TORONTO, June 19, 2026, 15:03 EDT
- MDA Space’s Toronto-listed shares were up 4.4% at C$58.08 in delayed afternoon trading after the company agreed to buy Blue Canyon Technologies from RTX’s Raytheon business.
- The US$620 million all-cash deal is aimed at expanding MDA’s access to U.S. defense-space work and classified programs.
- MDA’s New York-listed shares were not trading Friday because NYSE markets were closed for Juneteenth.
MDA Space shares rose in Toronto on Friday after the Canadian satellite and robotics company agreed to buy Blue Canyon Technologies from RTX’s Raytheon business for US$620 million in cash, a deal investors treated as a bet on U.S. defense-space demand. The TSX-listed stock was up 4.4% at C$58.08 in delayed afternoon trading.
The move matters now because MDA is trying to shift from being a supplier around the edges of U.S. defense programs toward a deeper local manufacturing and contracting role. Canada’s broader stock market gave little help: the S&P/TSX Composite was largely unchanged earlier Friday, with energy gains offsetting weakness in gold miners.
MDA said Blue Canyon, a Colorado-based maker of small satellites, spacecraft buses and mission systems, has more than 400 employees and two manufacturing facilities in the Denver area. The company said the acquisition would add about US$3.5 billion, or roughly C$4.9 billion, to its opportunity pipeline and should add to adjusted EBITDA and adjusted earnings per share in 2027. Adjusted EBITDA means earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, excluding some items a company removes from operating profit.
Chief Executive Mike Greenley called Blue Canyon an “ideal fit” and said the asset gives MDA a local manufacturing base, specialized talent and more U.S. market reach. On the transaction call, he described it as a “strategic foothold” in the U.S. defense market, where space systems are increasingly treated as core military infrastructure rather than optional technology spending. MDA Space
For investors, the cleaner part of the story is that MDA is not just buying revenue. It is buying eligibility and proximity. Greenley told analysts Blue Canyon’s facility security clearance creates a path to classified U.S. work that MDA “cannot currently access,” while Chief Financial Officer Guillaume Lavoie said Blue Canyon’s 2026 revenue is expected to be about US$160 million. StockAnalysis
The deal also puts MDA closer to a competitive field dominated by U.S. defense primes and space-platform companies. RTX is the seller here, not the buyer, while SpaceX’s recent Nasdaq debut has pulled more investor attention toward space names; MDA’s pitch is narrower and more industrial, built around satellites, components and government programs.
MDA has come into the deal with momentum. In May, it reported first-quarter revenue of C$464 million, up 32% from a year earlier, adjusted EBITDA of C$91 million and backlog of C$3.7 billion. Backlog is work already contracted but not yet booked as revenue, so it gives investors some visibility into future sales.
But the trade is not one-way. The transaction needs regulatory approvals and is financed with senior secured debt, which raises execution risk if approvals take longer, integration costs rise or U.S. defense customers move cautiously under a foreign-owned control structure. Greenley said he expected a CFIUS review, referring to the U.S. national-security screening process for foreign acquisitions.
The company said pro forma leverage after the deal should remain within its target range of 1.5 to 2.5 times net debt to last-12-months adjusted EBITDA. That reduces the immediate balance-sheet concern, but it also sets a test: MDA must turn market access into orders quickly enough for the stock’s deal-day jump to hold.
MDA’s U.S.-listed shares last closed at US$39.40 on Thursday, before the Juneteenth market holiday. That left Toronto trading as the main live read on Friday’s announcement.