# Starlink Unit Economics and Satellite Broadband Valuation

The commercial space and telecommunications sectors are currently undergoing a structural realignment driven by the rapid maturation of low Earth orbit satellite broadband. At the center of this transition is Space Exploration Technologies Corp. and its primary revenue vehicle, the Starlink constellation. As the parent company approaches a highly anticipated initial public offering in mid-2026 with a target valuation of approximately $1.75 trillion, its financial architecture has become a focal point for institutional investors [cite: 1, 2]. Unsealed financial disclosures reveal that Starlink is no longer a supplementary aerospace project; it is the primary economic engine subsidizing the company's capital-intensive launch operations and artificial intelligence infrastructure [cite: 3, 4].

## Corporate Financial Structure

The financial narrative surrounding the aerospace conglomerate fundamentally shifted in May 2026 with the filing of an S-1 registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission [cite: 3, 5]. The filing, preparing for a Nasdaq listing under the ticker SPCX, detailed the results of a complex corporate restructuring. Following a February 2026 triangular merger that integrated the xAI artificial intelligence division and the X social media platform under common-control accounting, the consolidated entity reported $18.7 billion in total revenue for the fiscal year 2025 [cite: 2, 6, 7]. 

Despite generating substantial top-line revenue, the consolidated entity recorded a net loss of $4.94 billion in 2025, followed by an additional $4.28 billion net loss in the first quarter of 2026 [cite: 4, 6]. The operating losses are entirely concentrated in the company's launch and artificial intelligence divisions. The launch segment, which includes research and development for the Starship vehicle, posted an operating loss of $657 million in 2025 [cite: 6, 8]. Simultaneously, the xAI division incurred a severe $6.4 billion operating deficit, driven by the massive capital expenditure required for orbital and terrestrial data center infrastructure [cite: 4, 6, 8].

| Operating Segment | 2025 Total Revenue | 2025 Operating Income / (Loss) | Year-Over-Year Revenue Growth |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Connectivity (Starlink)** | $11.39 Billion | $4.42 Billion | + 49.8% |
| **Space (Launch Services)** | $4.10 Billion | ($657 Million) | Not Disclosed |
| **Artificial Intelligence (xAI)** | $3.20 Billion | ($6.40 Billion) | Not Disclosed |
| **Consolidated Total** | $18.69 Billion | ($2.63 Billion) | + 33.0% |

*Financial data reflects the recast 2025 common-control accounting figures disclosed in the May 2026 SEC S-1 registration statement [cite: 3, 5, 6, 9].*

The Connectivity segment, driven exclusively by Starlink, is the sole profitable pillar holding up the corporate structure [cite: 4, 7]. In 2025, Starlink generated $11.39 billion in revenue, representing a 49.8% year-over-year growth rate, and posted $4.42 billion in operating income [cite: 3]. On an adjusted basis, the segment generated $7.17 billion in EBITDA, yielding a 63% margin that mirrors high-margin software enterprises rather than capital-intensive aerospace hardware vendors [cite: 3, 4, 7]. Without the cash flow generated by satellite broadband subscriptions, the parent company's broader technological ambitions and public market valuation would be financially unsustainable [cite: 10, 11].

## Subscriber Acquisition Dynamics

The foundational mechanism supporting the Connectivity segment's profitability is an unprecedented rate of global subscriber acquisition. The service has transitioned from a niche broadband alternative for remote rural populations into a mainstream utility. 

The active subscriber base has demonstrated exponential scaling over a multi-year horizon. The network grew from 2.3 million users in 2023 to 4.4 million at the end of 2024, and subsequently doubled to 8.9 million by the close of 2025 [cite: 7, 12, 13]. By the end of the first quarter of 2026, the company reported 10.3 million active paid subscriptions distributed across 164 countries [cite: 7, 12]. This metric specifically accounts for unique service lines, meaning that shared household or business terminals mask a much higher number of actual end-users [cite: 14].

Industry analysts project that this momentum will persist in the near term. Current forecasts estimate the subscriber base will reach 18.4 million by the end of 2026 [cite: 2, 15]. Long-term demographic modeling outlines a bull case in which the network captures 45 million subscribers by 2030, assuming the operator can maintain network capacity and penetrate denser suburban markets without experiencing severe bandwidth degradation [cite: 13].



### Average Revenue Per User Compression

A defining characteristic of the network's financial evolution heading into its public offering is the intentional compression of its average revenue per user. This metric reflects a strategic pivot from harvesting early-adopter premiums to aggressive, mass-market penetration, particularly in the Global South. The blended global ARPU has declined by 33%, dropping from approximately $99 per month in 2023 to $81 per month in 2025, and subsequently falling to $66 per month in the first quarter of 2026 [cite: 1, 9, 12].

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This downward trajectory is not indicative of waning consumer demand, but rather a calculated strategy to preemptively capture market share and establish a localized monopoly in developing economies before emerging mega-constellations can deploy their competing infrastructure [cite: 2, 15]. The operator introduced heavily discounted tiered service options, such as the Residential Lite plan ($49–$69 per month), which provides deprioritized data routing (25–100 Mbps) tailored for budget-conscious consumers [cite: 16]. Concurrently, baseline international subscription costs were aggressively slashed by 15% to 40% across various regional markets in early 2026 [cite: 15].

| Regional Market | Base Monthly Plan (Local Currency) | Approximate USD Equivalent | Upfront Hardware Cost (Local Currency) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **United States** | $50.00 | $50.00 | $249.00 (Mini) / $349.00 (Standard) |
| **United Kingdom** | £50.00 | $63.00 | £299.00 |
| **Canada** | C$120.00 | $88.00 | C$549.00 |
| **Australia** | A$90.00 | $60.00 | A$599.00 |
| **Germany** | €50.00 | $54.00 | €449.00 |
| **Brazil** | R$259.00 | $50.00 | R$2,699.00 |
| **Mexico** | MXN$999.00 | $55.00 | MXN$6,999.00 |
| **India** | ₹3,499.00 | $42.00 | ₹32,500.00 |

*Data reflects entry-level residential pricing as of March 2026. Hardware prices represent direct-purchase models prior to the rollout of regional rental mandates [cite: 16, 17, 18, 19].*

### Hardware Economics and Pricing Restructuring

Maintaining a 63% EBITDA margin while simultaneously dropping retail service prices requires relentless optimization of consumer hardware manufacturing. According to internal financial disclosures, the company reduced the average manufacturing cost of a user terminal by approximately 59% between 2022 and March 2026 [cite: 14]. Despite this reduction, the total cost of ownership remains a significant barrier to entry in developing markets, as the required phased-array antenna equipment still represents a substantial capital expenditure for the end user [cite: 20, 21].

