James Altucher says something big is coming. Not a routine IPO… but what he believes could be the single largest public offering in market history, built around Elon Musk’s most ambitious project yet: Starlink. And buried inside that story is an even stranger twist: a “big buyout” play that could, if he’s right, unlock life‑changing profits for anyone who’s in place before the rest of the world understands what’s happening.
Starlink: Elon’s secret internet revolution
Starlink started with a simple question: what if the world could get fast, cheap internet from space, without towers, trenches, or cables?
Instead of relying on cell towers and buried lines, Starlink beams high‑speed internet from a growing constellation of more than 6,750 satellites that already wrap around the Earth, reaching over six million customers with coverage from Manhattan to remote villages.
Altucher believes this is not just another tech upgrade, but a full‑blown “internet reset” that could eventually make familiar telecom giants—like Verizon, AT&T, and T‑Mobile—look as outdated as dial‑up modems.
Why this IPO could dwarf Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft
To understand why Altucher is so obsessed with a Starlink IPO, you need a little context.
When Amazon went public in 1997, its IPO valuation was about 438 million dollars, a number that looked big at the time but now seems tiny next to the 100‑billion‑plus valuation already attached to Starlink.
Altucher points out that, at that size, a Starlink IPO could be:
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Around 228 times larger than Amazon’s IPO
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Roughly 55 times larger than Apple’s
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About 128 times larger than Microsoft’s
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And 177 times bigger than Nvidia’s first appearance on the public markets
And that is just the starting line, not the finish.
The pattern: when the internet jumps, fortunes follow
Altucher’s thesis leans heavily on a repeating pattern: every time the internet upgrades to a new level, early investors in the right companies see extreme gains.
He points to three big examples:
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AOL and early dial‑up: After AOL helped bring dial‑up internet to the masses, its stock soared an almost unbelievable 81,844 percent in about seven years.
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EarthLink and DSL: When DSL freed users from tying up their phone lines, EarthLink jumped 6,638 percent in roughly three years.
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Comcast and cable: As cable internet took over, Comcast produced 46,222 percent gains between 1980 and 2017.
These numbers are rare, extreme, and required near‑perfect timing—but they did happen, and they show the kind of upside that can appear when the internet itself changes form.
Altucher’s claim is simple: Starlink is the next leap—and potentially bigger than all of those combined.
The telecom “nightmare” and a broken status quo
To Altucher, Starlink isn’t just a cool tech story—it’s a direct attack on a 2.18‑trillion‑dollar telecom industry that many customers already resent.
He reminds readers of a few painful facts:
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Americans pay among the highest internet prices in the world, often close to 200 dollars per month for service that is slower than what people pay far less for in places like South Korea.
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Venezuela, a country where most people struggle to afford food, still manages average mobile internet speeds roughly twice as fast as those in the U.S.
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During a major California wildfire, Verizon throttled data speeds for firefighters to 1/200 of normal unless they paid more—a move Altucher calls “criminal.”
Starlink’s pitch is the opposite: faster speeds, fewer dead zones, global coverage, and the potential to deliver all of that at a fraction of current prices because there are no towers to build, trenches to dig, or fiber networks to maintain.
From cruise ships and planes to war zones and disaster areas, Starlink is already quietly in use, and Altucher expects adoption to keep accelerating as more people realize they can bypass the old gatekeepers.

There is another layer most people never think about.
Right now, about 5.2 billion people use the internet—and they generate trillions of dollars in online commerce each year.
But there are 2.9 billion people who still have no internet access at all, many in remote or rural areas where traditional telecom companies cannot profitably reach them.
Because Starlink beams coverage from space, it can reach places that fiber and towers simply can’t, potentially unlocking trillions in new economic activity and giving billions of people their first real access to the modern digital world.
Altucher believes that bridging this gap is what makes Starlink not just a telecom disruptor, but a global economic catalyst.
Why Altucher thinks 2026 is “the year”
First, he digs up an older statement from Elon Musk himself: “Once we can predict cash flow reasonably well, Starlink will IPO.”
Recently, Musk announced that SpaceX’s Starlink division has reached breakeven cash flow, a milestone that, in Altucher’s view, removes the last big barrier to taking Starlink public.
Second, he argues that Musk actually needs another public company beyond Tesla.
Because most of Musk’s wealth is tied up in his companies, and because platforms like X are not yet reliably profitable, Musk has repeatedly had to sell Tesla shares when he needs cash—like the 23 billion dollars in Tesla stock he sold between April and December 2022 to help keep Twitter afloat, a period during which Tesla shares dropped more than 50 percent.
