JACKSONVILLE, Fla., May 15, 2026, 05:03 EDT
- Redwire surged 22.08% to finish at $13.99 on Thursday, although the jump didn’t appear tied to any specific catalyst.
- Stalker and Penguin uncrewed aircraft are on the roster, along with Octopus camera payloads—the company plans to display all three at SOF Week in Tampa.
- Redwire’s first-quarter revenue jumped 57.9%, yet losses deepened. The company has also set up a $350 million at-the-market share program.
Shares of Redwire Corporation surged over 22% on Thursday, catching a fresh wave of investor attention just before the space-and-defense tech firm’s upcoming military technology showcase. The move followed a quarterly report revealing a record order backlog, though losses widened. Redwire finished the session at $13.99, up 22.08%, according to coverage published Thursday evening.
Now, the shift is significant as Redwire pitches itself to investors as more than just a space-hardware firm — it’s aiming for a bigger slice of the defense-tech market. The company will be at SOF Week in Tampa, Florida, from May 18 to May 21, showcasing its Stalker and Penguin UAS drones, along with Octopus optical camera payloads.
Redwire has landed right where military buyers and key industry partners are looking, just as investors have been snapping up shares of smaller defense contractors with links to drones, sensors, and space systems. The stock’s latest run came after Redwire posted first-quarter revenue of $97.0 million—a 57.9% jump from last year—with gross margin at 26.6%.
Redwire is facing “very strong demand,” according to Chief Executive Peter Cannito. The company reported a book-to-bill ratio of 1.92 and a backlog sitting at $498.1 million. Book-to-bill, which tracks incoming orders against revenue recognized in the same period, signals accelerating order flow when it tops 1. Redwire Corporation
The company stuck to its 2026 revenue outlook, calling for $450 million to $500 million. Operational execution and active portfolio management boosted margins, according to Chief Financial Officer Chris Edmunds. Redwire wrapped up the quarter holding $175.2 million in liquidity.
The stock surged without any single contract announcement driving the move. Motley Fool’s Rich Smith pointed out Thursday that Redwire had soared 26% as of 1 p.m. ET, saying there was “no obvious news behind the move.” Benzinga pegged shares up 24.69% at $14.29 when it published. The Motley Fool
Defense Tech is grabbing a bigger slice of Redwire’s business. First-quarter revenue in that segment jumped to $44.3 million, up sharply from $9.3 million a year ago. Space revenue, on the other hand, held steady—$52.7 million compared to last year’s $52.1 million.
The scale here is hard to overstate. This week, Reuters said the Congressional Budget Office figures President Donald Trump’s Golden Dome missile-defense project could run up a $1.2 trillion bill over two decades. Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, RTX, and Boeing are all in line to chase slices of that massive pot, according to the report.
Redwire doesn’t match the scale of the primes, but that doesn’t mean it’s off investors’ radar—especially with the ongoing spending tug-of-war shaping interest in firms tied to space, sensors, and autonomy. On the ground at SOF Week, the company is pushing a practical message: Stalker and Penguin drones, plus optical gimbal cameras designed to sharpen operators’ view and speed up identification and action on threats.
The rally could be racing past the company’s actual numbers. Redwire ended the first quarter with a net loss of $76.5 million, after taking a hit of more than $44 million from one-off items. Adjusted EBITDA, stripped for certain factors, dropped to a negative $9.2 million.
Dilution is a possibility here. On May 6, a prospectus supplement filed with the SEC detailed that Redwire could sell as much as $350 million in common stock through an at-the-market offering. This allows shares to be sold gradually over time. The company said it could use the funds for working capital, capital expenditures, paying down debt, acquisitions, or other routine corporate needs.
Right now, investors are eyeing Redwire as a newly defense-linked player with orders stacking up. The real challenge: seeing those commitments translate to cash flow—ideally, without a surge in new stock hitting the market.