Categories: AllMarkets & Equities

Rocket Lab’s $8 Billion Iridium Deal Is a Bet on the Whole Space Stack

Article Brief

Key Takeaways

5 Points30s Read

  1. The dealRocket Lab agreed to buy Iridium for about $8 billion in cash and stock – $54 per share, a 24% premium – with closing expected in mid-2027.
  2. The real targetsNot Iridium’s growth, but its globally licensed L-band spectrum, 2.55 million recurring subscribers, and a 66-satellite network Rocket Lab can replenish with its own Neutron rocket.
  3. Instant profitabilityIridium’s $114.4M of 2025 net income makes the cash-burning launch company ‘significantly accretive,’ in its CFO’s words, the day the deal closes.
  4. Paying with momentumRocket Lab is funding about half the deal with a stock that jumped 15.9% on the news, valuing the company near $61 billion.
  5. The market’s verdictIridium closed at $54.59 – at or just above the $54 deal value – signaling investors expect the acquisition to clear.

Not investment advice. This article is for information only. Stock prices and deal values change; the figures here reflect trading on June 29, 2026 and the announced terms, which remain subject to regulatory and Iridium stockholder approval. Do your own research before making any investment decision.

Rocket Lab spent a decade selling rides to orbit. On Monday it agreed to buy the destination. The company said it will acquire Iridium Communications for about $8 billion in cash and stock, a deal that turns a maker of rockets and satellites into something far rarer: a space company that also owns the network, the spectrum, and the 2.55 million paying customers waiting at the other end of the launch.

Investors treated it as a coming-out party. Rocket Lab closed June 29 at $98.01, up 15.9% on the day, while Iridium jumped 25.4% to $54.59 – settling almost exactly on the deal’s implied price, the clearest sign the market expects this one to clear. The structure: $54 for each Iridium share, split roughly evenly between cash and Rocket Lab stock, a 24% premium to where Iridium traded the previous Friday.

Rocket Lab isn’t buying growth. It’s buying spectrum and a customer

Iridium is not a fast grower. It booked $871.7 million in revenue last year and $114.4 million in net income – a steady, utility-like satellite-communications business, not a rocket ship. At roughly nine times sales and seventy times earnings, the $8 billion price tag is a growth multiple stapled onto a mature operator. That math only works if the assets, not the income statement, are the point.

They are. The real prize is Iridium’s globally licensed L-band spectrum and its 66-satellite low-Earth-orbit network, plus 14 on-orbit spares. Spectrum that works everywhere on Earth is one of the scarcest assets in the satellite business, and Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck was blunt about why it matters: the deal skips the years it takes to win “globally harmonized spectrum” and deploy a constellation from scratch. It is the same scarce resource that has turned other satellite-spectrum holders into unexpected backdoor bets as the direct-to-device race heats up.

The captive-customer math

The second prize is quieter but just as important: Rocket Lab just bought itself a customer. Iridium’s constellation is aging and will need replenishing, and Rocket Lab now controls who launches the replacements. Instead of writing checks to a competitor, it can fill the manifest of its in-development Neutron rocket with its own demand – the kind of vertically integrated coverage advantage that has come to define the modern space economy.

It also rewires Rocket Lab’s income statement. The company has run on lumpy launch contracts and government work while burning cash to build Neutron. Iridium brings recurring subscription revenue, aviation tracking through its Aireon stake, and positioning, navigation and timing services that bill every month. CFO Adam Spice called the deal “significantly accretive” to cash flow and profitability – and with $114 million of real net income arriving on a company that still loses money, that is not spin.

A $61 billion company paying with a stock that just popped

Timing matters in a stock-funded deal, and Rocket Lab’s was sharp. Monday’s 15.9% jump pushed its market value to roughly $61 billion, and it is using that richly priced, freshly elevated stock to cover about half the purchase. Buying with expensive equity is shrewd; it also means dilution, and it leans on a valuation the market only just granted.

The arbitrage spread tells the other half of the story. Iridium closed at $54.59 against a $54 implied value, with the deal not expected to close until mid-2027. A spread that thin – trading right at, even slightly through, the offer nearly a year out – says investors are betting heavily on completion. It also leaves almost no cushion if the regulatory review drags or the stock portion of the consideration wobbles.

Deal terms at a glance

  • Deal value: about $8 billion in cash and stock
  • Per Iridium share: $54, roughly half in cash
  • Premium: 24% over Iridium’s June 26 close
  • What Rocket Lab gains: a 66-satellite low-Earth-orbit network plus 14 spares, globally licensed L-band spectrum, and about 2.55 million subscribers
  • Iridium 2025 results: $871.7 million revenue, $114.4 million net income
  • Expected close: mid-2027, pending regulatory and Iridium stockholder approval

Three ways to read the deal

Bull – the re-rate. Neutron begins flying Iridium’s replenishment in-house, the L-band spectrum anchors a direct-to-device or next-generation PNT push, and the market starts valuing Rocket Lab on recurring services instead of launch cadence. The multiple expands and the stock currency keeps compounding.

Base – accretive, but patient. Iridium’s revenue and profit steady a P&L that has leaned on contracts and government programs, but the network is mature and the close is a year out. Rocket Lab gets a stronger balance sheet and a fuller manifest without an immediate growth jolt.

Bear – a growth price for a utility. Nine times sales is a steep price for a single-digit grower, and the stock half of the deal dilutes existing holders. Layer in the capex to refresh an aging constellation and a regulatory review that touches defense customers and global spectrum rights, and the path looks harder than Monday’s pop implied.

The SpaceX playbook, scaled down

Strip away the tickers and this is a vertical-integration story. Launch, spacecraft manufacturing, satellite services, spectrum, and an end-user base under one roof is the model SpaceX built with Starlink – and the one Rocket Lab is now trying to replicate as the clearest number-two in Western launch. It is another step in treating orbit as billable infrastructure rather than a series of one-off missions.

The gating risks are no longer mainly technical; they are legal. Transferring globally licensed spectrum, clearing a network that serves defense and government customers, and winning an Iridium stockholder vote are the items that decide whether mid-2027 holds. For now the market has voted: Iridium trades like a deal that closes, and Rocket Lab is being repriced as more than a launch provider. The harder question won’t be settled until the deal is – whether owning the entire chain, from the rocket to the subscriber, makes Rocket Lab the next integrated space platform or a launch company carrying a satellite operator’s capex. Beck has staked $8 billion on the former.

Umair Aslam

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