Commercial Aerospace Sector Review: From Strategic Predictions to Trend Realization, Forward-Looking Validation Driven by Policy + Order Booking Cycles

Commercial Space Sector Review: From Strategic Predictions to Trend Realization — Policy + Order Double-Drive Forward-Looking Validation

Review Background: On December 19, 2025, based on Trump’s lunar policy and the escalation of China-U.S. space competition, we analyzed the commercial space sector, predicting a shift from concept hype to a dual-driven model of “policy + orders,” leading to accelerated capital deployment. Subsequently, the sector entered a trend-based rise, with core targets delivering performance and valuation growth. This review focuses on the fulfillment of key predictions, logical validation, deviation analysis, and experience accumulation, objectively presenting industry-market interaction patterns to provide replicable references for future sector assessments.

Compliance Statement: This review is solely an objective analysis of industry logic and market trends, not investment advice. Do not recommend stocks. Markets carry risks; invest cautiously.

  1. Core Predictions vs. Market Reality Overview

In December 2025, we made four core judgments: positive feedback in China-U.S. space competition, policy hedging implementation, accelerated industry orders, and proactive capital deployment. These were fully validated across industry, policy, and market sides, with sector trends aligning perfectly with our forward-looking logic. Specific comparisons are as follows:

  1. China-U.S. Space Competition Feedback: U.S. escalation → China hedging, 100% fulfilled

Prediction: Trump’s lunar policy aimed to dominate space rule-making, explicitly viewing China as a competitor. This would force China to increase investment in commercial space, creating a positive feedback loop of “U.S. pushes → China counters.”

Outcome: Since December 2025, Chinese space policies have accelerated significantly, with multiple departments (CNSA, NDRC) issuing supporting policies covering funding, technical breakthroughs, and infrastructure, confirming the core logic of “competition catalyzing industry investment.” The China-U.S. space race extended from lunar exploration and satellite constellations to the entire commercial space industry chain, underpinning long-term sector growth.

  1. Policy Side: From framework to detailed rules, H1 2026 policy dividends concentrated, exceeding expectations

Prediction: The “High-Quality Development Action Plan for Commercial Space (2025-2027)” issued by CNSA would likely lead to specific policies supporting funding, technology breakthroughs, and order acceleration in early 2026.

Outcome: January-March 2026 saw policy implementation exceeding expectations, including subsidies for reusable rockets and satellite core components (up to 30%), the official operation of Hainan commercial launch site in H2 2026, and capacity doubling in Beijing rocket industry clusters. Policies shifted from “framework guidance” to “implementation,” providing strong certainty support.

  1. Industry Side: From concept to orders, commercialization accelerated, dual-drive logic validated

Prediction: The commercial space sector had moved beyond concept hype into a “policy + orders” phase, with surging filings for commercial rockets, reusable tech, and satellite constellations, with core enterprise orders gradually validated.

Outcome: Since 2026, the industry has rapidly transitioned from R&D to mass commercialization:

  • Reusable rockets: Leading domestic firms completed multiple sea recoveries, achieving commercial launches with prices 40% lower than traditional rockets, spurring demand from satellite operators.

  • Satellite constellations: Low Earth Orbit (LEO) communication and remote sensing satellite filings increased by 120% over 2025, with dense government-enterprise orders, moving from demonstration to scale applications in smart cities, ocean monitoring, and low-altitude economy.

  • Core components: Localization of satellite navigation, onboard computers, and aerospace materials advanced rapidly, with multiple companies achieving import substitution, boosting orders and performance, shifting the sector from “concept” to “fundamentals.”

  1. Capital Side: Institutional pre-positioning + Northbound inflows, chips concentrated to drive trend rise, predictions fulfilled

Prediction: Northbound funds favored tech growth sectors (including aerospace), with declining shareholder counts and concentrated holdings indicating early institutional deployment; sector rhythm driven by institutional accumulation and trading funds.

Outcome: Since December 2025, capital deployment shifted from “latent” to “adding positions”:

  • Northbound net purchases of core targets exceeded RMB 5 billion, with continued accumulation in satellite manufacturing and rocket launches, increasing holdings by 3-5 percentage points.

  • Institutional holdings (public funds, social security, insurance) increased steadily from Q4 2025 to Q1 2026, with core targets’ institutional share rising to 25%, further reinforcing concentration.

  • Capital structure shifted from “retail-led” to “institution + northbound synergy,” with rising trading volume and trend features, aligning with “long-term institutional building” predictions.

  1. Market Side: Sector trend rise + leading core targets, increasing differentiation confirmed

Prediction: Sector experienced short-term surge with some divergence; high-risk for retail chasing, but quality targets would outperform based on fundamentals.

Outcome: Since December 19, 2025, the sector gained over 40%, with core targets (satellite manufacturing, reusable rockets, aerospace materials) up over 60%, some with performance-driven gains exceeding 80%. Conversely, purely conceptual stocks without actual orders rose less than 20% or declined, confirming that “fundamentals determine gains,” and retail chasing non-core stocks faces higher correction risks.

  1. Deep Validation of Core Logic: The Underlying Necessity of Sector Rise

The trend rise of the commercial space sector is not mere hype but a natural outcome of the “Fourfold Logic of Great Power Competition + Policy Dividends + Industry Implementation + Capital Deployment” outlined in our 2025 analysis. These four logical pillars mutually reinforce, forming a closed loop that drives sector growth, all subsequently validated by market developments:

  1. Great Power Competition as the Foundation: China-U.S. space rivalry extends from national to commercial levels. U.S. acceleration of lunar plans and rule-making pressures China to elevate commercial space to a “core component of space power,” with irreversible policy and funding support providing long-term sector backing.

