Top three-source view and TSO verification:
Source 1 (Payload Space): York Space Systems plans to acquire terminal maker ALL.SPACE for a total of $355 million; the payment structure is about $155 million in cash plus up to 5.9 million newly issued shares; the transaction documents have been filed with the SEC, and once completed, ALL.SPACE will become York’s indirect wholly owned subsidiary.
Source 2 (SpaceNews): York Space Systems plans to acquire satellite communications terminal provider All.Space at an estimated valuation of about $355 million; according to regulatory filings, the deal includes $155 million in cash and up to 5.9 million York shares; the report also says the move will expand York from spacecraft manufacturing into user equipment and network connectivity.
Source 3 (Washington Technology): York Space Systems has agreed to acquire All.Space Holdings; the transaction is valued at $355 million and will be paid with cash and stock; York disclosed in an 8-K filing that the deal consists of $155 million in cash and up to 5.9 million York common shares.
TSO verification conclusion: The three sources are highly consistent on the deal parties, target company, transaction value, payment structure, and filing source; the key facts reinforce one another. As for the “strategic expansion” angle, only Source 2 states it explicitly, while the others do not elaborate, so it can only be treated as a single-source supplement rather than a conclusion confirmed by all three.
Shared confirmed facts:
York Space Systems is moving ahead with the acquisition of ALL.SPACE / All.Space Holdings.
The total transaction value is about $355 million.
The deal structure is cash plus stock: about $155 million in cash and up to 5.9 million new York shares/common shares.
The information comes from SEC regulatory filings / an 8-K filing.
After the deal closes, ALL.SPACE will be integrated into York’s business; Source 1 states it will become an indirect wholly owned subsidiary, and the “wholly owned subsidiary” wording in the summary is consistent with that, though the legal pathway should be based on Source 1’s description.
Main differences or nuances:
The transaction status is described slightly differently: Sources 1 and 2 say “plans to acquire,” while Source 3 says “has agreed to acquire.” These are not contradictory, but they reflect different stages or wording strength.
The target company name varies slightly: ALL.SPACE, All.Space, and All.Space Holdings all appear; based on the provided sources, it cannot be further confirmed whether these refer to the exact same legal entity tier, but all three texts point to the same satellite terminal manufacturing business.
The strategic intent is not fully aligned: Source 2 mentions expansion into “user equipment and network connectivity,” while the prompt summary refers to a more vertically integrated communications and defense connectivity expansion. That more specific defense-focused description cannot be directly confirmed from the three sources and should be treated cautiously.
Background and analysis:
York Space Systems’ target is a satellite/communications terminal manufacturer rather than a traditional satellite bus manufacturer. Based on what can be confirmed from the sources, the core significance of the deal is that York may be extending from spacecraft manufacturing into terminal equipment and connectivity capabilities. Source 2 states this expansion direction explicitly; Sources 1 and 3 focus mainly on the transaction terms and equity structure. Because there are no further financial details, approval timelines, integration plans, or management comments, it cannot be confirmed from the provided sources whether the deal also includes other synergies, defense-customer positioning, or technology integration details.
Structurally, the transaction uses a cash-and-stock mix, indicating that York is not funding the acquisition entirely in cash, but is using equity consideration to align the seller’s interests with the post-acquisition company value. Whether the transaction will close after approval, and when, are not stated in the provided sources and cannot be confirmed.
Three-source summary:
Payload Space: emphasizes the SEC filing, $355 million total value, $155 million in cash and up to 5.9 million new shares, and the post-closing status as an indirect wholly owned subsidiary.
SpaceNews: emphasizes the roughly $355 million valuation and interprets the deal as York’s expansion into user equipment and network connectivity.
Washington Technology: emphasizes that York has agreed to acquire the company and disclosed the same cash-and-stock structure in an 8-K filing.
Conclusion:
Taken together, the most cautious and confirmable conclusion is that York Space Systems is acquiring ALL.SPACE in a cash-and-stock transaction worth about $355 million, with terms and valuation highly consistent across the three sources. The strategic implications can be partially inferred from Source 2, but the more specific motives, approval progress, and integration plans were not mentioned or could not be confirmed from the provided sources.