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After 25 years of writing the cheques himself, Bezos is opening Blue Origin to outsiders

May 14, 2026
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Dave Limp told an all-hands meeting that external funding is now on the table, weeks before SpaceX is expected to price the largest IPO in history at $1.75tn. The launch-cadence target is 100 a year. The cumulative bill so far is roughly $28bn.


Blue Origin is preparing to take outside money for the first time in its 25-year history. Chief executive Dave Limp told employees at a recent all-hands meeting that hitting the company’s launch-cadence targets would take more capital than a single backer could reasonably provide, and that external funding was now an option on the table, according to two attendees cited by the Financial Times.

The timing is not subtle. SpaceX is targeting a June listing at a $1.75tn valuation, which would be the largest IPO in history, slightly ahead of Saudi Aramco. The S-1 was filed confidentially on 1 April under the codename Project Apex.

Reuters has reported a $75bn raise and up to 30% of the offering set aside for retail investors. Three weeks out from the bookbuild, the appetite for anything with a rocket on its product page is the highest it has been since 2021, and Blue Origin’s chief executive has chosen this moment to mention, in front of his own staff, that the company would welcome the conversation.

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The financial picture explains the pivot. Blue Origin is expected to spend roughly $4.8bn this year, according to Capstone analyst Josh Parker, and has spent close to $28bn since it was founded in 2000.

Jeff Bezos has funded all of it, largely through Amazon stock sales. He now owns 9% of Amazon, down from above 10% a year ago, after a year of programmatic disposals that will continue through 29 May under his current trading plan. The world’s third-richest man can still write the cheque. He no longer has to.

The cadence target is the line that makes the maths inescapable. Blue Origin reached orbit for the first time in January 2025 with New Glenn, a 98-metre heavy-lift rocket that succeeded on its inaugural mission but lost its first stage on the descent.

Limp said in April the company plans eight to twelve flights this year, down from an internal target of fourteen. The longer-term goal is 100 launches a year.

Most of those are intended to deploy the TeraWave satellite constellation, the 5,408-spacecraft network Blue Origin announced in January to sell terabit-class connectivity to data-centre operators and enterprises rather than consumers.

Limp was, ostensibly, talking about employee compensation. The Q&A was about a new stock-option plan written to permit secondary sales of the kind SpaceX and OpenAI use to let staff exercise options without an IPO.

“We wrote this plan intentionally to allow for that,” he said. The same logic supports a primary round, and Limp did not pretend otherwise: the company needed to be “ready for external funding,” he said, and he expected strong interest.

He also said he did not expect Bezos to sell Blue Origin, and he did not rule out a future IPO.

What the round would actually price is harder to read. Blue Origin has a credible heavy-lift vehicle, a $3.4bn Artemis V lunar-lander contract, a satellite constellation that will not begin deployment until late 2027, and a launch cadence that is somewhere between an eighth and a tenth of what its own targets require.

SpaceX flew more than 130 Falcon 9 missions in 2025 alone. The gap, expressed as multiples on whichever valuation Blue Origin’s bankers eventually quote, is the entire conversation.

The thing to watch is not whether the round happens. It is whether Bezos shows up on the cap table afterwards as a single name or as the chair of a list.

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