Analysts at Barron’s have noted that what Musk really needs is a second publicly traded company to tap for liquidity and to relieve the constant pressure on Tesla.
With an estimated value north of 100 billion dollars and Musk controlling more than 42 percent of it, Starlink is the obvious candidate.
Bloomberg’s “smoking gun” and the SpaceX spinoff
One of the final pieces in Altucher’s argument comes from reporting on the internal moves at SpaceX.
Starlink is currently a subsidiary of SpaceX, but Bloomberg reported in 2023 that SpaceX is discussing an IPO of the Starlink satellite business as soon as late 2024, aiming to capitalize on strong demand for communications via space.
The same report said SpaceX has been moving Starlink’s assets into a wholly owned subsidiary that could be spun off in an IPO, a classic step in preparing a business unit to go public on its own.
To Altucher, these are not random corporate maneuvers—they are the quiet setup for the biggest IPO reveal of 2026.
He even pins down a date: Friday, January 30, 2026, during a major industry event known as the Space Congress, where top insiders, investors, and NASA officials gather.
In his scenario, that is where Musk steps on stage and finally announces that Starlink is being spun off and taken public.

The “pre‑IPO” angle: how regular people can get in
Altucher’s pitch is not just “wait for the IPO and hope.” His entire mission is to show everyday investors a way to position themselves before IPO day.
He points out that:
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Most of the real wealth from big tech companies is created before they go public.
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By the time a stock is trading on public markets, an estimated 95 percent of the total gains have usually already gone to insiders and early backers.
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That leaves regular investors fighting over the last 5 percent.
He uses Peter Thiel’s early stake in Facebook as an example. Thiel put 500,000 dollars into Facebook in 2004 for 10 percent of the company, at a valuation of 5 million dollars. By the time of Facebook’s IPO in 2012, his stake was worth roughly 10.4 billion dollars—a 2,000‑fold return in under eight years.
Altucher himself has seen similar pre‑IPO successes: a 37‑fold gain on TicketFly between 2009 and 2015 and a 60‑fold gain on Buddy Media between 2007 and 2012.
The problem, he says, is that pre‑IPO deals like these are usually closed off to “Main Street” investors.
Until now.
Destiny Tech100 (DXYZ): a Starlink “backdoor”
Here’s where Altucher introduces a vehicle he calls a breakthrough for ordinary investors: the Destiny Tech100 fund, trading on the NYSE under the ticker DXYZ.
This fund was designed with a single mandate—to invest exclusively in fast‑growing pre‑IPO companies and then let anyone buy into that basket via a regular brokerage account.
According to Altucher, Destiny Tech100:
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Holds stakes in Starlink’s parent, SpaceX, as well as other private giants like OpenAI and Epic Games.
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Has placed about 50 percent of its assets into SpaceX, giving shareholders indirect pre‑IPO exposure to Starlink.
By buying shares of DXYZ, an everyday investor can own slices of companies that would normally be reserved for Silicon Valley insiders and large institutions.
Altucher believes that as Starlink, OpenAI, and other major holdings eventually go public or get acquired, the fund’s value could “skyrocket into the stratosphere,” and Starlink’s IPO could even become an exit event that returns cash back to DXYZ shareholders.
The “big buyout”: one obscure stock at the center
DXYZ, however, is only half of the story. Altucher argues the biggest upside won’t be from Starlink itself, but from a small, little‑known company he says Elon Musk may be forced to buy for tens of billions of dollars.
Why? Because Starlink still has a critical weakness: direct‑to‑device connectivity.
Today, Starlink works like this:
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Satellites beam internet down to a Starlink terminal.
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The terminal then shares that connection with your devices.
The problem is obvious. Carrying around a bulky terminal everywhere you go is not practical for most people, which limits how far Starlink can go in everyday life.
Altucher says Musk has publicly called direct‑to‑device connectivity a major “game‑changer” and essential for Starlink’s future.
And that is where this obscure company enters the picture.
The “cell tower in space” patent
According to Altucher, this small tech firm has invented satellite technology that turns each satellite into a full cell tower in space.
Instead of sending a signal to a Starlink dish and then to your phone, these satellites act like towers themselves and beam internet straight to your phone, tablet, or other device—no extra equipment needed.
The company controls this approach through a key U.S. patent, No. 9,973,266, which Altucher says effectively gives them a monopoly on this specific direct‑to‑device method.