To circumvent this barrier, the network operator initiated a fundamental restructuring of its business model in May and June 2026. The company shifted away from a pure upfront hardware purchase requirement, transitioning to a monthly hardware rental model in several key markets, including the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia [cite: 8, 22, 23]. New subscribers are now charged a $10 monthly hardware fee (or a regional equivalent, such as A$15 in Australia) in addition to their baseline service plan [cite: 8]. Concurrently, the operator implemented a $5 to $10 monthly service price increase across its standard Residential and Roam tiers [cite: 8, 23]. 

This transition directly mimics traditional terrestrial telecommunications models. By lowering the initial capital barrier, the operator accelerates rapid subscriber acquisition. However, locking users into an inescapable hardware rental fee effectively increases the lifetime value of the customer and establishes a highly predictable, recurring revenue stream [cite: 24]. While this strategy forces the parent company to absorb the initial manufacturing cost of the terminal on its own balance sheet, the resulting predictability in long-term cash flow is heavily favored by institutional investors evaluating the upcoming public offering [cite: 24].

## Enterprise, Defense, and Mobility Revenue Streams

While the consumer broadband segment provides immense scale and volume, the enterprise and government verticals generate highly lucrative, low-churn revenue that stabilizes the broader balance sheet. Of the $11.39 billion generated by the Connectivity segment in 2025, approximately $4.2 billion originated from enterprise, aviation, maritime, and government services [cite: 7]. The stability of this revenue is notable; internal data indicates that churn is practically non-existent among enterprise customers paying in excess of $750,000 annually [cite: 7].

The defense sector has emerged as a primary growth driver, facilitated through the dedicated Starshield platform. The U.S. government generated between $4 billion and $5.9 billion in total revenue for the parent company in 2025, with Starshield contributing an estimated $3 billion of that total [cite: 2, 5, 25]. Recent unclassified defense contracts illustrate the scale of this integration. In May 2026, the U.S. Space Force awarded the company a $4.16 billion contract for the Space-Based Advanced Moving Target Indicator program, followed by a $2.29 billion contract to construct the Space Data Network Backbone—a secure, low Earth orbit communications mesh designed exclusively for military routing [cite: 5, 26]. The operator has also demonstrated aggressive pricing leverage within this sector; during recent geopolitical conflicts, the company nearly doubled the cost of data links utilized by specific military attack drones, effectively capitalizing on its monopoly position [cite: 27].

Furthermore, the expansion of the Direct-to-Cell network has unlocked a vast new addressable market. Following the $19.6 billion acquisition of EchoStar's terrestrial spectrum assets in late 2025, the operator commercially launched its Direct-to-Cell service via a partnership with T-Mobile [cite: 2, 7]. By early 2026, this mobile service had already reached 12 million customers across 22 countries, utilizing over 650 specialized Direct-to-Cell satellites to route standard SMS data directly to unmodified terrestrial smartphones [cite: 2]. The impending deployment of the next generation of satellites is expected to expand this capability to full 5G broadband connectivity [cite: 2].

## International Expansion Constraints

Despite possessing the technical capability to broadcast broadband access globally, the network's geographic expansion is strictly gated by sovereign regulatory frameworks and geopolitical friction. Operating a satellite internet service requires landing rights and spectrum licensing from local telecommunications authorities, which frequently prioritize national security and domestic economic protectionism over rapid technological deployment.

### Regulatory Impasse in India

India represents one of the most critical untapped demographics for satellite broadband, yet market entry remains frozen. The operator successfully secured a Global Mobile Personal Communication by Satellite license in mid-2025, which theoretically permitted the company to begin building out localized gateway infrastructure [cite: 28, 29]. 

However, commercial operations have stalled indefinitely as of June 2026. The Indian Ministry of Home Affairs has withheld the final security clearances required for activation [cite: 28, 30]. These delays stem directly from geopolitical anxieties regarding the unauthorized proliferation of satellite terminals during ongoing conflicts in the Middle East, particularly within Iranian territory where the service operates without official licensing [cite: 28, 30]. Indian security agencies are demanding robust guarantees regarding the U.S.-based operator's ability to sever connectivity and comply with sovereign directives during periods of international tension [cite: 28, 29]. Consequently, the impasse has also stalled the broader governmental approval of the domestic satellite spectrum pricing framework, effectively halting all commercial satellite deployments in the region [cite: 28, 30].

### Ownership Mandates in South Africa

In South Africa, the service faces severe regulatory barriers rooted in domestic economic policy. The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa requires telecommunications operators to hold Electronic Communications Services and Electronic Communications Network Services licenses [cite: 31]. Issuance of these licenses is contingent upon compliance with the nation's Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment laws, which mandate that foreign entities maintain 30% local ownership by historically disadvantaged groups [cite: 31, 32]. 

Because the parent company maintains a strict global policy against diluting its equity to satisfy local ownership mandates, it has refused to comply [cite: 31, 32]. Consequently, the service is officially banned, and local users face equipment seizures for accessing the network via gray-market roaming plans [cite: 31]. A potential regulatory shift introduced in December 2025 may provide a resolution; the South African government introduced a directive allowing companies to utilize Equity Equivalent Investment Programs, which would permit the operator to bypass the 30% equity transfer by pledging an equivalent sum—estimated at over $145 million—toward local infrastructure and educational initiatives [cite: 31]. If approved, full commercial activation is projected for late 2026 or 2027 [cite: 31].

## Competitive Infrastructure Alternatives

For the first half-decade of its existence, the market leader operated with a de facto monopoly in the consumer low Earth orbit broadband sector. As of mid-2026, the competitive landscape is beginning to fracture, introducing alternative mega-constellations backed by heavily capitalized technology and aerospace incumbents targeting specific sub-sectors of the connectivity market.

