When Rocket Lab unveiled its intention to acquire Iridium Communications for roughly $8 billion, the move instantly shifted the company’s competitive posture. The deal places the launch-and-satellite builder directly in the path of SpaceX’s Starlink constellation and Amazon’s Kuiper ambitions. Yet for all the bullish headlines, the transaction’s success ultimately depends on a piece of hardware that doesn’t yet fly: the Neutron heavy-lift rocket.
Without Neutron, the vertical integration narrative is hollow. Electron, Rocket Lab’s workhorse, is designed for small satellites and cannot haul the large batches needed for a megaconstellation. Neutron is supposed to fill that gap, but today it exists only as components in a Virginia factory. Management has targeted the fourth quarter of 2026 for the maiden flight, having filed an FAA license window that stretches from July to December of that year. The original plan called for a 2024 debut, meaning the rocket is already two years behind schedule.
That timeline pressure is not lost on the market. The stock has been on a roller-coaster ride since the Iridium announcement. Shares closed Wednesday at €88.00, down 34.23% from the all‑time high of €133.80 reached on May 27. But over the past twelve months, the stock still shows a gain of 191.01%, and the trailing 30‑day volatility has spiked above 100% — a clear signal of how jittery investors have become about execution risk.
The buying frenzy that followed the deal’s disclosure was led by analysts who rushed to boost their price targets. Bank of America kept its Buy rating and raised the target to $115, calling Iridium a “strong entry into commercial space applications.” Citizens JMP’s Trevor Walsh lifted his target from $95 to $130; Roth Capital’s Suji Desilva went from $100 to $130, arguing the combination creates a “formidable” competitive position against both SpaceX and Amazon. Craig-Hallum’s Jeff Van Rhee described the acquisition as “transformational” and hiked his target from $98 to $120, while Needham’s Ryan Koontz stayed at $120. On the more cautious side, Cantor Fitzgerald’s David Siffringer kept an Overweight rating but set a target of just $96, below the current price. Overall, the consensus on Wall Street stands at Strong Buy, with 11 Buy ratings and three Holds.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Rocket Lab?
The mechanics of the deal are straightforward. Each Iridium share is valued at $54, split evenly between cash and Rocket Lab stock — a 24.1% premium over the unaffected price. A consortium led by Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo has committed a $3.6 billion bridge loan for the cash portion, with the remainder to come from Rocket Lab’s own cash reserves and future debt or equity raising. Closing is expected by mid‑2027, pending shareholder and regulatory approvals.
Iridium brings a tangible asset base: 66 satellites in low‑Earth orbit, globally licensed L‑band spectrum, and more than 2.55 million subscribers across government, defense, aviation, maritime and enterprise markets. Its 2025 revenue was $871.7 million, with operating EBITDA of $495 million. Rocket Lab’s 2025 revenue was $602 million, so the combined entity would more than double the top line overnight. BTIG analyst Andre Madrid, who remains neutral, pointed out that the deal accelerates Rocket Lab’s entry into a market the company estimates at $100 billion, drawing parallels to SpaceX’s $17 billion purchase of EchoStar spectrum and Amazon’s planned $11.6 billion acquisition of Globalstar with Apple.
Even as the strategic debate intensifies, day‑to‑day operations grind on — not without hiccups. The 13th Electron launch of the year, carrying a satellite for Japan’s iQPS constellation, was scrubbed on the day of launch. The stock fell nearly 2% on the news, but Rocket Lab said backup launch windows will open in the coming days. The abort was attributed to weather, not a technical fault, and did little to dent the broader Iridium‑driven narrative.
Still, the biggest single variable remains Neutron. The rocket is the keystone of Rocket Lab’s plan to deploy and replenish a LEO constellation — and of the credibility of the Iridium acquisition itself. Every additional delay risks eroding the confidence that the share price has so far sustained. If Neutron lifts off within the FAA’s July‑to‑December window, the growth story will have a tangible foundation. If it slips further, the lofty valuation built on that promise may become harder to defend.
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