Jan 9, 2026, 05:41 EST — Premarket
Cemtrex Inc (CETX.O) shares rose about 33% in U.S. premarket trading on Friday after the company said it had completed its acquisition of aerospace and defense engineering firm Invocon. The stock was at $3.86 at around 5:40 a.m. EST, after closing Thursday up 9.9% at $2.90. A filing showed Cemtrex paid $7.06 million in cash and said Invocon financial statements and pro forma information will be filed later in an amended report. (StockAnalysis)
The acquisition matters now because it pushes the microcap company deeper into defense spending themes that have pulled in retail and momentum money in recent months. Cemtrex said the closing formally launches a new Aerospace & Defense segment and gives it a platform with long-standing U.S. government and prime contractor relationships. (Cemtrex, Inc.)
Cemtrex said Invocon brings decades of instrumentation, wireless sensing and telemetry work used across satellites, launch vehicles and space-based systems, and flagged awards under the Missile Defense Agency’s SHIELD IDIQ contract. (An IDIQ — indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity — sets a framework for future task orders; it does not guarantee revenue.) Chairman and CEO Saagar Govil called Invocon “a proven aerospace and defense business,” and said Cemtrex will focus on expanding participation in missile defense modernization and space systems.
Thursday’s session was volatile even before the early-Friday spike: Cemtrex traded between $2.48 and $2.90 and volume was about 8.1 million shares, Stock Analysis data show. That range — and whether buyers defend it once the regular session opens — is one immediate level traders are watching. (StockAnalysis)
But the move comes with the usual caveats for a thinly traded name. Contract vehicles and program ceilings can sound large on paper, yet orders arrive in pieces, and integration and disclosure can change the tone quickly.
The next firm catalyst is earnings, with Cemtrex’s next report estimated for Feb. 13, according to MarketBeat. Investors will be looking for clearer detail on how Invocon fits into the numbers and what, if anything, has changed in the company’s pipeline since the deal closed. (MarketBeat)