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### Amazon Leo Deployment Architecture

Amazon's satellite initiative, originally designated Project Kuiper and rebranded to Amazon Leo in late 2025, represents the most direct competitive threat [cite: 33, 34]. Designed to integrate deeply with Amazon Web Services for automated enterprise data storage and artificial intelligence analytics, Amazon Leo promises high-throughput capacity designed to rival existing terrestrial fiber [cite: 33, 35, 36]. The service offers three distinct hardware tiers: the compact Leo Nano (100 Mbps), the standard Leo Pro (400 Mbps), and the enterprise-grade Leo Ultra, which is capable of delivering 1 Gbps download and 400 Mbps upload speeds [cite: 35, 37].

Despite robust financial backing, Amazon Leo is severely constrained by deployment bottlenecks. The Federal Communications Commission authorization mandates that Amazon deploy half of its planned 3,236-satellite constellation—exactly 1,618 satellites—by July 30, 2026 [cite: 34, 37, 38]. As of May 2026, the company had successfully placed only 231 to 331 production satellites into orbit, rendering the regulatory deadline mathematically unreachable [cite: 34, 37, 38]. Because Amazon lacks an internal, rapidly reusable launch vehicle analogous to the Falcon 9, it is entirely dependent on a $10 billion commercial procurement strategy utilizing rockets from United Launch Alliance, Arianespace, and Blue Origin [cite: 38, 39]. To prevent license revocation, Amazon formally petitioned the FCC for a two-year deployment extension in early 2026 [cite: 37, 38]. Although the network initiated an enterprise beta in April 2026 with partners including Verizon, Vodafone, and JetBlue, mass-market consumer availability remains delayed [cite: 36, 37].

### Eutelsat OneWeb Market Positioning

Rather than engaging in a high-volume price war for consumer market share, Eutelsat OneWeb has strategically isolated itself within the high-margin enterprise and government sectors [cite: 40, 41]. The OneWeb architecture operates at a significantly higher orbital altitude of 1,200 kilometers, allowing it to achieve complete global coverage with a relatively sparse constellation of just 648 Generation-1 satellites [cite: 42, 43]. The primary engineering trade-off of this altitude is increased latency, which averages 50 to 70 milliseconds, compared to the 20 to 40 milliseconds achieved by networks operating in the 500-kilometer shell [cite: 42].

OneWeb's primary competitive advantage lies in its network management philosophy. It offers enterprise clients Committed Information Rates and formal Service Level Agreements, ensuring guaranteed uptime and bandwidth allocations [cite: 40, 44]. Furthermore, the network architecture supports direct network peering, static IP assignments, and MPLS integration, making it highly attractive to maritime operators, commercial aviation, and defense contractors requiring isolated, secure virtual private networks [cite: 40, 44, 45]. To maintain this niche dominance, the company plans to deploy 340 next-generation satellites beginning in 2027, featuring optical inter-satellite links and direct integration with the European Commission's secure IRIS² orbital infrastructure program [cite: 41, 43, 46].

| Architectural Feature | Market Leader (Starlink) | Amazon Leo | Eutelsat OneWeb |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Active Constellation Size** | ~10,400+ Satellites | ~231 to 331 Satellites | 648 Satellites (Gen-1) |
| **Primary Orbital Altitude** | ~340 km to 570 km | ~590 km to 630 km | ~1,200 km |
| **Peak Download Speeds** | ~200 to 400 Mbps | Up to 1 Gbps (Ultra Terminal) | ~150 to 195 Mbps |
| **Average Network Latency** | 20 ms to 40 ms | 30 ms to 50 ms | 50 ms to 70 ms |
| **Target Market Demographic** | Mass Consumer, D2C, Defense | Enterprise AWS Cloud, Consumer | Maritime, Aviation, Government |
| **Enterprise Network Features** | Best-Effort Delivery | Deep AWS Edge Integration | Strict SLAs, CIR, MPLS Routing |

*Data reflects operational capabilities and announced engineering targets as of mid-2026. Amazon Leo speeds represent the enterprise hardware tier [cite: 35, 42, 43, 45, 47].*



## Launch Infrastructure and Orbital Capacity Limits

The exponential scaling of any low Earth orbit network generates a compounding requirement for physical bandwidth. Maintaining service quality across a user base projected to reach 18.4 million requires massive injections of orbital capacity, which places an unprecedented strain on the underlying launch infrastructure [cite: 15, 48]. 

The current fleet of standard satellites (the V2 Mini variant) processes roughly 80 gigabits of throughput per unit [cite: 48]. To service the influx of new global subscribers without degrading network speeds, the operator must transition to its next-generation V3 satellites, which are engineered to deliver approximately 1 terabit per second of downlink capacity—an order-of-magnitude increase in performance [cite: 48]. However, physical physics dictates that these high-capacity satellites are too large and heavy to be launched on the workhorse Falcon 9 rocket. Consequently, the entire future capacity expansion of the broadband network is critically dependent on the operational success of the Starship launch vehicle [cite: 48, 49].

This dependency introduces severe execution risk. As of May 2026, the Starship program is facing developmental friction. Following an anomaly during a recent test flight, the Federal Aviation Administration grounded the vehicle and mandated a formal mishap investigation [cite: 50]. Any prolonged regulatory grounding or technical setback in the Starship testing cadence directly delays the deployment of V3 satellites, thereby creating a hard physical ceiling on how many new subscribers the broadband network can realistically support [cite: 48, 51]. 

Furthermore, the sheer density of the constellation—which currently accounts for roughly three-quarters of all active maneuverable satellites in low Earth orbit—presents ongoing space safety challenges [cite: 7, 50]. Automated collision avoidance systems manage thousands of minor interactions, but high-risk conjunction events require manual oversight. For example, in late May 2026, orbital tracking systems flagged an urgent conjunction between a broadband satellite and the ICEYE-X7 radar satellite, with a projected miss distance of only 5 meters, necessitating emergency maneuver considerations [cite: 50]. Managing this orbital congestion adds an layer of operational complexity as the constellation approaches its authorized 12,000-satellite cap [cite: 42, 50].