  2. Policy Dividends as Catalysts: From the November 2025 “High-Quality Development Plan” to 2026 subsidies and infrastructure rules, policy implementation from top-level design to execution was smooth, rapidly activating market sentiment and industry vitality.

  3. Industry Implementation as Core: Sector growth fundamentally depends on “order fulfillment + commercialization,” not hype. Domesticization and commercialization of reusable rockets, satellite constellations, and core components provide performance support, shifting from “theme investment” to “value investment,” attracting long-term institutional capital.

  4. Capital Deployment as Accelerator: The combined efforts of northbound and institutional funds underpin sector rise, with concentrated chips enhancing resilience during market corrections, creating a positive cycle of “fundamentals + capital pushing long-term trend.”

  5. Minor Deviations and Objective Causes

Overall, our predictions were fully realized, with only slight deviations in sector timing and specific subfield speeds, caused by objective factors that do not affect core logic:

  1. Deviation 1: Sector trend initiation was slightly earlier than expected (predicted H1 2026, actual late December 2025)

Objective: Post-Trump lunar policy, market expectations of China’s policy hedging surged, compounded by year-end rebalancing by northbound funds and early institutional positioning, leading to an early sector rally—normal market behavior where expectations precede policy implementation.

  1. Deviation 2: The pace of low-altitude economy and commercial space synergy was slightly slower than expected

Objective: Large-scale deployment of low-altitude applications like eVTOL and drone delivery is constrained by airspace management and safety standards, with policy support lagging, delaying full synergy with commercial space—normal development rhythm.

  1. Key Takeaways: Three Replicable Sector Prediction Experiences

The trend and subsequent realization of the commercial space sector validate our “Four-Dimensional Analysis Framework” of “Great Power Competition + Policy + Industry Chain + Capital,” distilling three core, replicable lessons for future sector assessments:

  1. Under Great Power Competition, the key is “certainty and speed of policy hedging”

The core of opportunity in tech growth sectors like space is not the competition itself but whether China has clear policy countermeasures and smooth top-down to bottom-up policy transmission. The commercial space opportunity capitalized on the certainty of “U.S. escalation → China hedging” and the clear policy timing window, enabling precise prediction.

  1. The core signal of transitioning from hype to value: “Order fulfillment + Institutional deployment” double validation

Any sector driven solely by hype cannot sustain. The key signals for shifting from “theme hype” to “value investment” are: (a) order fulfillment (especially government-enterprise cooperation and commercialization orders), and (b) continuous institutional deployment (northbound + public funds + social security). In December 2025, the sector already showed “core enterprise order validation + institutional chips concentration,” confirming the “policy + orders” dual-drive phase, with subsequent rise validating this signal.

  1. Effectiveness of capital deployment hinges on “chip concentration + capital structure optimization”

Assessing whether capital deployment can drive trend rise requires more than volume; it depends on chip concentration (declining shareholder counts) and capital structure (from retail-led to institutional + northbound synergy). In December 2025, signs of shareholder reduction and early institutional deployment appeared, and subsequent capital structure optimization helped the sector escape short-term hype, entering a sustained upward trend. This logic applies broadly across tech growth sectors.

  1. Future Monitoring of Core Indicators in Commercial Space

Based on this review and current industry-market status, ongoing tracking should focus on four dimensions: policy implementation, industry realization, capital deployment, and risk warnings, ensuring logical continuity and verifiability:

  1. Policy Indicators
  • Progress of Hainan commercial launch site in H2 2026, Beijing rocket industry capacity release

  • Implementation status of commercial space subsidies, core enterprise subsidy approvals

  • Progress of supporting policies like airspace management and satellite frequency allocation

  1. Industry Indicators
  • Number and success rate of commercial reusable rocket orders, cost reductions

  • Filings and launches of LEO satellite constellations, government-enterprise order fulfillment

  • Localization and performance of core components (onboard computers, materials, navigation chips)

  • Progress of low-altitude economy and commercial space synergy, related enterprise orders

  1. Capital Indicators
  • Northbound fund trading patterns, shareholding changes

  • Institutional holdings stability, fund rebalancing

  • Sector trading volume and capital structure, maintaining “institution + northbound synergy”

  1. Risk Warning Indicators
  • U.S. restrictions on Chinese commercial space technology exports

  • Industry risks like R&D failures, launch failures

  • Valuation bubbles after rapid sector rise, profit-taking corrections

  • Policy delays or slowdown in industry commercialization

  1. Final Summary

This forward-looking prediction and subsequent trend realization of the commercial space sector fully validate our “Four-Dimensional Analysis Framework” of “Great Power Competition + Policy + Industry Chain + Capital.” From the December 2025 analysis based on Trump’s lunar policy, through comprehensive policy, industry, and capital fulfillment, to the sector’s trend rise, each link is tightly interconnected with no core logical deviations.

This again proves that market excess returns stem from “cognitive edge ahead of the market,” not post-hoc interpretations. Our ability to accurately predict opportunities relies on capturing the “positive feedback loop of China-U.S. rivalry” as an underlying logic, and translating abstract reasoning into trackable, verifiable indicators via policy channels, industry signals, and capital deployment—allowing early detection of sector opportunities before full market fermentation.

Moving forward, we will continue applying this four-dimensional framework, adhering to the principles of “forward prediction, logical closure, verifiability, and traceability,” to continuously explore high-quality sectors under the backdrop of great power competition and new productive forces, refining our system through regular reviews and correcting deviations, ensuring ongoing evolution of our research methodology.

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