Today: 28 June 2026
Sidus Space Stock Jumps After Q1 Revenue Rises 51%, But Losses Still Loom

Sidus Space Stock Jumps After Q1 Revenue Rises 51%, But Losses Still Loom

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida, May 14, 2026, 19:18 EDT

  • Sidus Space posted first-quarter revenue of roughly $359,000, a 51% increase from the same period last year.
  • Net loss shrank to $5.2 million. As of March 31, cash came in at $27.3 million.
  • The stock climbed roughly 12% to $3.66 following the results.

Sidus Space shares climbed after the space and defense tech firm posted stronger first-quarter revenue, trimmed its loss, and disclosed new updates on customer payload projects linked to its LizzieSat satellite program.

This is a key step for Sidus, which is under pressure to prove its small-satellite hardware and space-data operations can transition from mere development to generating recurring revenue. Sidus has also pulled in $58.5 million via a registered direct offering—a share sale straight to investors. That means more cash in hand, but it also ramps up dilution risk for current shareholders.

Sidus reported that revenue jumped to $359,000 for the quarter ended March 31, up from $238,000 the year before, as the company picked up new customer contracts with Lonestar Data Holdings and Teledyne Marine. Cost of revenue dropped 25% to $1.4 million, resulting in a gross loss that shrank to $1.1 million, compared to $1.6 million previously.

Sidus’s figures remain modest. Net loss came in at $5.2 million, narrower than the $6.4 million loss reported a year ago. Selling, general and administrative expenses barely budged, totaling $4.4 million. Adjusted EBITDA—a non-GAAP metric that excludes interest, taxes, depreciation and stock-based pay—showed a $4.6 million loss.

Carol Craig, who runs Sidus Space as founder and CEO, pointed to “disciplined cost control” as the company delivered high-res images from LizzieSat-3 and got systems ready for LizzieSat-4 and LizzieSat-5. Sidus Space, Inc.

Sidus reported that LizzieSat-3 has returned its first images using HEO USA’s non-Earth imaging camera, capturing sub-5-meter resolution shots. The term “non-Earth imaging” means the camera targets objects out in space, not scenes on Earth. Sidus Space, Inc.

The company announced an expanded deal with Lonestar Data Holdings to develop a second StarVault orbital data-storage payload. It also reached an integration milestone with Maris-Tech on an AI-powered edge computing payload set for LizzieSat-4. Edge computing processes data near its source instead of routing it to a far-off data center.

Sidus reported cash dropped to $27.3 million as of March 31, down from $43.2 million at the close of 2025. The company burned through $5.6 million in operating activities during the quarter. No term debt on the books, according to Sidus. After the quarter ended, an April capital raise brought in roughly $58.5 million in gross proceeds.

During the earnings call, Chief Financial Officer Adarsh Parekh pointed to the quarter’s “transition to commercialization” along with the “financial impacts” tied to ramping up a deep-tech space operation. He added the latest capital injection offers Sidus flexibility—helping support growth plans and cutting back near-term financing risk. MarketBeat

Sidus flagged a shakeup in its finance team, saying the current CFO will exit on June 1. John Burke steps in as interim CFO as the company kicks off its hunt for a long-term successor.

The gulf between competitors isn’t closing. Last week, BlackSky, a space-based intelligence firm, posted first-quarter revenue of $20.8 million. Planet Labs, for its part, reported full-year fiscal 2026 revenue at $307.7 million and noted that 98% of its annual contract value was recurring by year-end. Sidus, still at an earlier stage, is working to turn payload commissioning, satellite services, and defense hardware into a more substantial revenue stream.

There’s a risk here: fresh cash might extend the runway, but without steady traction, it won’t be enough. Delays in customer trials, payload launches, or defense testing could leave Sidus with quarterly losses that continue to dwarf revenue. Shareholders, already wary, could bristle at the prospect of more stock hitting the market.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Today

  • Aristocrat Leisure Unveils A$1.12 Billion Buy-Back Balance Ahead of July Update
    June 28, 2026, 11:49 AM EDT. Aristocrat Leisure Ltd (ASX:ALL) has repurchased 24.56 million shares, spending A$1.38 billion of its A$2.5 billion buyback program, leaving around A$1.12 billion available. The stock closed at A$58.69 on June 26, up 8.2% for the week, outperforming the S&P/ASX 200 which fell 0.7%. Aristocrat's investor briefing and interim dividend payout of 50 cents per share are scheduled for July 1. With shares currently trading about 20% below their 52-week high of A$73.29, the remaining buyback funds could repurchase roughly 19.1 million shares, supporting the stock amid mixed market sentiment. Analyst consensus suggests modest upside with a 12-month average price target of A$63.34, highlighting cautious optimism ahead of forthcoming updates.

Latest articles

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) trades after Prime Day jump, AWS in focus as basket sizes shrink

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) trades after Prime Day jump, AWS in focus as basket sizes shrink

28 June 2026
Amazon closed Friday at $232.69, up 2.5% on massive volume, but still down 4.8% from June 18; Prime Day U.S. sales jumped 9.3% to $26.4 billion as average order size fell 10.6%, while AWS will raise AI compute prices by about 20% in July, spotlighting investor focus on whether higher AWS pricing can offset soaring AI infrastructure costs.
Ripple MiCA Approval Moves RLUSD, XRP (CRYPTO:XRP) Not Focus, in Europe Payments Push

Ripple MiCA Approval Moves RLUSD, XRP (CRYPTO:XRP) Not Focus, in Europe Payments Push

28 June 2026
Ripple’s preliminary Luxembourg crypto license could open regulated EU payments, but XRP traded near $1.05—still 71% below its 2025 high—as investors await proof that RLUSD stablecoin flows drive real demand on the XRP Ledger, not just Ripple’s private platform; RLUSD supply fell 9% in 30 days while XRPL stablecoin value rose 20%.
Plug Power (NASDAQ:PLUG) stock heads into June 30 cash deadline after shares fall five days

Plug Power (NASDAQ:PLUG) stock heads into June 30 cash deadline after shares fall five days

28 June 2026
Plug Power (PLUG) fell 1.17% to $2.54 Friday, capping a five-day, 10.9% slide as volume jumped above average, with investors eyeing a June 30 deadline to close a $132.5M–$142M asset sale to Stream Data Centers—a key liquidity event equal to up to 64% of unrestricted cash and nearly all Q1 operating cash use—amid a shortened trading week before the July 3 market holiday.
Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) faces Gemini shortage as Chrome training draws crowds

Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) faces Gemini shortage as Chrome training draws crowds

28 June 2026
Chrome’s 70.25% global browser share cements its role as Alphabet’s key gateway for AI features and ad revenue, with Q1 Search & other ads delivering $60.4 billion—about 55% of total revenue—while Google faces supply limits for Gemini AI and ongoing antitrust risks; shares last quoted at $337.39, down 2.0%.
Rackspace Stock Jumps 26% As AMD AI Deal Tests RXT Turnaround Story
Previous Story

Rackspace Stock Jumps 26% As AMD AI Deal Tests RXT Turnaround Story

Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz
Next Story

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 15.05.2026

Go toTop