Redwire (RDW) stock surged nearly 20% on Wednesday after the space and defense company posted strong first-quarter results, highlighted by record backlog and sharply improved margins.
Redwire Corporation, RDW
Q1 revenue came in at $97 million, up 57.9% from the same period last year. That beat was driven by growth in both segments — space revenue hit $52.7 million, while the defense tech segment contributed $44.3 million, much of it fueled by the Edge Autonomy acquisition, which Redwire has now fully rebranded.
The stock was trading up around 19.76% in Wednesday’s session, reflecting investor enthusiasm for the beat and the reaffirmed outlook.
Gross margin was one of the cleaner stories of the quarter. It came in at 26.6%, up from just 14.7% a year ago and 9.6% in Q4 2025. Management attributed the improvement to better bookings mix, movement of products from development into production, and tighter cost controls.
The net loss for the quarter was $76.5 million, though management noted that more than $44 million of that was non-recurring, including $42.5 million tied to non-cash equity vesting from the Edge Autonomy deal. Adjusted EBITDA was negative $9.2 million, but CEO Peter Cannito said that excluding discretionary R&D spending, the company would have been EBITDA-positive.
Bookings totaled $186.5 million in the quarter, delivering a book-to-bill ratio of 1.92. That pushed total backlog to $498.1 million — a 21.1% jump sequentially and 71.1% year over year.
In defense, Redwire received more than $20 million in follow-on orders for its Stalker drone systems from the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps. The Marine Corps also made its first purchase of the advanced navigation version of Stalker Block 30, a system already fielded in roughly 250 units by the Corps.
The Stalker platform also participated in the U.S. Army’s Ivy Sting exercises, where Cannito said it was the only fixed-wing vertical takeoff and landing system present.
Redwire also secured a prime contract with the Belgian Ministry of Defence to build Belgium’s first national security satellite, along with a quantum-secure satellite contract under the European Space Agency’s QKDSat program.
Redwire was selected as one of 14 vendors for Space Systems Command’s Andromeda IDIQ contract, originally valued at $1.8 billion over 10 years. Cannito said the program’s shared ceiling is now expected to increase to more than $6 billion.
The company also received a $12.8 million contract to supply ELSA solar arrays to Moog, and an additional $4 million from NASA to support pharmaceutical research aboard the International Space Station using Redwire’s PIL-BOX platform.
Cannito said the company sees roles in a multi-orbit Golden Dome architecture and continues to pursue lunar power grid contracts. Redwire’s Roll-Out Solar Arrays are positioned as a potential foundation for lunar grid infrastructure.
Full-year 2026 guidance remains $450 million to $500 million in revenue. The company ended Q1 with $175.2 million in total liquidity, including $145.2 million in cash.
Analysts at Alliance Global and Jefferies raised price targets following the report.
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