Today: 23 June 2026
Redwire’s Space Surge Pauses as Jefferies Lowers Rating
2 June 2026
2 mins read

Redwire’s Space Surge Pauses as Jefferies Lowers Rating

New York, June 2, 2026, 15:04 (EDT)

Redwire Corp traded a bit higher Tuesday, after dropping hard Monday. Jefferies downgraded the space-and-defense name to “Hold,” saying the stock’s run was outpacing the company’s fundamentals.

Redwire shares gained 0.7% to $20.82 in afternoon trade, putting the company’s market value near $4.0 billion. The stock touched $22.13 at its high and dropped to $20.36 at the low. Volume topped 30 million shares for the session.

Redwire has turned into one of the main ways public investors can get exposure to space stocks, especially with SpaceX eyeing what could be the biggest IPO ever. Reuters said Tuesday that SpaceX is shooting for a $1.75 trillion valuation and wants to raise at least $75 billion. The company could go public as soon as June 12.

Jefferies lifted its price target on Redwire to $24 from $13 but lowered its rating on the stock, saying shares are up 223% this year and don’t have much near-term upside. Analyst Greg Konrad noted that Redwire is working through backlog — orders signed but not yet counted as sales — and needs to turn that into revenue.

Redwire’s higher multiple is getting attention. Jefferies said most of the recent gains in the stock are because of valuation, not because forecasts improved. The firm expects adjusted EBITDA to stay negative in 2026. Jefferies says this profit metric leaves out financing, tax, and some non-cash items.

Redwire posted a 57.9% jump in first-quarter revenue to $97.0 million and reported backlog at a record $498.1 million. The book-to-bill ratio came in at 1.92. CEO Peter Cannito said demand for the company’s differentiated products remains “very strong.” Redwire Corporation

Cash profit is in focus. Redwire booked a net loss of $76.5 million for the first quarter and posted adjusted EBITDA of minus $9.2 million. The company stuck to its 2026 revenue target, still calling for $450 million to $500 million in sales. “Pleased to reaffirm” that outlook, said CFO Chris Edmunds. Redwire Corporation

Space stocks moved higher Tuesday, but gains weren’t even. AST SpaceMobile jumped 10.5%, Intuitive Machines finished up 4.4% and Rocket Lab climbed 1.6%. That beat Redwire, which only managed a smaller bounce.

Still, the sector’s biggest mover has a valuation flag. Morningstar analysts put SpaceX at $780 billion, which is less than half its reported IPO target. Analyst Nicolas Owens said, “We think the company has been significantly overvalued.” For Redwire, that works both ways: a SpaceX IPO could keep the focus on space stocks, but it might also draw money away to the new top name. Reuters

Risk is clear. Redwire’s recent quarterly filing says orders in backlog may never become revenue and notes U.S. government contracts are often only partly funded, can get canceled fast, and come with heavy audits. Redwire also sold about 6.94 million shares through an at-the-market program in Q1, raising $63.5 million net but boosting the number of shares.

Redwire’s stock is trading on timing more than whether space demand holds up. Investors want proof that orders turn into sales, sales into cash, and that the defense-tech story keeps going after the SpaceX effect cools off.

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the founder and CEO of TS2 Space, a satellite communications company serving customers around the world. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he has more than two decades of experience in telecommunications, satellite services and technology ventures. He writes about satellite communications, space technology, artificial intelligence and the stock market, with a particular focus on technology companies, semiconductors, emerging industries and the trends shaping global innovation.

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