Because of that, he believes Musk has no practical choice: if Starlink wants to fully unlock global direct‑to‑device connectivity, it will need this technology.
His conclusion is blunt:
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Musk will have to buy this company.
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The deal could be worth tens of billions.
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And the buyout will likely be announced before the Starlink IPO.
Investors who already own shares in this obscure stock when a buyout is announced, he argues, could be in line for the biggest windfall of the entire Starlink story.
The full name and ticker of this company—and all of Altucher’s research on it—are contained in a report titled “Elon’s Big Buyout: The #1 Starlink IPO Stock To Buy Now.”
How Altucher claims to spot these megatrends
Altucher isn’t shy about his track record.
He has been:
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A hedge fund manager at Formula Capital
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A venture capitalist running a 200‑million‑dollar fund called 212 Ventures
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A Wall Street Journal best‑selling author
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Host of “The James Altucher Show,” a podcast downloaded more than 70 million times with guests like Ray Dalio, Mark Cuban, and Peter Thiel
Over the past few decades, he has built a reputation for calling big shifts early:
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In the 1990s, he predicted streaming video before Netflix became a household name.
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In 2007, when Facebook turned down a 1‑billion‑dollar offer from Yahoo, he publicly forecast it could one day be worth 100 billion dollars—a level it surpassed, on its way to a 1.9‑trillion‑dollar valuation.
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In 2013, he called Bitcoin a world‑changing technology while it traded near 114 dollars, long before it surged past the 100,000‑dollar mark.
He also highlights more recent recommendations for his readers, including:
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Solana, recommended around 11 dollars and later trading above 234 dollars, more than a 20‑fold gain.
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The Trade Desk, flagged around 22 dollars and later hitting nearly 140 dollars.
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SoundHound AI, bought below 2.50 dollars and later reaching nearly 24 dollars, a move his service exited with a 269 percent profit.
These examples do not guarantee future results, and Altucher admits that some picks fail entirely, but he uses them to show the type of asymmetric opportunities he is always hunting.
Real‑world investors, real‑world results
To make this personal, Altucher shares stories from readers of Altucher’s Investment Network.
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John R., 47, from Michigan, said he used Altucher’s analysis to buy Ethereum at 275 dollars.
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Bethany C., 61, from Florida, reports making a 419 percent gain over 12 months for an 89,785‑dollar profit, helping her move closer to retirement.
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Patrick L., from Nevada, says a single recommendation produced a 577 percent gain worth 19,485 dollars, more than paying for his subscription many times over.
Again, not every investor will see results like these, and all investing involves risk, but these examples are meant to show what is possible when you catch a megatrend early and act on it.
Why he’s making this offer now
Altucher usually charges far more for institutional‑level research—wealthy clients have paid hundreds of thousands of dollars per year when he managed money for them—but Altucher’s Investment Network is priced differently.
Normally, six months of access costs 299 dollars, already a fraction of what most professional managers charge.
But because he views the Starlink story—and especially the potential buyout play—as one of the biggest market moments of his career, he has dropped the six‑month price to 49 dollars for new readers through this special offer.
That 49‑dollar trial includes:
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Six monthly issues of Altucher’s Investment Network
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Weekly email updates
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Urgent trading alerts when it is time to buy or sell
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A members‑only website with back issues, a model portfolio, and special reports
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Quarterly Q&A calls where he discusses what he’s researching and where he sees the next big opportunities
And of course, it also unlocks the flagship report “Elon’s Big Buyout: The #1 Starlink IPO Stock To Buy Now” at no extra cost.
Risk‑free trial, with everything yours to keep
Altucher leans into skepticism rather than running from it.
He offers a 90‑day, risk‑free trial: if a new subscriber spends three months following his work and decides it’s not right, they can call or email customer support and receive a full refund, no questions asked.
Even then, they keep:
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All issues received
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Every special report, including the Starlink big‑buyout research
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Access already delivered through the members‑only site
For Altucher, the logic is simple: he only makes money in the long run if people stay and renew because they are impressed with the ideas and results.
A brief anecdote from the front lines
Reading Altucher’s pitch, it’s hard not to think about how these kinds of stories look from the inside.
There was a moment not long ago when a new fintech stock crossed the screen with almost no coverage—tiny volume, thin float, a product that sounded too niche to matter. It sat there, ignored, while the headlines shouted about the same few mega‑caps every day.
