Today: 17 April 2026
Space and Defense Stocks to Watch: Lockheed, Huntington Ingalls Rise Into Holiday Week; AST SpaceMobile Deal in Focus

Space and Defense Stocks to Watch: Lockheed, Huntington Ingalls Rise Into Holiday Week; AST SpaceMobile Deal in Focus

New York, February 15, 2026, 12:58 EST — The market has closed.

Lockheed Martin and Huntington Ingalls, the shipbuilder, powered a late Friday rally in U.S. space and defense shares. The gains came as investors eyed new policy cues and geopolitical developments ahead of the long weekend.

With U.S. markets closed Monday for Presidents Day, traders will need to wait until Tuesday to react to anything that surfaces over the weekend.

That leaves the sector kicking off the week on shaky footing, swayed by contract rumors, shifting budget politics, and the odd surprise headline that can hit without warning.

Huntington Ingalls finished the day at $418.78, climbing 3%. Shares of Lockheed advanced 2.4% to $652.58. General Dynamics ticked up 2%, closing at $347.64, and L3Harris ended 1.7% higher at $345.50. Northrop Grumman notched a 1.1% gain. RTX, meanwhile, dipped 0.5%.

Boeing finished 1.5% higher. AeroVironment jumped 3.8%, with Kratos Defense up 2.3%. Palantir advanced 1.8%.

AST SpaceMobile picked up 0.4% to finish at $82.51 on Friday. Redwire dropped 2.3%, closing at $20.09, and Iridium eased down 0.8% to $19.52.

AST has dominated chatter in the sector following its announcement of fresh financing moves. The company’s plan: buy back roughly $300 million of its outstanding convertible notes set to mature in 2032, and issue around $1 billion in new convertible notes due 2036. These instruments can convert into equity, potentially diluting current shareholders and setting off hedging activity. According to AST, the refinancing should slash interest costs by over $50 million but will tack on about 1.15 million new shares. The company also flagged “substantial” trading swings tied to actions by note holders. Nasdaq

Investors in the defense sector sifted through signals out of Munich this weekend, as European officials pushed the case for ramping up rearmament and dialing back dependence on Washington. The backdrop: President Donald Trump’s Greenland annexation push unsettled U.S. allies. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen didn’t mince words—“some lines have been crossed that cannot be uncrossed anymore.” She pointed to nearly an 80% jump in European defence outlays since before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. NATO member states last year committed to boosting their core defense spending from 2% up to 3.5% of GDP, plus another 1.5% earmarked for broader security investment. Reuters

Von der Leyen, in separate remarks, called on the European Union to “bring to life” its mutual defence clause, insisting that “mutual defence is not an optional task for the European Union.” Reuters

Contractors across the U.S. are scrambling to keep pace with new pressure from the White House, which wants faster weapons deliveries and more robust output. “The carrot-and-stick approach seems to be working,” wrote Scott Mikus of Melius Research. Major primes now plan to ramp up capital spending in 2026, responding directly to the administration’s push. Reuters

Still, the policy isn’t all upside for investors. “The micromanaging of capital allocation is three-quarters of a step back,” said David Sowerby, managing director at Ancora Advisors, which holds General Dynamics stock. He’s talking about new restrictions on shareholder payouts and executive pay. Trump’s order blocks contractors from paying dividends or buying back shares until projects are finished on time and within budget. CEOs could also see pay capped. Investors are uneasy—these rules threaten the “income” profile the sector is known for. Reuters

Competition in the space arena isn’t standing still. Vietnam’s government has cleared SpaceX to roll out its Starlink satellite internet service locally, according to state media. The company’s local entity was granted licenses covering fixed and mobile satellite internet operations, plus approval for radio frequencies and equipment.

This week, eyes shift to Tuesday, February 17, with U.S. markets coming back online after the Presidents Day holiday. Investors are also poised for any signals out of Munich or Washington that could shake up forecasts for defense spending and oversight of contractors. In the space sector, AST is lining up its BlueBird 7 launch for late February on Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket—a near-term milestone that has investors paying attention.

Stock Market Today

  • 3 ASX Penny Stocks Under A$400M Market Cap To Watch
    April 16, 2026, 10:16 PM EDT. Australian shares face a mild dip amid fuel rationing concerns and geopolitical tensions, prompting caution among investors. However, penny stocks-smaller companies usually trading under A$400 million market cap-offer growth prospects. Bisalloy Steel Group (A$234.44M market cap) stands out for its strong financial health and 24.9% return on equity, despite a dividend not fully covered by cash flow. Lunnon Metals (A$89.34M market cap) is pre-revenue and unprofitable but showed a reduced net loss and maintains no debt, supported by experienced leadership. Praemium Limited (A$348.54M market cap) focuses on wealth management and software solutions, representing promising exposure in a challenging market. These picks highlight potential value beyond mainstream ASX stocks.

Latest article

Hims & Hers Health Stock Jumps as FDA Reconsiders Peptide Restrictions

Hims & Hers Health Stock Jumps as FDA Reconsiders Peptide Restrictions

16 April 2026
Hims & Hers Health shares rose to $26.65 Thursday after the FDA said it would reconsider restrictions on several peptides, removing 12 from a high-risk list and scheduling a July review of seven more. The move follows Hims’ March decision to stop advertising compounded GLP-1 drugs and expand branded offerings through Novo Nordisk. The company acquired a California peptide facility last year to bolster supply.
NuScale Power Stock Whipsaws After U.S. Opens Door to Nuclear Loans, Space Reactor Push

NuScale Power Stock Whipsaws After U.S. Opens Door to Nuclear Loans, Space Reactor Push

16 April 2026
NuScale Power shares jumped to $13.23 before falling back to $11.52 Thursday after the White House ordered NASA to start a space-reactor program and Energy Secretary Chris Wright said initial U.S. reactors would likely get federal loans. NuScale remains the only U.S. firm with an approved small modular reactor design but has yet to secure firm orders or financing.
SoFi Technologies Stock Rises as FedNow Instant Transfers Set Up April 29 Earnings Test

SoFi Technologies Stock Rises as FedNow Instant Transfers Set Up April 29 Earnings Test

16 April 2026
SoFi Technologies shares rose 1.5% Thursday after launching instant bank transfers via its Galileo platform, allowing money to move between SoFi and outside banks in seconds. The stock traded near $19.08 in New York. Investors await first-quarter results April 29, with SoFi guiding to $1.04 billion in adjusted net revenue and 12 cents per share in adjusted earnings.
D-Wave Quantum Stock Jumps Again as Nvidia’s Ising Launch Reignites Quantum Rally

D-Wave Quantum Stock Jumps Again as Nvidia’s Ising Launch Reignites Quantum Rally

16 April 2026
D-Wave Quantum shares climbed about 5% Thursday, extending a 22.6% surge after Nvidia launched Ising, a new AI model family for quantum computing. D-Wave traded at $21.81, up from last year’s lows, and reported 2025 revenue of $24.6 million with first-quarter 2026 bookings topping $32.8 million. The company completed its $250 million Quantum Circuits acquisition in January. Market cap stood near $8.4 billion.
Communication Services stocks face a holiday-shortened week as Meta and Alphabet slide, ad jitters linger
Previous Story

Communication Services stocks face a holiday-shortened week as Meta and Alphabet slide, ad jitters linger

Applied Materials stock jumps on AI chip-tool outlook; what to watch when Wall Street reopens
Next Story

Applied Materials stock jumps on AI chip-tool outlook; what to watch when Wall Street reopens

Go toTop