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Applied Aerospace Stock Falls Below IPO Price After $650 Million Debut — The First-Day Signal Traders Can’t Ignore
3 June 2026
2 mins read

Applied Aerospace Stock Falls Below IPO Price After $650 Million Debut — The First-Day Signal Traders Can’t Ignore

New York, June 3, 2026, 14:06 EDT

  • Applied Aerospace & Defense traded below its $20 offer price after opening higher on the NYSE.
  • The company raised $650 million in an initial public offering, the first sale of shares to public investors.
  • Investor demand for defense and space suppliers remains firm, but debt and customer concentration are early watchpoints.

Applied Aerospace & Defense Inc. shares slipped below their initial public offering price in afternoon trading on Wednesday, cooling an early pop in the space and defense supplier’s New York Stock Exchange debut.

The stock was recently at $19.73, down 1.35%, after opening at $20.75 and trading between $18.95 and $20.95. Reuters reported the opening price valued the Huntsville, Alabama-based company at about $3.54 billion after it sold shares at $20 each.

That matters now because Applied is landing in a busy IPO window for aerospace and defense names. The first-day fade suggests investors still want exposure to the sector, but not at any price.

The tape was not helping. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF, a basket of large U.S. stocks that trades like a share, was down 0.57%, while the iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF was off 0.56% in regular trading.

Applied said late Tuesday it priced 32.5 million shares at $20 each, with Morgan Stanley and Jefferies as lead banks. The company said the shares would begin trading on Wednesday under the ticker AADX and that the offering was expected to close on June 4, subject to customary conditions.

The company builds complex hardware for space and defense programs, including systems tied to space launch, defense aviation and precision-strike markets. It was formed from businesses with long operating histories, including Applied Aerospace and PCX Aerosystems, and is backed by Greenbriar Equity Group.

Its filing showed fast growth, but not a clean balance sheet. Applied reported 2025 revenue of $498.8 million, up 24.8% from 2024, and a net loss of $17.0 million; for the March quarter it had revenue of $134.4 million and a net loss of $15.1 million. The company also had about $1.02 billion of debt at March 31.

There is an order cushion. Contract backlog, meaning signed work not yet billed, stood at $1.06 billion at March 31, up from $871.3 million at the end of 2025.

The customer base is still tight. Three customers accounted for 59% of 2025 revenue and 60% of accounts receivable, a filing showed, leaving the company exposed if a large program slows or a buyer changes suppliers.

The listing follows other defense-linked IPOs, including Arxis, AEVEX and HawkEye 360. IPOX CEO Josef Schuster told Reuters last month the U.S. IPO market was in its “best shape” since the late 1990s, citing stronger post-IPO returns and reception across risk levels. Reuters

Arxis set a tough comparison. Its shares surged nearly 36% in their Nasdaq debut in April after the aerospace parts maker raised $1.13 billion, while Troy Hooper, co-head of equity capital markets for the Americas at Mergermarket, said the Middle East and Ukraine wars had created “structural tailwinds” for the aerospace and defense sector. Reuters

But the risk case is simple enough. If public-market buyers decide Applied’s debt load, losses or customer concentration deserve a bigger discount, the stock could stay pinned near or below the offer price even if defense spending remains strong.

For now, the debut is mixed: Applied got the deal done, raised real money, and joined the public market. The first trade was above issue. The second act is already less forgiving.

Michał Rogucki is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic developments. A graduate of Humboldt University of Berlin, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis before transitioning to financial journalism. He covers the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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