## Public Market Valuation Implications

The culmination of these unit economics, regulatory battles, and engineering dependencies will be tested on the public markets. The impending initial public offering scheduled for June 12, 2026, aims to raise up to $75 billion at a target valuation between $1.75 trillion and $2.0 trillion [cite: 1, 4, 25]. To contextualize this scale, if priced at the top of its range, the listing will dwarf the 2019 Saudi Aramco debut to become the largest IPO in global financial history [cite: 2, 52].

Institutional investors analyzing the prospectus are utilizing a sum-of-the-parts methodology to justify the valuation. The launch division provides a dominant logistical moat, controlling approximately 90% of the commercial launch market, while the xAI division leverages the premium multiples currently assigned to artificial intelligence foundation models [cite: 10, 52]. The AI narrative is further bolstered by multi-billion dollar compute-sharing agreements with leading generative AI laboratories [cite: 6, 53]. However, these future-focused divisions are highly capital intensive and deeply unprofitable; the AI division alone lost $2.47 billion in the first quarter of 2026 [cite: 4, 53].

Consequently, the broadband network serves as the crucial financial anchor. Generating approximately $810 million to $1 billion in monthly subscription revenue at 63% EBITDA margins, the Connectivity segment provides the only reliable free cash flow available to fund the conglomerate's broader ambitions [cite: 1, 3, 10, 11]. Wall Street underwriters argue that the predictable, recurring revenue from 10.3 million hardware-locked subscribers justifies valuing the enterprise more like a high-margin software-as-a-service or telecommunications monopoly than a traditional aerospace manufacturer [cite: 4, 24].

Conversely, bearish analysts highlight significant structural vulnerabilities. Research notes have assigned rare "Sell" ratings to the unlisted equity, citing execution bottlenecks and extreme capital intensity [cite: 51, 54]. Skeptics note that the 2025 capital expenditures exceeded $20 billion, driven heavily by AI infrastructure build-outs, which will continually drain the profits generated by the satellite network [cite: 7, 51]. Additionally, if the Starship vehicle faces continued delays, the resulting orbital capacity constraints will inevitably stall subscriber growth, eroding the fundamental thesis supporting the trillion-dollar valuation [cite: 48, 51, 55]. The market's reception to the IPO will ultimately depend on whether investors believe the broadband network's unit economics can sustainably subsidize the cost of deep-space infrastructure and planetary-scale artificial intelligence.

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65. [SpaceX's Starlink shows strong growth](https://www.gurufocus.com/news/8912501/spacexs-starlink-shows-strong-growth-amid-challenges-for-xais-grok)
66. [SpaceX IPO Valuation](https://www.tapbit.com/en/learn/article/spacex-ipo-valuation-starlink-growth-risks-outlook-20260608)
67. [SpaceX Heavy Reliance on Starlink Profitability Seen](https://ocpartnership.org/first-dry/SpaceX-Heavy-Reliance-on-Starlink-Profitability-Seen-as-IPO-Approaches-21-4060)
68. [Who owns SpaceX](https://keeptrack.space/deep-dive/who-owns-spacex)
69. [SpaceX valuation insights](https://www.techflowpost.com/en-US/article/31240)
70. [To infinity and beyond: SpaceX's IPO](https://www.nb.com/insights/cio-weekly-article-to-infinity-and-beyond-spacexs-ipo)
71. [SpaceX IPO: Starlink AI infrastructure analysis](https://knightli.com/en/2026/06/08/spacex-ipo-starlink-ai-infrastructure-analysis/)
72. [SpaceX IPO Guide - xAI Merger](https://www.bitmex.com/blog/spacex-ipo-guide)
73. [Amazon Leo vs Starlink comparison](https://www.speedcast.com/blog-hub/2026/amazon-leo-starlink-comparison/)
74. [Starlink vs. Amazon Leo](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCq3FLxJAww)
75. [The satellite race between Amazon Leo and Starlink isn't what it seems](https://www.rcrwireless.com/20260421/network-infrastructure/the-satellite-race-between-amazon-leo-and-starlink-isnt-what-it-seems)
76. [Kuiper vs Starlink comparison](https://speedify.com/blog/satellite-internet/kuiper-vs-starlink-comparison/)
77. [Amazon Leo vs Starlink explained](https://www.spacelaunchschedule.com/news/amazon-leo-vs-starlink-explained/)
78. [SpaceX IPO financial analysis](https://www.fidelity.com/news/article/default/202605202046RTRSNEWSCOMBINED_KBN3RR2QH-OUSBS_1)
79. [Morgan Stanley Outlooks](https://www.morganstanley.com/Themes/outlooks)
80. [Atlantic Legacy Group Deck](https://advisor.morganstanley.com/atlantic-legacy-group/documents/field/a/at/atlantic-legacy-group/AM_-_AprEconDeck_-_Mar2026.pdf)
81. [Investment Outlook Midyear 2026](https://www.morganstanley.com/insights/articles/investment-outlook-midyear-2026)
82. [Tech Stocks Lead Charge Toward Record](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y1-Rvd06RsA)

