New York, January 12, 2026, 18:37 EST — After-hours
- Rocket Lab shares closed up 3.6% and edged lower in after-hours trading
- The rally has been underpinned by Rocket Lab’s move deeper into U.S. defense satellite work
- Focus turns to late-February earnings for updates on costs, execution and cash burn
Rocket Lab Corp (RKLB.O) shares rose 3.6% on Monday to close at $87.91 and were last down about 0.4% in after-hours trading by 6:18 p.m. ET, when extended-hours trading can be thin and jumpy. The stock swung between $83.49 and $88.81 in the session, with about 21.9 million shares traded, according to market data. (Investing)
The move keeps Rocket Lab in the “space-defense” bucket for a lot of investors, not just the small-rocket trade. That matters now because bigger government programs can reshape revenue mix — and they can also reshape expectations, fast.
Rocket Lab disclosed on Dec. 19 it had won an $816 million prime contract from the U.S. Space Development Agency to design and manufacture 18 satellites for the agency’s Tracking Layer Tranche 3 program. The award includes a $806 million base contract plus up to $10.45 million in options, a filing showed. “Demand for resilient, scalable, and affordable space systems continues to grow,” Chief Executive Peter Beck said in the release. (SEC)
The Space Development Agency said the Tracking Layer Tranche 3 awards total about $3.5 billion across four teams led by Lockheed Martin, L3Harris Technologies, Northrop Grumman and Rocket Lab, with launches planned in fiscal 2029. Acting director Gurpartap “GP” Sandhoo said the additional satellites are meant to push toward near-continuous global coverage for missile warning and tracking. (U.S. Army Security Assistance Command)
Analysts are not uniformly chasing the stock at these levels. Investing.com data shows a “Buy” consensus, but the average 12-month price target of about $69.66 implies roughly 21% downside from Monday’s close, with estimates spanning $47 to $90. The stock has traded between $14.71 and $89.87 over the past 52 weeks, the data showed. (Investing)
One risk is execution: the SDA awards are fixed-price contracts, meaning the contractor eats the bill if costs run over plan. The agency expects the satellites to fly in 2029, so investors are paying up today for work that still has years of build and test ahead of it. (Reuters)
Rocket Lab also faces a different kind of competition on the satellite side, where established defense primes have deep relationships and production lines. If delivery pace slips or costs flare, the stock can reprice just as quickly as it ran up.
Investors now look to Rocket Lab’s next quarterly results, expected on Feb. 26, for updates on margins and cash burn as it scales its space-systems business. Analysts tracked by Public.com forecast a loss of about 9 cents a share, after Rocket Lab last reported a 3-cent loss on Nov. 10. (Public)