The 36% Space Rally Is Not What It Looks Like
The S&P Kensho Global Space Index is up almost 36% year-to-date. The headline reads like a clean story about innovation and investor optimism. It is not. The rally is a geopolitical artefact, and the market is not being honest about what it is pricing.

On the morning of 17 May 2026, the S&P Kensho Global Space Index was up almost 36 percent year-to-date. The number reads like a straightforward story: investors believe in space, the sector is growing, capital is flowing. That is a plausible reading. It is not the complete one.
The more uncomfortable reading is that the space rally is a symptom of the same fragmentation currently destabilising the financial and physical infrastructure that makes dollar-denominated markets possible. These two things—space stocks climbing and dollar hegemony eroding—are happening in the same system, and they are not unrelated.
Space has undergone a category shift in institutional portfolios over the past five years. What was once largely the domain of government agencies and defence contractors has become critical civilian infrastructure. GPS, broadband constellations, Earth-observation networks, and the timing signals that underpin financial settlements: these are space assets, and they are now understood as essential to national security as much as economic function. That reframing has attracted a different class of capital. Sovereign wealth funds, infrastructure investors, and technology allocators have moved into the sector not because they believe in the romance of space but because they understand what the infrastructure does.
The complication is that this capital is arriving through markets that still operate on dollar logic—even as the geopolitical environment that sustains dollar primacy fragments around it. The United States and its allies currently hold dominant positions in orbital infrastructure: launch capability, satellite networks, ground-segment systems. That dominance has the same structural character as historical maritime hegemony. Control the chokepoints, control the commerce.
But the analogue runs in both directions. On 16 May 2026, Iran announced it would soon unveil a new Strait of Hormuz transit system with routing controls and fees for vessels seeking safe passage. The Strait handles roughly a fifth of global oil trade and a substantial portion of liquefied natural gas shipments. Iran has long had the geographic capacity to disrupt it; what the announcement signals is a decision to formalise and monetise that capacity rather than merely wield it as a latent threat. Routing controls and fee structures are, in infrastructure terms, the functional equivalent of what the United States does when it sets standards for which vessels can dock at which ports under which flag-state arrangements.
The space sector rally and the Hormuz announcement operate at different altitudes—one orbital, one maritime—but they are part of the same structural story. State actors are racing to secure and monetise the infrastructure that global commerce depends on. The United States and its partners have the lead in space. Iran is attempting to hold a chokepoint on the water. The two are not equivalent in capability or consequence, but they respond to the same incentive: in a fragmenting order, control over essential infrastructure is both defensive posture and revenue source.
Japan's major brokers preparing to sell crypto investment funds, also reported on 17 May 2026, belongs to this same pattern. The financial infrastructure is not immune from the fragmentation logic. Dollar-denominated capital markets remain dominant, but the regulatory and institutional scaffolding is developing alternatives—digital-asset frameworks, crypto-native financial products, jurisdictionally diversified custody. Japan, a G7 economy, is not building these alternatives out of ideological conviction. It is building them because the lesson of the past decade's financial sanctions regimes is that infrastructure access can be weaponised, and resilience requires redundancy.
The opinionated read is this: the space rally is simultaneously a bet on the existing order and evidence that investors sense its erosion. Capital is flowing into orbital infrastructure partly because it is a hedge against the disorder that would accompany a rapid unravelling of dollar primacy—space assets, like gold and other hard assets, derive value from the scenario in which everything else becomes unstable. But the capital is also flowing through dollar-denominated instruments, priced in dollars, and denominated against dollar-denominated benchmarks. That is not a bet against the system. It is a bet the system holds long enough to generate returns, even as the conditions that sustain the system deteriorate.
The whale who lost $32 million and then opened a 25x Ethereum long position worth $2.7 million is a different kind of signal. Leverage at that scale is a conviction trade—either a belief that Ethereum is dramatically undervalued or a willingness to accept a binary outcome for the sake of asymmetry. High-leverage positioning in crypto has always been more prevalent during periods when conventional market signals are difficult to read. When the macro picture is clear, the premium on binary bets falls. When it is not, the premium rises. The fact that a whale who had just absorbed a significant loss was willing to reach for 25x leverage on the same asset class suggests the macro picture is not clear.
None of this means the space rally is wrong. Orbital infrastructure is genuinely valuable, genuinely growing, and genuinely strategic. But reading it as a simple innovation trade misses what is actually happening: capital is rotating into assets that function as infrastructure of empire, in a moment when the empire's infrastructure is under structural pressure. The market is hedging. The question is whether the hedge is sufficient, and whether the returns on the underlying assets will survive the system transition those returns are partially pricing in.
The honest answer is that we do not yet know. The sources do not specify the composition of the flows driving the space index higher, the mechanisms through which Iran expects to enforce its routing regime, or the regulatory details of Japan's forthcoming crypto fund products. What we know is that the headline numbers across all of these stories are pointing in the same direction: a world in which infrastructure—physical, financial, digital—is being contested, remade, and monetised by actors who do not share the same assumptions about who controls it or who pays for passage.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/Cointelegraph/28498
- https://t.me/Cointelegraph/28490
- https://t.me/Cointelegraph/28491
- https://t.me/Cointelegraph/28492