**Sources:**
1. [bitmex.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQF_zxLEBwRIGCW_D2q2MZvI_BzCuMmF-CcAomvRxDJ4S8oSDsb_Hjb_FuMKNEWD60wm-yQMPz4xu-AgnnLlmddbH64-Fc33Qp1GbqZuHWcxGsghJT85fKIELMtX_fCZ2U7RZw==)
2. [keeptrack.space](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGnoEL_xcLZ72foJSvYcv77Hgsx-oBVTjMYah1yeVrR-EK0fX6RVOwtNM0TD6qWg6zzRfu6wXC9OAV4RL-klOkBg4lD-9V2UVyuVLsWDvFuzG9sr37rRPAYkqscQcruva0cZX-g_2bP)
3. [newspaceeconomy.ca](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEZBI5-3iiCeNtMI3PUUv_5Sm0AUdz8U3f2UEuYpQF6NOtMHtL-a3ByLSUMdhtKvOrRql8h_n7s_eAVCF7YHjYKdSWXbpXDoTfS4LOfysUheSxwiG4PJ9pLFyuoxUbOFA1kabOUHC6qehYzZeakBDD-vMYV2Dukv3DWdn5bXn7wWmN4NDk=)
4. [briefglance.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHd1ch568dFTfhbVLphS8g8CulD-ZoGOfIg21LZt61zEuHtvoseqfvcqX_XqrJu90rHWHVCn__RbQ0V6UFxj9FsnoCPVHk3IPjnK-0FMge7N2YBTOOik7hIGg2s-loIma8Vky13x-ooP85dEfb3RKmtGgXlNap8d5HofL3hUbFiUv_Xj61N3YthIQAktiVFMzfz0ZVuUt7V07eDGmg=)
5. [mlq.ai](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHLL1ExB6BOdcnNHE0Phuz6J2v67pGaR6_aqjN9F-TL9P19zL2RKk6xz3SaNIpPkILWJR1OxUaitxs_2Rymo8pu5MoAcwsnlBo_DavpI4qnzGxsxFoDOJwaNNUAtmG-7k_2uZbgRpfJGBhNFHcayH6djuAB9qcGV6KOZ5uNK1uC1f0uwwypSKYJkhG-OdA=)
6. [thevccorner.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEMRF3GNH7914-CeaYlrO4-1pAN-CXy1KOVVXAkrI7pLDlAKdMkwrMdf80wVdWZkestckLG4iSUPQunHA1kjxAoCIGip8DTLH5V-c_3VFJVnDvnOEyadXvXzN3WlB055QNTzQAu1h2UF9QF2AOHG4JqQqcqSAk-Udz3feU8LR0=)
7. [mostlymetrics.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE-hvoX62cCZ17dKGArlvmvkb95eg4YCXhh-CCkMAOlT5sy9rBu-hopGfxbI5wh8HsDwVxlKbwy_vPDop_fe4vJL_69XaKWDCe07XF9x3lN99AJPeOZKarZyJjyFq01j8ijpwfYJDxUxKcQ6gYF)
8. [mlq.ai](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGDQdpO4OCcmcJvFf4vstIqhCIwxkSs9Bc4R_wgsvfinJXYGmBuSufi7pSujFxBRaD-VEYv_wRs7KaacwaJYoMieguSo7MT5VCyRdaiB5FF0pbWN3B0eHK7nopeh2LFJg3WrKiXD6jr7VEG146MyAPfLT4GKioh3LSrqCEuiXKeTMp91fsg2h2x5J5MhzV_8bEhnydCop8kusY7RLLbZGze)
9. [techjacksolutions.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH-HqzTjl-cD0C-442mt1A750TiLLLNhk1aubAziGyIQoQxEFRHRkhjR6GB8u6Kl69N1uHkIkHHNAtUQ2yVEYGN_jnitYLjZjUrGr-USaIFz93g2GYEUFlhmh4jQn64RrUanmKBGGb7X5WWPe7DEJ-6Re0tYGEm1IXeq3gbrX9qMkT7fPIhCbMZdK8ScKhE1X3X2i0vsxVzwL3v)
10. [techflowpost.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGNEV_JgtPdWtokHc42guGe6wbi8J0o1KQ6Q7k2HF9Yaq3Tmyh73atDBPOhyW-gfuhJgzmMJ7HtOxwom9f1ySMz-FTqpv8Cgk9iwrQTYBTKXAjQCohvzlrzfnaN0R_WNc2YWbIOEME=)
11. [knightli.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHll6Z9rFu8UTcutFWfU0MLbSnoL8p-14jCSUEppPV2xtX6cf4qQlS7tJdYqgiE_dK0NWrdhCkF-89MBbeGcJoN-gld4TKotaBUkBKM5gw2d18QkEGHJgwO55RtF1Dt1pCjzfu_Vcx9la-_gob3qzDqzxRIKIv6dtBGVKban4phz-VETlve7sUx)
12. [hl.co.uk](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEqb6bP1JIlptVAoTPpUbcFoy45Ot8KaGQy6fd83i7MzrSh5Q-A1ke8wx7hqd8zVjI8oCCcG38f7jeJ0Mbp3CFvyElirhfwqjByLh0WfqZbeL4JCjAfFkc_84GKk2eViirLT6i9A4i4kiRhXbVjbS26fqb6-RZYiRkpLVjwE4igt-GEDwtPM5W1BEnOxZByCmc=)
13. [satnews.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHT7AOt6bepjsasMY-nZTp6mN13HFd25mmH5F8lMCwcX7DxHzqGW-aZKnzBIREbgVEQj-p2NRBOYykQMsI1kA98c3u9gVYJdNWVG0Kygiv76VFxongh7Dv-VCokzSHcTTxPmPuHlSiuY7_MgSLFhJGEVO3oU6Ss_wwbsTPoSm_Rh8sYKtToz6Zwj2yLZ1fCQkOHwF27UhBOjaFsCq0Zil2eZSZ7EhNJFUoXEa36)
14. [pcmag.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFRHLm0ewAci31ZJlgqiFM8AGyynfAM6BCCg87EpF1IIa37WZ0NYfUo02WYA6BVYpMetiQOJjM_QOXpN7KT7IKa9YHjJV5HkSgBWa7OhsUwhAE0A2VZdoNUpe2-eaF9GCcY8jwpuAbzJ3ezv6G1vXqDxO4sSTTpl6iApWHcezpO7DsLWEVKQO8IfSdzzU-No3ATrpg1wAa_xQ==)
