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Quantum Space announced a merger with Inflection Point Acquisition Corp. VI, valuing the company at $1.2 billion and targeting Nasdaq listing as QSPC in Q4
Quantum Space, the satellite‑mobility firm led by former NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine, will become a public company through a merger with the special‑purpose acquisition company Inflection Point Acquisition Corp. VI. The deal, announced on June 8, values Quantum Space at more than $1.1 billion and is expected to close in the fourth quarter, after which the company will trade on Nasdaq under the ticker QSPC [2].
Key takeaways
Quantum Space’s decision to go public via a SPAC rather than a traditional IPO reflects a desire for speed, according to CEO Bridenstine, who said “we need to go as fast as possible to get these capabilities on‑orbit as soon as possible” [4]. The merger with Inflection Point Acquisition Corp. VI will provide roughly $253 million from the SPAC’s trust account, assuming no shareholder redemptions, plus a $300 million private investment in public equity (PIPE) from Inflection Point [2][4]. Combined, these funds give the company a post‑merger equity valuation of about $1.2 billion [4].
The transaction is slated to close in Q4 2024, after which Quantum Space will list on Nasdaq under the ticker QSPC [2]. The company expects to generate $24 million in revenue this year and $61 million in 2027, driven largely by milestone payments on contracts already secured [4]. However, it also projects operating losses and a cash burn of $69 million in 2026 and $97 million in 2027, highlighting the capital‑intensive nature of its development program [2].
Quantum Space’s flagship product, the Ranger space tug, is designed for high‑maneuverability across multiple orbits, including geostationary orbit and beyond. Bridenstine described Ranger as “the most maneuverable satellite in its class,” built to meet Space Force requirements for sustained on‑orbit maneuverability [2]. The company already holds six contracts and pending proposals with the U.S. Space Force, Department of Defense, DARPA, and the Air Force Research Laboratory, and was selected for the Space Force’s $1.8 billion Andromeda contract for geosynchronous reconnaissance satellites [3].
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Ranger is designed for national security missions, specifically to perform sustained maneuvers in orbit and provide surveillance of rival satellites.
The company plans to launch its first Ranger prototype to orbit in 2027.
The company is led by CEO Jim Bridenstine, a former NASA administrator, and was co-founded by executive chair Kam Ghaffarian.
The SPAC proceeds will fund the ramp‑up of Ranger production, a planned pathfinder mission slated for mid‑2027, and support the establishment of a satellite manufacturing facility in Tulsa, Oklahoma [2]. Bridenstine indicated that public‑market access will also facilitate potential acquisitions of supplier companies to accelerate scaling [4].
Quantum Space’s SPAC listing underscores a growing trend of space‑technology firms using blank‑check deals to secure rapid financing for ambitious defense and commercial projects. By targeting a pure‑play national‑security niche, the company aims to become a leading provider of in‑space mobility, a capability the U.S. military is actively seeking. The merger also reflects broader investor interest in the space sector, even as SPAC activity has cooled since its 2021 peak. If successful, Quantum Space’s Ranger platform could lower mission costs and expand the United States’ ability to maneuver assets in high‑value orbits, influencing both defense readiness and future commercial space services.
AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 5 outlets · Jun 11, 2026 · How we report
The deal is expected to provide approximately $553 million in total capital, consisting of $253 million from the SPAC's trust and a $300 million private investment.