Planet Ventures Offers Public Investors a Gateway to Private Space Companies

Planet Ventures Inc. (CSE: PXI) (OTC: PNXPF) has grown its cash and asset base from $5 million to $20 million over the past two and a half years, positioning itself as a publicly traded vehicle for retail investors to gain exposure to private space and aerospace companies before major liquidity events.

May 20, 2026
Planet Ventures Offers Public Investors a Gateway to Private Space Companies

The rapid expansion of the space economy is creating opportunities that, like artificial intelligence and biotech before it, often generate the most value before they reach public markets. Planet Ventures Inc. (CSE: PXI) (OTC: PNXPF) is positioning itself as a publicly traded investment issuer that provides retail investors access to private space and aerospace companies that would otherwise remain out of reach.

Structured as a publicly traded investment issuer, Planet Ventures holds a portfolio of private space investments spanning launch systems, satellite software, orbital energy infrastructure, microgravity robotics, and cislunar development. CEO Etienne Moshevich has outlined a 2026 mandate to expand the portfolio while continuing to build management and advisory capabilities. The company has grown its cash and asset base from approximately $5 million to roughly $20 million over the past two and a half years, providing capacity for additional deployment.

The company's strategy addresses a persistent challenge for individual investors: how to gain exposure to transformative industries before the largest liquidity events occur. By the time companies in sectors such as aerospace reach major exchanges, much of the earliest value creation has already accrued to venture capital firms, institutional investors, and strategic backers. Planet Ventures offers one possible answer to this access arbitrage.

Among its holdings are Mantis Space and General Astronautics, which focus on orbital energy technologies and robotic servicing systems that could become foundational to the next generation of commercial space activity. The orbital energy and lunar habitation technologies underlying these investments are unproven at commercial scale, but the company believes they represent significant long-term potential.

Investors should be aware of the risks inherent in early-stage space investments. Portfolio companies have limited operating histories and are pre-revenue. The technologies involved may not be successfully developed or deployed. Space sector operations require licenses and approvals from domestic and international regulatory bodies, and failure to obtain or maintain them could materially delay or prevent operations. Commercial demand for in-space power systems and lunar services has not been established at scale, and projected market growth may not be realized within anticipated timeframes.

Additionally, investments in private, early-stage companies are illiquid, and there is no guarantee of a market for these securities or the ability to exit on favorable terms. Portfolio companies may require additional funding that may not be available, or may be available only on dilutive or restrictive terms. Adverse macroeconomic conditions or geopolitical developments could disrupt the company's investment strategy or the operations of portfolio companies. The company's performance depends in part on retaining key personnel and advisors.

The latest news and updates relating to PNXPF are available in the company’s newsroom at https://nnw.fm/PNXPF.