Amazon (AMZN) just completed a massive new deal, and Goldman Sachs thinks investors need to see the bigger picture.
For perspective, Amazon has entered into an agreement to acquire Globalstar, allowing Amazon Leo to offer direct-to-device (D2D) services to its low Earth orbit satellite network and extend cellular coverage for customers in remote locations, a company press release shared. Amazon and Apple also confirmed their agreement, which will enable Amazon Leo to power satellite services for some Apple devices.
Following the news, Goldman reiterated its buy rating and left its 12-month price target for Amazon stock at $275. With shares of the e-commerce giant trading at $249.02 in the report, that points to a 10.4% upside from current levels.
Instead of treating it as a one-off M&A headline, Goldman Sachs views the move as a major play in satellite-based connectivity, and a warning shot to rivals.
Amazon has already dropped more than $100 billion into its satellite effort, Leo, formerly known as Project Kuiper.
The firm argues that the AI behemoth is marching toward commercialization, with the Globalstar deal giving it access to even more assets, more spectrum, and a stickier partnership with Apple.
The development adds to the tremendous head of steam Amazon stock’s been building of late.
Amazon stock has outperformed the broader market, gaining 16.4% over the past month and 17.6% over the past six months.
Project Leo is Amazon’s attempt at building a satellite network that essentially works like a cell tower in the sky.
That’s huge because it brings in customers who previously couldn’t access traditional networks and puts them into the ecosystem.
This proverbial “internet bridge” can reach rural users, businesses, and governments that are typically outside normal coverage areas.
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Globalstar’s acquisition speeds these efforts and then some, feeding into Amazon’s broader strategy in connecting to Amazon Web Services (AWS). That would enable customers to push satellite data straight into storage, AI tools, analytics, and a whole host of other stuff.
For perspective, Amazon’s cloud service generated $35.6 billion in sales out of the company-wide total at $213.4 billion in Q4 2025 (16.7% of total sales).
Separately, Synergy Research Group said AWS held a 28% share of the global cloud infrastructure market in the same quarter, keeping its lead over Microsoft and Google.
