New York, May 27, 2026, 09:01 EDT
- Redwire was quoted at $24.17 in premarket trading after closing Tuesday at $22.04, up 26.01%.
- The move came as investors bid up publicly traded space names around SpaceX’s planned listing and latest Starship test.
- Redwire’s latest reported backlog was $498.1 million, but losses, execution risk and possible share issuance remain overhangs.
Redwire Corp shares rose before the U.S. open on Wednesday, extending a sharp rally from the prior session as traders treated the defense-and-space contractor as one of the few listed ways to play renewed interest in the space economy.
The NYSE-listed stock closed Tuesday at $22.04, up 26.01%, and was quoted at $24.17 in premarket trading at 8:59 a.m. in New York. Premarket trading is the thinner session before the 9:30 a.m. opening bell, where moves can be larger and less liquid than in regular hours.
The reason it matters now is not a fresh Redwire contract. It is SpaceX. Elon Musk’s rocket and satellite company is aiming to list as early as June 12 after filing for an initial public offering, or IPO — the first sale of a private company’s shares to public investors — that Reuters has reported could value the company around $1.75 trillion.
SpaceX’s latest Starship test also gave the trade another push. Mark Vena, CEO at SmartTech Research, told Reuters the company “did not need perfection” from the flight, only evidence the vehicle was moving the right way. Antoine Grenier of Analysys Mason called the test a “lukewarm success,” a phrase that fits the market’s mood: not clean, but good enough for buyers. Reuters
Redwire is moving with peers, not alone. Barron’s reported that space-related shares rose Tuesday, with Rocket Lab up 5.5%, AST SpaceMobile up 13.1%, Firefly Aerospace up 18.8% and Redwire up 26.1%, tying the move to SpaceX’s Starship flight and IPO anticipation.
Redwire’s own news flow has been quieter. Its investor site listed its latest press releases as a May 20 $15 million follow-on Stalker uncrewed aircraft systems order from the U.S. Army aviation training command and a May 19 multi-year Penguin Mk3 tactical UAS contract for a NATO country. UAS means uncrewed aerial system, a drone platform used for military or commercial missions.
The company’s most recent earnings gave bulls something to point to. Redwire reported first-quarter revenue of $97.0 million, up 57.9% from a year earlier, and a record backlog of $498.1 million. Backlog is contracted work not yet recognized as revenue. Its book-to-bill ratio, orders compared with revenue in a period, was 1.92.
Chief Executive Peter Cannito said Redwire was seeing “very strong demand for our differentiated products,” while Chief Financial Officer Chris Edmunds said the company was pleased to “reaffirm our 2026 revenue forecast.” Redwire kept its full-year revenue forecast at $450 million to $500 million. Redwire Corporation
But the rally has weak spots. Redwire also reported a first-quarter net loss of $76.5 million, including more than $44 million in non-recurring activity, and adjusted EBITDA — earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, a rough measure of operating profit — of negative $9.2 million.
Another risk is dilution. A Redwire SEC filing this month showed the company may sell up to $350 million of common stock through an at-the-market offering, a program that lets a company issue shares into the market over time. New shares can raise cash, but they can also reduce existing holders’ ownership stake.
The immediate test for Redwire is whether the SpaceX-driven trade survives the next few sessions. James Bruegger, chief investment officer at Seraphim Space, told Reuters that “full reusability” is what could cut launch costs, while Jesse Nacht of MarketVector Indexes said the Starship flight reduced, but did not remove, execution risk. Reuters
For now, Redwire is trading like a public proxy for a private-market story. That can work while IPO demand, defense spending and satellite enthusiasm line up. It can also unwind fast if the SpaceX deal stumbles, Starship progress slows, or investors turn back to Redwire’s losses and need for capital.