LONG BEACH, California, May 8, 2026, 06:03 (PDT)
Rocket Lab’s stock jumped 6.6% to $83.79 before the bell Friday, according to Benzinga, after the company posted record Q1 revenue and landed its largest-ever launch contract. The news also brought renewed focus to its Neutron rocket, which has yet to fly.
Timing is crucial here: Rocket Lab wants to break into heavier payload launches, a space largely held by bigger rockets right now. The company just signed a deal—customer name undisclosed—for five Neutron flights and three Electron flights, all slotting between 2026 and 2029. With this agreement, Rocket Lab’s launch schedule has climbed past 70 missions. The backlog? That’s now in excess of $2.2 billion in contracted but unfinished work.
U.S. defense spending is now driving a bigger slice of the space sector. Rocket Lab picked up a $30 million deal from Anduril Industries to handle three HASTE hypersonic test launches—hypersonic referring to speeds of Mach 5 or above—and also snagged a spot alongside Raytheon on the U.S. Space Force’s Space Based Interceptor initiative. “National security priority,” is how Rocket Lab USA President Brad Clevenger put next-gen missile defense. Rocket Lab Corporation Rocket Lab
Those numbers shifted the outlook for the next few quarters. Rocket Lab posted first-quarter revenue up 63.5% year over year, hitting $200.3 million, and reported a GAAP gross margin at 38.2%. The company now targets second-quarter revenue between $225 million and $240 million—topping the previous quarter and, if met, setting another record.
Product revenue climbed to $127.5 million, up from $80.8 million a year ago, according to the quarterly filing. Service revenue also moved higher, reaching $72.9 million from last year’s $41.8 million. Net loss narrowed to $45.0 million, or 7 cents per share, versus a $60.6 million loss the previous year.
Peter Beck, founder and CEO, called the new launch contract evidence that “the space industry needs more launch capacity.” Notably, the agreement brings in Neutron customers even before the rocket’s first flight—a detail likely to draw investor scrutiny, since Neutron is Rocket Lab’s planned reusable medium-lift vehicle, designed for heftier satellite constellations and national security payloads. GlobeNewswire
The main hurdle remains execution. Rocket Lab is targeting a late-2026 first launch for Neutron, according to Spaceflight Now, with CEO Beck describing the timeline as “aggressive.” The outlet also pointed out that Neutron’s Archimedes engines are expected to deliver thrust comparable to the Falcon 9 from SpaceX. CFO Adam Spice flagged that bigger deals tend to create “lumpiness” in how the backlog grows. Spaceflight Now
Rocket Lab is taking steps to shore up its supply chain, announcing a definitive agreement to acquire Motiv Space Systems, a robotics and motion-control outfit based in Pasadena, California. The deal is on track to close in the second quarter. “A natural next step,” Motiv CEO Chris Thayer said of the move. GlobeNewswire
Wall Street wasted little time. Citizens analyst Trevor Walsh bumped his Rocket Lab price target up to $95 from $85, StreetInsider noted after earnings landed. Investing.com pointed out that Citizens stuck with its Market Outperform call, highlighting a quarter that beat forecasts.
Rocket Lab continues burning through cash as it ramps up. The quarter saw $50.3 million in operating cash outflows, according to its filing. Supply-chain snags have pushed back some deliveries tied to an MDA spacecraft-bus contract, leaving the size of any potential liquidated damages up in the air. That’s the tricky part when backlog starts to outpace what production lines can handle.
Right now, investors see the quarter as proof that Rocket Lab is drawing demand in launch, spacecraft systems, and defense. But the real hurdle comes next—getting Neutron from a booked lineup to an actual rocket on the pad.