EchoStar Corporation significantly altered its financial trajectory this week following the verification of a massive capital restructuring effort involving multibillion-dollar asset sales to AT&T and SpaceX.

These transactions, valued collectively at over $40 billion, effectively address the company’s looming 2026 debt maturity wall and transition the legacy operator from a distressed carrier into a spectrum holding entity.
Spectrum Monetization and Debt Liquidation
The liquidity surge stems from two primary agreements finalized in late 2025. In August, EchoStar agreed to sell a portion of its terrestrial low-band and mid-band spectrum to AT&T for approximately $23 billion in an all-cash transaction. This was followed by a series of deals with SpaceX, including a $17 billion transaction for AWS-4 and H-Block licenses.
The SpaceX agreement includes:
- Approximately $8.5 billion in cash.
- $8.5 billion in SpaceX equity, valued at $212 per share at the time of the initial agreement.
- Assumption of $2 billion in interest payments due through November 2027.
- A follow-on exchange of AWS-3 spectrum for approximately $2.6 billion in additional SpaceX equity.
Strategic Pivot to EchoStar Capital
These divestments have triggered a fundamental shift in corporate structure. In November 2025, EchoStar announced the formation of EchoStar Capital, a new division focused on strategic investments and M&A. Hamid Akhavan, who previously served as EchoStar’s CEO, transitioned to lead the new capital division and the Hughes subsidiary, while co-founder Charlie Ergen resumed the role of EchoStar CEO.
The company also scuttled plans for its own standalone low Earth orbit (LEO) constellation, terminating a $1.3 billion contract with MDA Space. Instead, EchoStar’s Boost Mobile brand will operate as a hybrid mobile network operator, utilizing AT&T’s terrestrial infrastructure and SpaceX’s Starlink Direct to Cell service to provide coverage.
Executive Rationale
“This transaction with SpaceX continues our legacy of putting the customer first as it allows for the combination of AWS-4 and H-block spectrum from EchoStar with the rocket launch and satellite capabilities from SpaceX to realize the direct-to-cell vision,” said EchoStar Capital CEO Hamid Akhavan.
Regulatory and Infrastructure Hurdles
Despite the influx of capital, the strategy faces localized resistance. In mid-December, a coalition of infrastructure providers including American Tower and Crown Castle filed protests with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) under Docket 25-302. The companies argue that EchoStar should not be permitted to divest “crown jewel” assets while allegedly defaulting on lease obligations to the entities that built its terrestrial network.
The FCC continues to review the spectrum transfers, with final tranches of the AT&T deal expected to close in mid-2026. While the capital injections have resolved immediate “going concern” warnings for the parent corporation, subsidiaries like Hughes continue to navigate independent debt maturities, including $1.5 billion due in August 2026.
