I have a story here that I just can't get out of my head. Jed McCaleb, the same guy who created XRP and founded Mt. Gox, is now investing billions of his own money into a completely crazy project: a private space station in orbit. And the most interesting part? He's doing it all by himself. No investors. No partners. Just him.
The company building all this is called Vast, and the project could land a huge NASA contract in 2026 worth billions. But here’s the detail that shows Jed’s level of confidence (or maybe madness): he said he's totally fine losing a billion if it doesn’t work out.
Jed McCaleb is 50 years old, grew up on a farm in Arkansas, and dropped out of Berkeley University. He’s never worked in the aerospace industry. His entire fortune came from early investments in revolutionary technologies and getting out before things got complicated. As of December 2024, he controlled $3.3 billion through two private foundations he fully funded. Most of that came from selling XRP and Ripple shares between 2014 and 2022, totaling around $3.2 billion.
What’s fascinating is how he sees all this. “It’s super important that people take this leap from where we are today to this potential world where many people are living off Earth,” Jed said from Vast’s headquarters in Long Beach. “There aren’t many people willing to dedicate the amount of resources, time, and risk tolerance that I am.”
Vast was founded in 2021, and Jed brought on Max Haot in 2023 to be CEO and handle day-to-day operations. Jed comes from San Francisco once a week. Max drives a Cybertruck, Jed drives a Model 3. Meanwhile, the company grew from fewer than 200 people to 740 last year, and the Long Beach facility operates 24/7.
The project itself is ambitious. They’re building a module called Haven-1, which is about 10 meters tall and 4.4 meters wide. It fits inside a Falcon 9 rocket. It accommodates four people and has roughly 45 cubic meters of space—twice what you’d find in a typical RV. It will have separate sleeping areas, wooden panels, a large window, and a table for the crew to eat together.
The original launch date was August this year, but it was delayed. Now they’re aiming for May 2026. Vast is working with SpaceX to send the hardware to space. They’ve already booked launches, and SpaceX agreed to transport astronauts on behalf of Vast once NASA gives approval. They’re also using SpaceX parts, including a docking adapter for the Dragon capsule and a Wi-Fi system that will operate in space using Starlink.
Haven-1 won’t have the same life support systems as the International Space Station. There will be no water or air recycling. It’s designed for short stays. Max said, “We’re not a space station company yet. We’re an aspiring space station company.”
But why does all this matter? NASA plans to retire the ISS by the end of 2030. If Vast manages to get Haven-1 into space first and it works, they could win the NASA contract to keep astronauts in orbit. That would mean a steady flow of money. Without that contract, the company probably won’t survive long-term.
The next two years will decide everything. Haven-1 is still under construction. NASA is still reviewing proposals. The contract decision is expected by mid-2026. Until then, Jed McCaleb continues betting $1 billion that the wealth he accumulated from crypto can actually build a functional space station.
What makes this even more interesting is that Jed isn’t a loud, flashy figure like many crypto billionaires. He’s discreet, works with the same people for decades, and spends his time between Costa Rica and Berkeley. He pilots his own plane. Meanwhile, competitors like Axiom Space, Blue Origin, and Voyager Space are also building space stations, but none of them have someone putting billions of their own money into it like Jed is.
Jed McCaleb’s story is that of a deliberate risk-taker. It started with eDonkey in 2000, then Mt. Gox, then XRP. Each move was controversial or risky. And now he’s doing the same in space. If it works, it completely changes the game. If it doesn’t, well, he said he’s okay losing a billion. How many people do you know who can say that calmly?