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STMicro targets more than $3 billion in space chip revenue as demand grows

By Thomson Reuters May 4, 2026 | 11:01 AM

By Nathan Vifflin

May 4 (Reuters) – STMicroelectronics is targeting well above $3 billion in cumulative revenue for its semiconductor space business from 2026 to 2028, it said on Monday, ​helped by surging demand for chips used in low-Earth ‌orbit satellite networks.

Shares in the Franco-Italian chipmaker rose by as much as 7%, before settling 2.2% higher at 1536 GMT.

STMicro said its LEO revenue rose to about $600 million in 2025 from about $175 million in 2021, and ‌it ​is now close to $1 billion in 2026.

“We ⁠are just in the ⁠early innings of this market,” STMicro executive Remi El-Ouazzane told analysts in a conference call.

Players such as Starlink, AST SpaceMobile, Amazon Leo are pushing low-Earth orbit satellite communications from a ​niche towards mass-marketed broadband and direct-to-cell services, and potentially orbital data centres.

STMicro hopes its decade-long supply partnership with Starlink in ⁠satellites and user terminals will give ⁠it a first-mover advantage to keep as much ​of its near 90% market share as possible as this market ​rapidly expands, attracting competitors.

One of Europe’s largest chipmakers said ‌China represented a large opportunity in user terminals, but it will miss out on satellite technology because of export controls.

“We are unapologetically European. So we end up being actually U.S. and ⁠China compatible,” El-Ouazzane said.

“The China compatibility, though, starts and finishes at user terminal. Because of export control, we cannot have any satellite technology ⁠happening in China,” ‌he added.

The company also identified orbital data ⁠centres as a possible future market, but said ​it ‌has not included any related revenue in its ​current 2026-2028 ⁠target.

“My wild guess as to when we could start to see, a relevant amount of orbital data centres in the sky, I would say three years from now would be maybe an interesting guess,” El-Ouazzane told reporters.

(Reporting by Nathan Vifflin in Gdansk; Editing ​by Alexander Smith)