Blast-off: Why Rocket Lab shares are up 38%

Blast-off: Why Rocket Lab shares are up 38%

This month’s surge means his stake is now about US$347m ($574m).

Rocket Lab’s twin spacecraft for Nasa’s Escapade mission to Mars – “Blue” and “Gold” – fully assembled and ready for shipping at the company’s Spacecraft Production Complex and headquarters in Long Beach, California, before shipping to the launch site at Cape Canaveral. Photo / Rockeet Lab

Despite finally breaking out of the sub-US$5 orbit where it’s mostly been languishing since mid-2022, the Kiwi-American’s shares are still well shy of when it listed on the Nasdaq in August 2021 (US$10) or the September 2021 lift-off when it briefly topped US$20.

Separately, Rocket Lab said in an NZ Companies Office filing that it has diverted its Sikorsky-S92 and a Bell 429 helicopters after calling time on its ambitious programme of catching Electron rocket boosters as they fell from space in favour of “more financially viable” retrieval after splashdown.

An artist impression of Blue and Gold in orbit around Mars. The Rocket Lab designed and built satellites will be carried to Mars by the maiden flight of the New Glenn rocket, made by the Jeff Bezos-backed Blue Origin, launching from Cape Canaveral in October. The pair should be in orbit around the Red Planet in September next year. They will study its atmosphere until early 2027. Image / Rocket Lab
An artist impression of Blue and Gold in orbit around Mars. The Rocket Lab designed and built satellites will be carried to Mars by the maiden flight of the New Glenn rocket, made by the Jeff Bezos-backed Blue Origin, launching from Cape Canaveral in October. The pair should be in orbit around the Red Planet in September next year. They will study its atmosphere until early 2027. Image / Rocket Lab

Neutron will land under its own power. One helicopter — presumably the Bell 429, given the price point — was sold for $6.3m, with the firm realising a $1.8m gain. The other was listed as held for sale with a carrying value of $14.3m.

Although it managed to grapple on to an Electron under parachute only briefly, in May 2022, before the pilot was forced to let it go, the Sikorsky found fame when Sir Peter pressed it into service for Cyclone Gabrielle missions in February last year (see There’s a starman, freighting in supplies).

Revenue surge

On August 8, Rocket Lab reported June-quarter revenue that jumped 70% to US$106.2m versus the year-ago quarter.

The increase came from more launches, but also “significant growth” in its systems business, which is set to hit headlines this year when two Rocket Lab-designed and built spacecraft go into orbit around Mars as part of Nasa’s Escapade mission to study the red planet’s atmosphere (Rocket Lab hasn’t put a value on its Escapade contract. The total budget for the mission has been estimated at US$79m, including US$55m for the New Glenn launch.)

Its net loss narrowed to US$85.9m from the year-ago US$91.5m.

The firm, which staged a US$355m convertible note offering in February, finished the quarter with US$546.8m in cash and equivalents.

Rocket Lab has long forecast it won’t hit profit until after the launch of its much-larger, crew-capable Neutron rocket, which will cost customers US$50-US$55m a launch, versus aboutd US$7.5m for the Electron today.

In May, the company said Neutron’s first launch from the under-construction Launch Complex 3 in Virginia, scheduled by the end of this year, would be mid-2025. The firm stuck by that revised date with today’s quarterly result.

The company said there had been a successful “hot fire” of Neutron’s Archimedes engine at Nasa’s Stennis Space Centre in Mississippi this month (which close followers of the company would have already seen on founder and CEO Peter Beck’s social media).

Rocket Lab also said today it has begun installation of the largest automated fibre placement (AFP) machine of its kind into the company’s Neutron rocket production line in Maryland. The AFP machine will enable Rocket Lab to automate production of the largest carbon composite rocket structures in history, the company says.

With its first-quarter result, Rocket Lab said its backlog had topped US$1b for the first time.

Today, it said it now has US$1.07b of orders in its pipeline.

The firm, which staged its 50th Electron launch on June 20, continues its drive to increase the frequency of Electron launches from Launch Complex 1 at Mahia Penninsula and Launch Complex 2 in Virginia. Its 51st launch was on August 3. The window for its 52nd launch opens on August 11, potentially making it an eight-day turnaround between missions.

Towards the end of the June quarter, Rocket Lab announced more federal funding from a US goverment perhaps mindful of developing too great a dependence on Elon Musk’s SpaceX — for which Rocket Lab has emerged as the most serious rival (according to an investor presentation released this morning, the Kiwi-American firm’s Electron rocket accounts for 64% of non-SpaceX US orbital launches so far this year).

Rocket Lab said its satellite solar panel plant in New Mexico had received US$23.9m in funding under the Chips and Science Act of 2022 — popularly known as the Chips Act and designed to boost semiconductor manufacturing in the US.

New Mexico’s state government contributed a further US$25.5m.

New Mexico is home to SolAero, maker of the solar panels that power Nasa’s James Webb Space telescope, which was bought by Rocket Lab for US$80m in 2022. The Chips Act and state government funding will go towards developing radiation-hardened solar cells — a project Rocket Lab says will create 100 local jobs (the firm now employs 1800 worldwide, including 750 in NZ).

Earlier, Rocket Lab received a US$23.35 grant from the US Air Force’s new Space Force division for work on the Neutron’s upper stage.

It has also received about US$45m in subsidies and tax breaks from Virginia towards Neutron’s assembly plant, mission control and launchpad, which are all under construction at Nasa’s Wallops Island spaceport in the eastern seaboard state.

In the June quarter, Rocket Lab expanded the slate of work for its fully owned subsidiary Rocket Lab National Security, as it was awarded a US$32m ($53m) contract to contribute to the Tactically Responsive Space Mission known as Victus Haze in a push to give the US military’s Space Force wing the ability to rapidly respond to threats from space.

Chris Keall is an Auckland-based member of the Herald’s business team. He joined the Herald in 2018 and is the technology editor and a senior business writer.