NEW YORK, April 16, 2026, 11:46 EDT.
Rocket Lab stock surged roughly 9% Thursday, following the company’s debut of an electric propulsion system for satellites and the closing of its $155.3 million buyout of Mynaric earlier this week. It’s a notable move, broadening Rocket Lab’s reach past launch services. By 11:30 a.m. EDT, the shares were trading at $80.39.
Why does it matter right now? Rocket Lab is pushing a bigger narrative to investors—beyond just small-rocket missions, the company wants to be seen as a one-stop shop for spacecraft, key hardware, and data connectivity. That messaging is going out just as SpaceX lines up a June IPO roadshow and Blue Origin preps for a pivotal New Glenn booster reuse test, ratcheting up pressure in the launch sector.
The mood has clearly seeped into analyst chatter. On Thursday, MarketBeat flagged Rocket Lab as hitting a pivotal moment again after its recent slide. Just two days earlier, a Seeking Alpha piece called the drop a buying chance.
Yahoo Finance flagged the stock’s move earlier in the week, after Cantor Fitzgerald reaffirmed its Overweight rating and held firm on the $85 price target. That came on the heels of Rocket Lab’s announcement: three more dedicated Electron launches are now on the books for Japanese radar-satellite firm iQPS, bringing the contract’s mission count to 15. Rocket Lab said April 9 the next flight won’t lift off before May 2026.
Rocket Lab on Tuesday introduced Gauss, a Hall-effect thruster built for satellite maneuvering and station-keeping in orbit. The company says its production line is up and running, with capacity for over 200 units annually. “We’re solving this bottleneck with Gauss,” Chief Executive Peter Beck said. Rocket Lab Corporation
Rocket Lab, later that day, confirmed the Mynaric deal had officially closed—bringing in laser communication terminals designed to enable rapid satellite-to-satellite data transfers. On the topic of persistent shortages in laser links, Beck declared, “that changes today.” Rocket Lab pointed out Mynaric is already providing optical terminals for its $1.3 billion in Space Development Agency prime contracts, a batch that covers 36 satellites. Rocket Lab Corporation
Interest has come after a messy period for Rocket Lab. The company pushed back Neutron—its larger medium-lift rocket—into the fourth quarter of 2026, following a tank test mishap in January. In March, Rocket Lab turned to an at-the-market stock sale, dribbling shares out into the open market. As of April 8, the company said the sale was finished.
Still, in February, Rocket Lab posted all-time high 2025 revenue of $602 million, with its backlog—signed contracts—reaching $1.85 billion. Looking ahead, it’s projecting Q1 2026 revenue to land between $185 million and $200 million.
Wall Street sentiment is shifting. On April 7, Citizens analyst Trevor Walsh bumped Rocket Lab shares up to Outperform, assigning an $85 price target. Walsh pointed to the company’s growing launch business, its work in defense space systems, and what he called a “clearer path toward higher-value” services. That, he said, tips the risk-reward balance “meaningfully in Rocket Lab’s favor.” GuruFocus
Rocket Lab is still up against much larger competitors. SpaceX, for one, is preparing for what may turn out to be the biggest IPO on record. Blue Origin, meanwhile, is gearing up for its third New Glenn flight this Friday—a crucial test of reusability that could threaten Falcon 9’s dominance. Rocket Lab has pinned its hopes on Neutron, though the rocket hasn’t launched yet.
Neutron is still the swing factor here. Rocket Lab, back in February, pushed the debut flight to Q4 2026; then, in its March prospectus, flagged “risk and uncertainty” tied to getting a new launch vehicle off the ground. If delays stack up from here, the schedule investors have penciled in could slip. Rocket Lab Corporation
Late Thursday morning in New York, Rocket Lab shares held onto a gain of about 9%, once again thrusting the company into this week’s spotlight as traders weigh if the latest slide has finally bottomed out.