New York, June 12, 2026, 07:49 (EDT)
- BlackSky Technology finished Thursday at $35.97, gaining 13.15%. The NYSE space-intelligence stock saw a choppy week.
- BlackSky shares rallied after the company said June 9 it landed a National Reconnaissance Office contract modification for its AROS satellite program.
- The next thing traders are watching is the company’s Q2 earnings, with market calendars pointing to August, though the company still hasn’t set a date.
BlackSky Technology drew attention after shares jumped to $35.97 on Thursday, gaining $4.18, or 13.15%, on 2.76 million shares. According to MarketBeat, BKSY was moving higher again in early after-hours trading Friday, up another 2.81% at $36.85. Investors are quickly repricing the space intelligence stock following recent contract news.
BlackSky’s announcement about a contract change with the National Reconnaissance Office to speed up work on AROS still stands out as the main news for investors. AROS is designed as a wide-area satellite system focused on foundation imagery, or the base layers of geospatial data used in mapping, navigation, monitoring and analytics. According to BlackSky, this funding will lead to a flight-ready, multi-spectral, large-area mapping spacecraft and data system by 2028.
Investors watch BlackSky’s stock for contract visibility, which is a big part of its value case. Satellite Today said the NRO told Defense Daily the contract change is “8-figure” and now totals over $150 million. That’s more significant than another development milestone. CEO Brian O’Toole said AROS will help “fill anticipated market gaps.” That lines up with bulls betting on commercial geospatial intelligence demand staying strong. Via Satellite
Stocks tend to move up when investors get more bullish about future revenue, cash flow, or strategic value. Shares drop when hopes get cut back, when shares look expensive, or when there’s more risk to the business plan. For BKSY, bulls say the NRO modification should mean stronger government demand, a bigger market outside point imagery, and momentum from Gen-3 satellites. BlackSky reported up to $160 million in new contract wins and set 2026 revenue guidance for $130 million to $150 million.
BlackSky’s first quarter numbers keep the bear case in play. Revenue fell to $20.8 million from $29.5 million last year. Net loss widened to $29.7 million from $12.8 million. Adjusted EBITDA came in negative at $5.1 million. 2026 capex is forecast at $50 million to $60 million, so the pressure on funding and execution isn’t going away for investors.
Valuation is a point to watch after the move up. BlackSky’s market cap sits at about $1.33 billion at the latest price. MarketBeat’s analyst figures give the stock a Hold, with an average 12-month target of $36.50—that’s just over where BKSY last traded. Investing.com puts the 52-week range between $10.80 and $52.88, so volatility is still in play even after Thursday’s pop.
Investors looking for the next move are eyeing the second-quarter earnings. They’ll be watching if management sticks with its higher 2026 outlook and turns Gen-3 and AROS demand into actual sales and better margins. MarketBeat doesn’t have a confirmed date for the earnings release yet, but puts the estimate at August 6 using previous years as a guide.
BKSY is looking risky, not exactly cheap right now. The bull argument is better, with demand for government space-intel showing up and contract flow picking up, but shares are trading close to average analyst targets. Losses, capex, satellite results, and questions about government budgets are still big risks. For investors, it’s less about BlackSky winning deals and more about turning those deals into steady growth and positive adjusted EBITDA.