Rocket Lab doubles down on satellite network with $8B acquisition
Rocket Lab just made its biggest move yet. The space company, known for launching small rockets into orbit, is buying Iridium Communications in a deal valued at about $8 billion.
For years, Rocket Lab (RKLB) built rockets and satellite parts for other companies. Now it wants to own and operate a global communications network. That's a big shift, and investors are paying attention.
Why Rocket Lab wants Iridium
Building a space business is tricky. You need spectrum, the radio-frequency space companies use to send signals. You need satellites already in orbit. And you need customers who already pay you.
Iridium (IRDM) has all three. CEO Peter Beck said the company operates 66 active satellites and 14 backups, providing coverage from pole to pole.
That means ships at sea, planes in the air, and remote sensors in places with no cell towers can all stay connected through Iridium's network.
Related: Rocket Lab's latest bold move rattles investors
The network uses something called L-band spectrum. According to Beck, that band is valuable because it pushes through bad weather and rough conditions better than other signal types.
It's why pilots, the military, and emergency responders depend on it when nothing else works.
Iridium pulled in $871 million in revenue last year, according to a company statement, with profit margins around 57%. Comparatively, Rocket LaB remains unprofitable.
What the deal looks like
According to the Rocket Lab press release:
- Rocket Lab will pay $54 per share for Iridium, split between $27 in cash and Rocket Lab stock.
- The stock portion can shift slightly depending on how shares trade before the deal closes, but it's structured with a floor and a ceiling so neither side gets burned by big swings.
- To pay for it, Rocket Lab lined up a $3.6 billion bridge loan from Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo.
- Most of that will pay off Iridium's existing debt. The rest, combined with cash Rocket Lab already has, covers the cash portion of the deal.
- Both boards have already approved the merger. It still needs sign-off from Iridium shareholders and regulators, and the companies expect it to close sometime in 2027.
CEO Matthew Desch said joining Rocket Lab gives Iridium a faster, cheaper way to launch and expand its services, including new aviation safety tools and backup systems for GPS.
Desch stated:
"As the worlds of space and terrestrial communications continue to converge, more critical services will depend on space-based capabilities. Success will come from those who can bring new innovations to space quickly and sustain them over time as efficiently as possible."
What Rocket Lab's financials say about the deal
So is Rocket Lab in good shape to pull this off? The numbers tell a mixed but improving story.
Revenue is climbing fast. Quarterly sales hit $200 million in Q1, up more than 63% from a year earlier.
Gross margin has also improved, rising from under 29% a year ago to over 38% now, indicating the company is keeping more of each dollar it brings in.
Rocket Lab is still losing money on an operating basis, with an operating loss of $44.8 million last quarter.
That's not unusual for a fast-growing space company still building out factories and new rockets like Neutron. Heavy spending on research and development, $80.5 million last quarter alone, is a big reason why.
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Where Rocket Lab looks strong is its balance sheet. Cash and short-term investments totaled over $1.38 billion as of the most recent quarter, up sharply from $688 million a year earlier.
Total assets have grown to nearly $2.82 billion, while total liabilities sit at $555.6 million. That leaves shareholder equity of $2.26 billion, more than four times total liabilities.
In plain terms, Rocket Lab isn't drowning in debt. It has plenty of cash on hand and a balance sheet that can support a large acquisition without putting the company at serious risk, especially with Iridium's cash-generating business helping offset Rocket Lab's own losses going forward.
That combination- fast growth, improving margins, a strong cash position, and now an instantly profitable business joining the fold- points to a company in a fundamentally stronger position than its bottom line alone suggests.
The losses are real, but they look more like the cost of expansion than a sign of trouble.
What it means going forward
Beck called the equation behind this deal "1 plus 1 equals 3."
The idea is simple. Rocket Lab builds and launches things. Iridium operates a network that already makes money.
Taken together, Rocket Lab becomes a company that can build, launch, and operate its own services in space, rather than relying on someone else for the final piece.
If the deal closes as planned, Rocket Lab will go from rocket builder to a true end-to-end space company, with Iridium's spectrum and customer base as the foundation for whatever comes next.
Related: Why Rocket Lab stock tumbled on Nasdaq-100 news
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This story was originally published June 30, 2026 at 11:13 AM.