15. [medium.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGxnqc08U2vHeoAcKX2e3zWz_wznSY1Azx-nYaeOX3OzHwEYxakhfLqxkXCAbzXvaO2s1At4MqJ7OTAs-uOvLmuchdC75PFl88_qe9yVJvx9ts-QL-JYQT0bg1Whh7hms9SkynGEhz1QGZm6iHAzMw6fOf0kzgrbEa4BbdKaimGNoCazSj06KZYbamDOWtZSbRA8TomMmlNwEMc2DCWKgTfY82rXt-O1zjLfkwsJPgcikHC5ct9gaQ=)
16. [usmobile.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHwNqyMc0N77C93-4M0nctPCb0YgT3w6Pi3EVD5wu8uXSuW_VvfazNAbeXQdcKj_jnbIaDR7G017Xx_YKWC-ft3d_SK4Z0wuq1uPey2J79FYzR1vsm6fmtJsdi5GVXkWVOWjg==)
17. [starlinkprice.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEpUojsg4hku5H3TCaq2wjWvBGzD9KQDfc1W-YQ1j7gKshVX0Uqsg9mMmnA-idrQuCAXDmSab1HjCNLPN4P1bmJsxHMTvgshWkxfjEMs2bdNw==)
18. [starlinkprice.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQF3wPYEYeFAC06MXR87B-utRdQsi95WHpEQpz4nBC0lg8mdxrT-MpjxSCuF25lx9pkjmMV5klexCVbFSZnSPHeqnhWwWybvkCdqa8JOPCX1t1CyC-21p9kXuFCCGR-APEY937Oo)
19. [5gstore.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEZP1R-mWAxjo93yBErnk5ilt1SbwK-4TK57grM6Yklu8npY6hiJyUmApK5mCY57JaI3s135yCYFovp_ROrdS7hKKxWvuC44bS4q_0BPyTHJlExAeO2W_lI9p7mKTJ-rfSY5ahoLWymqXwg3M29PiNcRRuXgWrEt7WwLmg=)
20. [lycheeip.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFAC_LXgMseN2L0VidE3zxRvgqYmHhHbXxIQ9CLC8dEphhZJQQDQ0vVa3JyQUIndOLnN94xNM7y7u9Jr-5MyVNDhpevBjI7gY07TeL87bHpHAaBVW1H3CBYp9Uy4I_egOk4xtZgU2PK1MYdIwWXUfB0eeh-dg8Nae6VJ0CCnT5uVdL69NilmHs=)
21. [youtube.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEP8MoRVCn2hV9EDECJev4-tzGh8NCTgSOAuGuy00ob5seCZ3-bCgM5mrA3D_wvjdkZzZG6C8kdIoxLOYK5R60OXiWqvPnaGs9lzBa2H1sAj-fC-60lSNCoPSYeeVF8OOug)
22. [findcheapbroadband.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH0RYfmNvLzhItLfB7goQ0rfPNfDtG4V6b5KszLlTnLx5CVpEfA4_85AtMBPjFChQQ-6C3RBN0urAJ2ZmpOxeYs1Lr2by9m-tTOwzi3FH1aRmAFuH6mnKTvrLmwHxj7goOpmNJhqmEpocCP)
23. [keeptrack.space](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEsMyP5ApnLfaJs93V3qZu0cqSQoCUzEU80G4jS4d6xSkzMx4GuUwMeO68ICZptvnZ9hlcBfC1Oug4kzV_ihiPOf1a57p04_dbH-ZJKa1nsLjgN6b2gOQu1JKrA-u1qnC_3tCuSkOt_ViHTY34Rdg==)
24. [youtube.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGuIpoGZsqpt2WRsKf6Fbg3Hy_1IW97NA5VkzrP_tPKT5e1Q1WFx6euziuQM4eVmL64hzkMGCgoN-ZORhYvwP3Ja94AZq99nsA8nb_m6ViECuQjOA4SOg9x3hPxmuXYmOD7)
25. [seekingalpha.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFovWoe03EogphufIe5lAM0g37xu_fnqqgTXb7tmGYhscdbmzB9QfDF0qhLi3Gi0FTG4q9JtiVq3iPG1nsG9Bzc1Z7mfc9hpa-G0fmPhTGBwEbixqnuFozEZtgu7ZUWbQqIXtIea60LMUbcjTEJaRkuTnUTBBzC9S1GXuGn1t11Q4LfGBM-TDF70BscNa3lnaHYxqYI78MuOdxdVY3aJMwQiFBsxg==)
26. [qz.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFrhiMmctyVJXhvw-5jIw3HyTvMKND3qtFvsWkCaZ28-3WCbxecOhNypljqWAN6WjlKn_GnCufIj5-CqtuOTuK-oCy6YCp6cLw7TF6hV-YfJf6-_x1Dbkp9P9daqOlZWzIAeiu3FUfzJhBUPvqn6PVp80A39D_fndsStE3zS9k5zJqDZg==)
27. [briefs.co](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEerQPqde4DrcUihLSqAkfD6ezUTRIjFK-Tkw3F1YFmsnDwNT8C7ARSh2VB-3t5zyYlVfsMSlqvVL-lR4Mx8ntJ_ghPPQSPvCFaqCy3853MPm2ss-j1LZeDkifhaZWZ7r4e9Exvh3hO6VCMcweY78pVL8X5W4nnpXsfx9EKizu6L_rT_4W1_kaGTpE9eqchiDo5bf8TFwylOF8=)
28. [mybroadband.co.za](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHtj9W8aJlbhp5w6_u3p_UYcI7dG6wEvESwDDSxglQy9Qvnb4fNnO6lAd4PpI-6jCtjrLevsIp9i-TloYR4PaVy0Yin-SHAov49Bz84mVzoY-QYBCyDTy0mWJUU9pgfJk7K2Lbnj3qoD6DaWJ3pZqAhHnBOWgyKYEATN4XTNcujKDER9GrB5MZF)
29. [gadgets360.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFuJ1J9DDqa926d3ljGyP5DC04twrCLsPG_pOJQD0P990oPHwPbsoOX9IjL4pQ2KCvAyBB8cwmvN6tHl30lIpzFOKTNg7Dv3HMjQQpeqaHQYNTGyqE-_pa4885xD4ZCbZn5clstIzgwJ_x1hOL5KelGBuhwhUQwJ3Vnfpx_F1--M0hy7EY35FVu0RV3SB8gwNAMzjCGY0RCBakQSH4AovYdhAkWa8FeCjpk0BDDKmVrIbHvuFxfgh5YQA==)
