Bloomberg
Billionaire Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic aims to go public later this year and become the world’s first listed space-tourism venture.
A stake in Virgin Galactic will be sold to a shell company that already trades on the New York Stock Exchange, raising about $800 million as the project nears its first commercial flights, a person familiar with the matter said.
The deal would involve US-based Social Capital LP, according to the person, who asked not to be named because the plans are private. The firm, founded by Sri Lanka-born billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya, has until September to use a pile of cash raised in 2017 or return it to investors. The Wall Street Journal reported earlier that Social Capital Hedosophia Corp would buy a 49 percent stake.
By selling the holding to a listed entity Virgin would bypass the need for an initial public offering. That would avoid both a costly investor roadshow and the challenge of selling shares in a company whose plans were put on hold for four years in 2014 after a space-plane broke up in a test flight, killing one pilot and seriously injuring another.
Calls to Social Capital in Palo Alto, California, weren’t returned outside of office hours.
The share sale would help fund the business until its spaceships can operate and generate a profit. More than
$1 billion has been raised since the company was founded in 2004, initially from Branson, with an Abu Dhabi investment company taking a stake in 2010.
Branson is one of several
billionaires, including Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Tesla Inc’s Elon Musk, who are racing to send customers into space.
Virgin Galactic already has about 700 customers ready to pay at least $250,000 for a 90-minute flight to the edge of space, allowing them to experience weightlessness and see the curvature of the Earth. Branson said in December that he expected to make his first flight some time in 2019, followed by commercial clients.
The founder of Virgin Atlantic Airways and businesses spanning banking to gyms said that Virgin Galactic’s development and testing programme had advanced sufficiently to move its space vehicles and 100 staff to its Spaceport America operational base in New Mexico from a California test centre.
The complex is close to completion with a hanger, offices, fuel farm, warehouse and antenna for telemetry and communications.
A carrier aircraft and the spaceship VSS Unity will be moved there over the summer for final test flights before the start of full commercial services for passengers and research payloads.