This is part of a series on the global impact of SpaceX’s historic IPO, tracing how mainland Chinese investors’ strategies, the Hong Kong market and wider capital flows are being reshaped by Elon Musk’s trillion-dollar rocket gamble.In 2016, a SpaceX rocket carrying a satellite blew up during a test, destroying on-board equipment and surrounding facilities worth millions of US dollars.Fortunately, the satellite operator, Israel’s Space Communications, had an insurance policy worth almost US$300 million on the cargo, largely minimising the loss.As the commercial space sector has flourished over the past decade – culminating in the blockbuster initial public offering of SpaceX on Friday – the space-insurance market has matured alongside it.Once a highly specialised niche, the sector now serves as a critical financial backstop protecting satellite operators, manufacturers and space-flight providers against catastrophic loss.
Who pays when rockets explode? China rushes to insure SpaceX’s rivals
Wave of Chinese insurers is underwriting rockets and satellites, turning space risk into a new front in the China-US rivalry.
Chinese investors aggressively enter space insurance as SpaceX's IPO drives commercial space into a trillion-dollar market. Mainstream space insurance lowers adoption barriers for satellite infrastructure, making it viable for enterprise decisions.













