Explore the full insider trade history of Globalstar, Inc., a publicly traded company based in United States. Shares trade on US US, under the oversight of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Others sector, Globalstar, Inc. has logged 54 reports. Market capitalisation: €7.8bn. The latest transaction was filed on 7 January 2026 — Attribution. Among the most active insiders: Taylor Timothy Evan. The full history is accessible without an account.
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Globalstar, Inc. is a United States-based satellite telecommunications company listed on the NASDAQ under the ticker GSAT. For French-, Belgian- and Swiss-based investors, it is best viewed as a niche connectivity infrastructure company operating at the intersection of telecom, space assets and industrial IoT. Founded in the 1990s, Globalstar built its business around mobile satellite services, making it one of the early movers in satellite-enabled voice, messaging and data connectivity. The company is headquartered in Covington, Louisiana, United States. Globalstar’s core model combines a low-Earth-orbit satellite constellation with a terrestrial ground network to deliver satellite voice, low-speed data, messaging and specialized connectivity in areas where terrestrial mobile coverage is limited or unavailable. Its best-known consumer-facing brand is SPOT, which has long been associated with personal satellite messaging, emergency communications and outdoor use cases. Beyond that, the company offers asset tracking, telematics, geolocation and machine-to-machine / IoT services, alongside wholesale satellite capacity services that have become increasingly important in the company’s recent strategic evolution. From a competitive standpoint, Globalstar operates in a focused but challenging niche. It does not compete as a broad consumer telecom carrier; instead, it differentiates itself through licensed spectrum, proprietary infrastructure, an installed base in safety-critical and field-based applications, and a value proposition centered on reliability and affordability. Its end markets include emergency services, government, maritime, transportation, agriculture, energy, construction and other remote-industrial applications. Recent developments suggest that Globalstar is in the middle of a more capital-intensive growth phase. Public disclosures in 2025 and early 2026 highlighted network expansion initiatives, including progress on ground-station buildouts, the opening of a new Satellite Operations Control Center at headquarters, and the commercial rollout of two-way IoT capabilities through the RM200M module. The company also reported stronger wholesale capacity activity and continued commercial adoption across enterprise and government channels. In other words, Globalstar is trying to evolve from a specialized satellite services provider into a broader connectivity platform with more scalable industrial applications. For equity investors, the key analytical points are execution, monetization of infrastructure investment, and the pace at which new satellite-enabled products translate into durable revenue growth. The company’s recent messaging indicates strategic momentum, but also underscores that its investment profile remains tied to long-cycle network deployment and commercialization. As a NASDAQ-listed issuer in the United States, Globalstar remains a name to watch for investors seeking exposure to satellite communications, IoT connectivity and remote-asset solutions.