Jacksonville, Florida, June 12, 2026, 19:02 EDT
- Redwire shares changed hands at $15.12, off about 11.6% after ranging from $14.75 to $18.45 in active trading.
- Smaller space stocks sold off after SpaceX’s public listing, with losses picking up after Redwire launched a $500 million at-the-market equity program. The move lets Redwire increase its outstanding share count as it sells more stock.
- The big question for investors is if Redwire will turn its largest-ever backlog into higher revenue and stronger cash flows, and do it without relying too much on issuing new shares.
Redwire Corporation shares fell on Friday, with investors backing away from smaller space stocks after SpaceX’s market debut drew fresh attention. RDW was last at $15.12, down $1.98 or 11.6%. More than 64 million shares traded so far, with the session range between $14.75 and $18.45. The drop stands out since Redwire had been running higher in a broad speculative move in space stocks. Sector shifts like this can squeeze valuations even if the company’s long-term outlook doesn’t change.
Space stocks sold off as the tape went risk-off, Reuters said Friday. Investors took profits on SpaceX’s trading debut, with Rocket Lab, Planet Labs, Intuitive Machines, AST SpaceMobile and Virgin Galactic all down. Chris Beauchamp at IG Group told Reuters investors might be worried the “hype can’t quite live up to expectations.” Talley Léger at The Wealth Consulting Group pointed to “capital recycling” as some investors move out of old names to make space for SpaceX. Reuters For RDW, that puts a spotlight both on Redwire’s contracts and earnings, and whether space stocks are trading above what fundamentals support.
Dilution risk weighed on Redwire after the company filed on June 9 saying it may sell up to $500 million in common stock through a new at-the-market program. An ATM program lets Redwire sell shares into the market over time, instead of through a single big deal. SEC Redwire isn’t required to issue new shares and can halt the program, but the prospectus flags the risk: more equity raises can dilute holders, so each share could become a smaller piece if the company issues more stock.
Redwire’s capital structure came up Friday in a separate Form 4. AE Red Holdings and related parties exercised warrants for 2 million shares at $11.50, doing it cashless. Redwire kept 1,070,565 shares to cover the price, leaving 929,435 shares issued. The warrants let holders buy at a set price. Stock Titan The filing doesn’t show the holder is bearish, but it hit as traders were already eyeing dilution risk and insider supply.
Bulls argue Redwire isn’t just a story stock. First-quarter numbers showed 57.9% revenue growth over last year to $97.0 million. Gross margin rose to 26.6%. The book-to-bill ratio hit 1.92, so fresh orders were almost double recognized revenue. Backlog reached a record $498.1 million. That’s contracted work still to be booked as sales. Redwire Corporation The company kept its 2026 revenue forecast of $450 million to $500 million. CEO Peter Cannito called demand for Redwire’s products “very strong.” Redwire Corporation
The bear case sticks on whether the company can actually turn demand into lasting profits and cash flow. Redwire posted a $76.5 million net loss for the first quarter, with over $44 million tied to non-recurring items, and reported adjusted EBITDA at negative $9.2 million. Redwire Corporation In its own prospectus, Redwire points to volatility, potential dilution, dependence on the capital markets, and risk that negative analyst notes or bad press could hit the stock.
At today’s price, RDW comes off as risky rather than clearly cheap. There’s upside here if Redwire delivers on its backlog, grabs more defense and space business, and gets closer to cash generation. But the ATM facility, recent warrant moves, continued net losses, and the sector’s valuation pullback put most of the risk-reward on execution. The next quarterly update is the big event for investors. Key will be how revenue tracks against the $450 million to $500 million full-year target, whether margins keep improving, and if management can fund growth without much more share issuance.