Virgin Galactic posts another loss as it inches toward space tourism flights
Virgin Galactic’s founder, British billionaire Richard Branson, is expected to be the first non-crew member to fly aboard the company’s suborbital vehicle, SpaceShipTwo. The company has said it’s working to reach that milestone this year.
Galactic plans to send groups of paying customers on brief, scenic flights to the edge of space, where they’ll float weightless for a few minutes while viewing the cosmos through the plane’s windows. They’ll also encounter intense G-forces as the space plane rockets its way to more than 50 miles above Earth.
Sam Korus, an industrial innovation analyst at ARK Invest, said the additional deposits showed that there could be sustained interest in space tourism.
“Coming into this earnings call with the environment as is, it was all steps in the right direction,” Korus said, referring to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.
Korus said he was also encouraged by the fact that Virgin Galactic reported having about $420 million in cash on hand, suggesting the company could have enough money to finish its test flights before commercial operations begin.
But Galactic’s rise in market value since the start of the year came as the company reported no big changes in its underlying business.
Morgan Stanley said in a research note last week that it considers Virgin Galactic’s stock to be an attractive investment “in part due to its position as the only pure-play publicly traded space” company, and “a growth outlook we see as largely insulated from Covid-19 factors.”
Developing supersonic point-to-point travel technology, which many companies in the aerospace world are taking on to various degrees, is likely still years away from reality.
So far, Virgin Galactic has completed two powered test flights to the edge of space over the company’s testing facilities in Mojave, California.
The company’s space plane was recently transported to New Mexico, the eventual launch destination for Virgin Galactic’s tourism customers. Last week, its space plane conducted a glide test, in which the space plane took flight but did not power up its rocket engine, over New Me
xico.
“The fact that we were able to get this flight off in that time was heartening to me, because it suggested that we are able to create updated operational protocols that allow our team to operate safely” during the pandemic, Whitesides said during a conference call Tuesday.