The precision mechanical components maker is betting space infrastructure can become a new long-term growth engine for the company.
Its strategy targets the fast-expanding LEO satellite market, where demand for specialised components is rising as deployment of satellite networks accelerates.
The move signals Syncmold's effort to diversify beyond existing businesses and capture growth from the broader build-out of commercial space infrastructure.
As space industrializes, can traditional manufacturers truly adapt to the high-volume, zero-failure demands of the LEO satellite boom?
With tens of thousands of satellites launching, is the industry building a revolutionary infrastructure or the world's largest orbital junkyard?
As the LEO satellite 'gold rush' strains supply, which single component failure could ground the entire industry?