The Wall Street.
In the conference room on the top floor of the Morgan Stanley Building, Daniel Morgan leaned back in his chair and listened quietly to the explanation of the company's last quarterly earnings.
Some time ago, using the "doom-day conspiracy" and the havoc created by the establishment of the Noah's Ark Fund, the space companies in Silicon Valley and Seattle formed one after another and led to a new frenzy of space exploration interest never seen for half a century.
As the leader of Wall Street investors, Morgan Stanley certainly wished to get its hands on a piece of this pie.
However, the defense tax introduced by Celestial Trade cooled down the frenzy instantly like a bucket of ice, cold water over the heads of new space companies in Silicon Valley and Seattle.