30. [aa.com.tr](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGd2V6CsmDtUEBiI9GdNaOBQkukGmnwohQOPcatsoDVm-ly_7F0Q0QxIsCS_eW7fcVxPToKaJnaPsN_YzoE1KGngDVHhqO9-LCtWePY-wri6xgn4YBC2if3Z7UKUY78TaylqXSAlDbH9tKseWSfRFg17yMari4fPq5uk8HisLo7tt1VoZKHfyxv1i24XFlRXP7IUs9KECar7GSuwDIxA83knkoWUGun2y3OEmUAz3Ve8AU8DiDgliz9xFfzGtWmS4H48fnRHf8=)
31. [techinafrica.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFGhTk9Xc5cYs0k1dwgwceJW8gREB1XYyWVOpJ7o4PmrADNjmOXBxp9guiZvBRDwD-fZPWLEGR7u7WVgrkN45aW7TOVyVeR9p8Urs0nqadCiWmeRm2slMWrd5lnDQRSFLcmwhK4mqpxPhCQc4o6KczzsWlfP7qyR1PUl5Zfuf-eEwkX7t2HN0PBK-bdWzI=)
32. [advanced-television.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHcmicUVPPxsAubm9MBYTwTUJfMkjs2sSI9x6KVhKwZR5Tte31J71Xyk5V3MXhTYKzY2GgaJoew4uabgqTg6TWBJUepNAeWIirFZEcxdbhcZQvDZwwPqgc7s9EqHGUekWLytXp2n8dY42FGiX0WBiUe2OGz5ZXo5pDHg3Woq-_yhRgNWfQbVtfNTg35aVdCRam0Ge55scKM9XS5d4k=)
33. [spaceinternetsolutions.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFigvqiErLgNKbajNEcI7cJZwDMNuTJLB5_fKQqpJcAAX9VFPy9Jg02ovnxuMhCmtQm6gEP9ZjSMcRfD8U50AI58K9lfXO4V7TRuWYCUQzmyHykJlio_IpwWY_H9HP68jenpPK9ihhVHO-hZ2IA9F5q8SgF8deFE1qaIqdvTc3YYZhY)
34. [keeptrack.space](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHwBdQMNcj53cPrgjSeufkh_e80aT9CvGA3lnot4njt_zkX-R5lV5t8-6aHRO0tnNocibp2XcFPqRaPPoZBzQuSQcGKX7J8luW6UFKMw0AnzEH7ai9fr8uQ2laCa3CID91ud3RADoP8dnRkwclipLil)
35. [aboutamazon.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFJZfw3zIMP-WfDAfDNJwGmgUMHm2LTv0VxuJ7KjCyuJ2SvHkQC9mU5CALdHwWYC5e-Yo417895HiFTesG0i0Pl8Q3kKy8ueT7xY4r_JRF34FEFE6YMq5ylP_bflf2zAghNKCU-_HBO5QoiZGgaVRvU3AuN3SMng6fbzLCJnLq-7QxChK9ifgd9nQ==)
36. [engadget.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEsAuH3300gnpcsRnBTzk-XnBFozdTgU-AqblAk3HynNhoUYHF2NmGIV8e0zAkfPv856_1G-6hMQF_Su9jCK6ijNKldd4zngeAWAIZQ-uncEhD66V2PYBawJXNs4f2exqKT5SX2e09T61w_7R9T8_3iLHDtzWH1WcK0PA-CTHt5T8Pq5SaFWfyqus0jatWSmhClJqFNpU_sAsM9WzQSmuGP_9OnK2DsoAeAIfQy_N2crQ==)
37. [thenextweb.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHQzHQ8R1OhnNYNuZ43rZAhAX5L9Cn3zoJ4j4nKMoitNZqPWIMe4fvTVEc68s5bfbON1LLLfrrJp28KERJq891wQrMSpyywshf5dWkdm6SQdyN25NQPASAMI9Ur1BJTdKbFeYHQrlLwAoHiJOMUKcg5TQc3rPTjwW8=)
38. [wikipedia.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEGpuBRZpekQ_SirDqK5EQ2ZlHdidWqbuK8udZLiCkoOhEPxuUwl7jzSPGlzvujQsne_QHEDAf5sy_ki_Sc5C9ytvgnr-5XWL4dW7vk6Iu5sZ9jLkPdOq7LfzNjeVyh)
39. [rcrwireless.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGKd2A6bR6grT5Kh5fMK1aSD7haaxeHutI9rTiy_Mss2oLHfPdogobReeICvnl1JLAr2CcSpCp64Uc3kf-aDKpzXLkfmLPsVosexbefYaUoREq4HBPkWmYJjFX7PXFIw6KAedU72zGtKniOYGqR03uudiedeqZfueQI0YtbfNmI1TtP6_TyxLaQqHgCFaphOoY8HYsUGA-ePSzup942G8JB1Uplmf2ar8TvsbRsklR14RYk4pcPtlPv)
40. [substack.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE6WALMWMfVzQymK_kbaukBX39gu7n6Ml7GTrrguq6zXgXMvwYXXt5ZPbyieieLYvCF6kyOtNPyQpXExFHPPd7dH_-n3sNhtLGj8zBq-4bIYyz3IE8VHL8MZkYPLztDSCT4YIpMg7Zr5ORNWcT_bqBX8Bfe)
41. [behindtheblack.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHMOcxEsIr2Y_qBZUJnt_zkmW8qxYLapmC9ZcBFHg7gOCiZas4q0yZp6FBtEQnx0U1788f1qYHe5WkfeQW4bEpJMr19prQU3Po9AE0tVuEQkj--YDKBfWKRf8dLRUhfh6XJHRCun6GU0CCjB1l6FsjY-VXQ9TTxXO-z99uGSxDFMz8ZG2bMTsAuJUfqnxk1PWi7qlaInKsqQoACEAe94mCUZsLzisyBzSWAnAkokg==)
42. [spacenexus.us](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHienQyaJHliisQkiZOOhgcf-LCADelqRN3dUvWKO04a6Q0jEk8_ri-A5uCG129ymTIewylxcrJefVwEC8HXs11n9kZfC63zj3FP_0n3rIpjEzSGaEELHt3vE7o7X5Se5JA8K2_5kMOFOfH-JDJFiaTBXM1MJ-t-gsREklgVkqA8Zwfr5HA)
