EOS-X Space Expands U.S. Footprint After Space Perspective Deal

EOS-X Space enters Wall Street with a New York Stock Exchange presentation, following its Space Perspective acquisition and outlining its IPO and growth roadmap.

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EOS-X Space, the Spanish-founded near-space  aerospace company, officially marked its arrival on Wall Street today with a corporate  presentation at the New York Stock Exchange, signaling its evolution into a transatlantic  aerospace platform anchored industrially and financially in the United States. 

The milestone follows EOS-X Space’s acquisition and integration of U.S.-based Space  Perspective, a move that significantly expands the company’s engineering footprint in  North America and consolidates its position in the fast-emerging near-space segment. 

Post-integration, the combined platform reaches an implied pro forma valuation exceeding  $650 million

From Europe to America’s Space Coast 

EOS-X Space now operates from Florida’s Space Coast, within the Cape Canaveral and  Kennedy Space Center ecosystem — the most established aerospace cluster in the world. 

By embedding itself directly into the U.S. space infrastructure, EOS-X gains: 

Proprietary aerospace engineering and pressurized capsule manufacturing  capabilities 

Direct access to U.S. certification and testing infrastructure 

Operational alignment with NASA-adjacent technical standards 

Scalable industrial capacity on U.S. soil 

In parallel, the company has established a commercial and financial presence in New  York, strengthening its proximity to U.S. capital markets as it advances toward a potential  IPO within the next 18 months, subject to market conditions. 

IPO Roadmap and Financial Trajectory

Founder and CEO Kemel Kharbachi outlined the company’s capital markets strategy  during the NYSE presentation, targeting: 

Revenue exceeding $500 million in 2026 

Positive EBITDA in 2026 

A potential valuation trajectory toward $1.5 billion as it approaches public market  readiness 

The NYSE engagement represents a visibility milestone among investment banks,  institutional investors, and pre-IPO desks actively monitoring the next wave of commercial  space platforms. 

A Different Bet on Space 

While much of the space industry remains focused on high-cost orbital launches, EOS-X  Space is pursuing a structurally different strategy. 

The company develops near-space human flights at approximately 40 kilometers altitude  using helium-based balloon systems and pressurized capsules — a model designed for  lower capital intensity, reduced operational complexity, and higher flight frequency  compared to rocket-based architectures. 

Flights last between five and six hours, with minimal G-forces and a direct zero-emissions  profile. The result is a premium experience with improved margin dynamics and capital  efficiency. 

EOS-X Space does not compete for orbit. 

It competes for frequency, scalability, and return on capital. 

Positioned for a Sector Inflection Point 

The commercial space sector is entering a renewed expansion cycle, driven by  institutional capital returning to deep-tech assets and increased anticipation surrounding a  potential SpaceX IPO — widely viewed as a catalyst event for the broader space  economy. 

EOS-X Space’s strategy is built on tangible industrial assets, integrated manufacturing,  and operational execution. While independent from orbital launch economics, the  company is structurally positioned to benefit from the broader revaluation of space  platforms.

CEO Perspective 

“This moment marks our transition into a fully integrated transatlantic aerospace platform,”  said Kemel Kharbachi, Founder and CEO of EOS-X Space. 

“Our industrial anchoring in Florida and financial positioning in New York align aerospace  engineering with capital markets discipline. The next phase of commercial space will not  be defined only by orbital ambition, but by scalable platforms with clear economic  fundamentals.” 

EOS-X Space