But a small note in an earnings call hinted that a “major cloud provider” had quietly become a customer. The stock drifted sideways for months. Then one day, the partnership was named, the ticker exploded, and anyone who had taken the time to actually read the filings—before the press release—saw their patience rewarded.
The pattern was familiar: the crowd only moves once the story is obvious. The real money is made in the fog, when things still look uncertain and a little bit mysterious.
That is the exact moment where Altucher wants readers to meet Starlink and this unknown “cell tower in space” company—not when the buyout headlines are already flashing across financial news banners.
Why this matters to investors?
For a younger investor, the numbers can feel unreal. Billion‑dollar deals, trillions in value, percentages with four digits. But the core idea is simple enough for a 11th grader to grasp.
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The internet keeps upgrading in big leaps.
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Each leap creates companies that change how everyone lives and works.
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People who recognize the leap early and invest carefully can, sometimes, turn small amounts of money into huge gains.
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Most people only hear about it after it’s already happened.
Altucher’s message is that Starlink is one of those leaps.
He believes it will:
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Break the old telecom model
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Bring internet to billions who don’t have it
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Force Elon Musk to buy a small company with a critical patent
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Then explode onto public markets in a historic IPO
If he is right, the window before that announcement is when the real opportunity lives.
Your next step: watch the clock
In Altucher’s view, time is the enemy here.
If you wait until after a potential buyout and IPO announcement, any “ground floor” pricing will be long gone.
That is why he urges readers to:
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Understand how DXYZ fits into the broader pre‑IPO landscape.
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Position themselves before January 30, 2026, if his Starlink‑at‑Space‑Congress prediction proves accurate.
Altucher’s Investment Network is designed to be that bridge between “I heard about Starlink in the news” and “I knew how to act before the news broke.”
For anyone who has ever looked back at missed chances—Netflix at a few dollars, Bitcoin at triple digits, Facebook before the world took it seriously—this is meant to be the moment you do something different.
And that is the heart of the pitch:
Use this Starlink window not just to read another headline… but to step inside a research network built to find these rare inflection points early, while there is still uncertainty in the air and the biggest gains are still ahead.
FAQs about Elon’s Big Buyout and Altucher’s Investment Network
What exactly is “Elon’s Big Buyout” and the #1 Starlink IPO stock?
Elon’s Big Buyout is James Altucher’s research thesis that Elon Musk will be forced to acquire a small, little‑known tech company that owns a key “cell‑tower‑in‑space” patent (No. 9,973,266) to unlock full direct‑to‑device Starlink coverage. Altucher believes this buyout, potentially worth tens of billions of dollars, could be announced just before a historic Starlink IPO, and that early investors in this obscure stock could see the biggest windfall of the entire Starlink story.
How can I get a pre‑IPO stake in Starlink before any IPO is announced?
Altucher highlights the Destiny Tech100 fund, trading on the NYSE under ticker DXYZ, which was built to hold stakes in fast‑growing private companies like SpaceX (Starlink’s parent), OpenAI, and Epic Games. Around 50 percent of the fund is invested in SpaceX, so buying DXYZ shares gives regular investors indirect, pre‑IPO exposure to Starlink that is normally reserved for insiders and large institutions.
What do I receive when I subscribe to Altucher’s Investment Network?
A six‑month subscription includes monthly issues focused on major megatrends, weekly email updates, urgent trading alerts, access to a members‑only website with back issues and a model portfolio, and quarterly Q&A calls. New members also receive the special report “Elon’s Big Buyout: The #1 Starlink IPO Stock To Buy Now,” which reveals the name and ticker of the obscure buyout target and shows how to buy it.
How much does the service cost and is there any guarantee?
Ordinarily, six months of Altucher’s Investment Network costs 299 dollars, but through the Starlink Big Buyout offer, new readers can join for 49 dollars for six months. The subscription comes with a 90‑day, risk‑free guarantee: if you’re not satisfied within three months, you can request a full refund and keep all issues and special reports you’ve received.
Why should I consider this instead of just waiting for the Starlink IPO
Altucher’s core point is that by the time companies go public, an estimated 95 percent of the total gains are usually captured by early insiders, leaving only about 5 percent for public‑market investors. His strategy is to position readers before major catalysts—like a Starlink IPO or a forced buyout of the “cell‑tower‑in‑space” company—so they have a chance to benefit from the bigger, earlier moves, rather than chasing headlines after the fact.
































