New York, June 12, 2026, 06:01 EDT
- Redwire finished June 11 at $17.09, up 14.93%. The stock was quoted at $18.09 pre-market as of 6:00 a.m. EDT.
- Redwire’s newest SEC filing gives the green light to sell as much as $500 million in common stock through an at-the-market offering. That keeps dilution risk front and center for RDW.
- Redwire is posting higher revenue and a record backlog, supporting its growth pitch, but with the stock’s current valuation and continued losses, it remains a speculative buy today.
Redwire Corporation shares bounced Thursday. RDW finished at $17.09, a gain of 14.93%, after starting the session at $15.02 and moving between $14.70 and $17.28. The stock, which slid earlier on financing news, was quoted at $18.09 before the U.S. open Friday, early data showed. StockAnalysis reported the market cap near $3.38 billion and trading volume topping 71 million shares.
Redwire’s latest trigger is a June 9 filing for a fresh at-the-market equity program. The company said it might sell as much as $500 million in common stock, naming Truist Securities, J.P. Morgan, BofA Securities, B. Riley, Canaccord Genuity, H.C. Wainwright, KeyBanc and Roth Capital as agents. Redwire said uses for the money could include working capital, paying down or refinancing debt, strategic deals or investments, and research and development.
That same financing flexibility is also where the main risk for the stock comes in. The $500 million shelf is about 15% of Redwire’s market cap as of Thursday’s close. Redwire isn’t required to use the full amount or to sell shares right away. Actual sales would increase the share count unless the company later grows its earnings. Redwire ended its previous at-the-market program, which was set to expire in May 2026, when it started this new June plan. There were no termination penalties.
Bulls point to orders and revenue. Redwire in May posted Q1 revenue of $97.0 million, up 57.9% from a year ago. Gross margin came in at 26.6%. The company reported a book-to-bill ratio of 1.92 and record backlog of $498.1 million. Total liquidity was $175.2 million. CEO Peter Cannito called demand “very strong.” CFO Chris Edmunds said Redwire was happy to “reaffirm our 2026 revenue forecast” at $450 million to $500 million. Redwire Corporation
Profit remains a trouble spot. Redwire posted a net loss of $76.5 million for the first quarter, with more than $44 million tied to one-time items. Most of that came from equity compensation connected to the Edge Autonomy deal. Adjusted EBITDA came in at negative $9.2 million. The company now leans more on investor trust, contract wins, and keeping a tight hold on its new equity program.
Wall Street isn’t showing a clear bullish view. RDW’s analyst consensus at StockAnalysis is “Buy,” but the average price target for 12 months is $15.67, under where shares closed Thursday and below the early Friday pre-market quote. Jefferies lowered its rating on Redwire, cutting to Hold from Buy, but raised its target price to $24. The firm said after Redwire’s 223% jump this year, there’s not much near-term upside until investors see more backlog turning into revenue. StockAnalysis
Is Redwire a buy right now? For risk-tolerant investors OK with volatility, dilution, and contract risks in aerospace and defense, RDW is still a high-beta name showing strong revenue gains. Conservative investors probably want to stay out at this price, waiting for proof that backlog converts to solid cash flow, and that share sales are actually driving growth, not just flooding the market. What comes next: Redwire’s next quarterly update on share sales under the ATM program, how much money came in, and what share agents were paid.