43. [eoportal.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGNxi59XCaYmKeyyFdsaCfISTmHuycwwWP2vnpI0Qt6Ci-XcGtlmeCSup6Um0B5eUAhmGsVVWmhBXb02ePZQxVBXnhimB11GcLlS4JZD-0k4xuNlFwzu315UuDsf7czGquG0n27F2ej3g==)
44. [speedcast.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHsTb8iISQiz5SFYRphmIUpH78efHU4yHf2dV0IPKO_QYHg2etxZUTMejmkeOSAPAK1dYIKWDZJIMc6nWHGEBHv7u_cEyo_GrbSaLcX4IHLNxioCK5WR9qXsk-43j9oQTP-z4QgMCPQciQhw2GtmB2I-LI=)
45. [concordelectronics.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHJLvn5NQ8Ax3JLQG2p6a5-Woktrb8nzNImKA-OQkkE64krezcXWmGsPD-tPaOqFacVnKonpLLMtW_xP7eSvskVYqdoRr0dNV-ejv5bxARi22ptY2SEr07jIoaUZgxREeVxo1gkQTOZhRmGCDhPTpXl73e3hkadonezkkHAsIUTDBSqTDMcBLSB1_05qqLYuZ7JBPtlSoXhMXLXJNl1bHYcvGVtY1nBsR6wojkCmSO1bG3aTdF7dH1ijMbX2qqo-abb)
46. [businesstoday.in](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQG7EZ5hPLQUFudgWyEa21d2Tz5evk-D4KxlH64ceBFKTSMsryDG25j5U4cN6yJ8tl_ox8xNs5YJQmT8PlYsULduAkX2J3Jg8b7ZIk8-m-uXJeAXWpJw6D9gsCKjRFRVm3NJ_e4jApw53VvdFIAVoAwfK9aUWF2zcYU2cf4dFOr2b5v2N46QcgCu9LOw4HyOWXGLuGsNL3NbzqHQrwxk7zN1t7I2gnhnUtkXif3Be_RHuGjstIPvuFYuVFvzh5z2CCvOvuepjlBFGQpdutH8IME16EQDHQ==)
47. [speedcast.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGsXhx_tujBxk6J8SYBWp_907-kGrcPqKSA9T-yGgOwCPn_PE7kt8gb0pc59UaOHDCAlTYckzx1PqZm1-8T1Zei0erL3Tdan2R4dhZhsav4JTpHAPBXoiDc-kzx3dcTx6BdzAmycD0FgcIwveEHcPb1iRWrqRsyzl5nhLUr4A==)
48. [thenextweb.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE1ybQhs77wCBVXk5rmTqQRObHA3yJ3zQb7wD-Y4MSKgQHtVo60hu1pkucAO05cxaqq8nsWthuMV9a_ScxH5sqgenZ7iI7_d5MnrRReXL9NUM7CM0ZTiy8ukZ9nD5KviRVjDrWmzuzTW9llFiHp99pFqWL4BGXZ-KMeVIMllxUV14NpVyTcz95L-opB-WmBIvEwjQ==)
49. [lpl.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFFCNbXkPtqt3o6hNhUKujayxGoT0hCULnn6EKRDvzVjoD5rGup40O1B3xdw_DD0vUqgbL-v6YLk9OvEBb6-kO4DZP5-JK3MTvcDgftK8_sk4qPzmEf7FIXhpD3hhO9huJXT402eza4yZMYwUmObYmzuX2nDuy3wCKll0GQlhR_)
50. [keeptrack.space](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE1Q0yxlKEfpLNraJvucMRczorsn9A634lMHpHh4z6ogi0irmyUgnZ_iXNRyla42LGGs4NqK9Yh2QEUb5yN7aqVuc6MSt-3gTWXwjS4F_kft2i8w-EAgkZ5YzlLhAlySSS7BJ60eImAVkASMYUpbw==)
51. [yahoo.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGzgPJe4EakcXQzDwh8Qw4BeMi4yKbXAHHIfa5mQ0akr1YN0iVcUW_orGGFB3CF5wXaGRF5HEjinHik6Nkc8XQNEfwQSrWzzRvtVLaYOutdu58UwVXks0VxGZ_ZLy9iefXIxiUJC0CIGDAKYsXSWO4NyId-d8G5UMPdwhGN-qUq3ojb-BL8)
52. [nb.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEN__xX7dJsj4NDoGTjN4sZw1WYjK26ucwb8p9ZBJhmLyoh70JbNqNknZuVZntQFtE9VLNRlwePGI4oW2c8XyOe8xi8VMNLFjnQQtajEH9GqIpov_g19t7sdUVm0JL6-bPbANKfbfF3fkM0f8WZ5JZxSj6aPL99OMGn5tTkt8h8OjX8Kk-Xk74=)
53. [fidelity.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFbfpaEnAuJTsbf_nBtqYVe3x96b-wus_1Aywy8YTzNjqU4-PKC5r1990AN9-uievST1gqykNbitSdRN0Qq_FNwf53S2vB14xyN2WNpGivyAw_m7eTN_YgLhe-rBMKQufmT9j9E0avQcBk4I52tZVcL7vB3Mx5V13exHtYrX_Cc3_h_rh7_rLwu0tdF5wE4Azaw5A==)
54. [investing.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFK0fM8TeMSBI0g0IeYj87UwV1tSl5tUC_MzG0nR_RNLen4u3irFd_ZH65QqoRR_8csxW2ZogMc0tiAWxUm95tBMXZAEiaWNIjoVraP-iDhfemxZ7sLZaeiwrvAPS9kwQM5yHUQrrXiw4Lc3eMr84BVkITW1ax1oD5__8SvYMobPBwPZgbgZlGT9wPp7wAzq_zDbO1NUzUHZJy8hX4YhuX6RT4UFjP1BvsD0b-_mQ==)
55. [tapbit.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHAvYUikV6U3L6JzXVFSkIIUCLm0ZJPChyZnU_CiMzHfsi4QBOUK3GdiVFloTcvoO7P-b-ocXxLUESpCHGcQGLco6L8FA0YRD5IW2rkQfXQRlr75_pXN1s2sbPxm-y_PNWPppp9KLCDFGUogPmjORIbGmE9Np_-KlhuShqDcY8SNWZLkNbAJzG5ThfvnTLxPPIPmPKqp1W4RbM=)
