Redwire (RDW) stock has climbed more than 13% on Friday, capping a three-day run that has pushed the stock to successively higher highs. The aerospace and defense company is trading around $17.49 as of Friday morning.
Redwire Corporation, RDW
The gains come on the back of a flurry of contract wins across both its drone and space divisions.
The company landed a follow-on order worth $15 million from the U.S. Army’s 1st Aviation Brigade for a third batch of Stalker surveillance UAVs. Total Stalker orders now stand at $24.8 million over the past eight months.
That deal was followed by a separate multi-year contract with an undisclosed NATO ally for its Penguin Mk3 uncrewed aerial systems. The deal is described as “high eight-figures,” putting it in the tens of millions of dollars range.
Both contracts come through Redwire’s Edge Autonomy division, which the company acquired in 2025 for $925 million. At the time, the move raised eyebrows — Redwire had built its identity as a pure-play space company. That bet is now starting to look smart.
Redwire also holds a $498.1 million backlog, and these new awards add to what analysts see as the central story: whether growing defense programs can offset the volatility that comes with fixed-price space development contracts.
The drone deals weren’t the only news. Redwire was named prime contractor on DARPA’s “Otter” program — an effort to develop air-breathing spaceplanes capable of operating at very low Earth orbit (VLEO).
These spaceplanes are designed to partially refuel by “breathing” the thin air of Earth’s upper atmosphere — a genuinely novel concept in aerospace.
Redwire brought in Voyager Technologies (VOYG) as a subcontractor on the Otter program. Voyager will supply a high-precision Acceleration Measurement System to help the spaceplane maneuver in VLEO. Voyager stock rose nearly 12% on the news.
No additional contract value was disclosed for Otter, but the prime contractor designation keeps Redwire at the center of a cutting-edge DARPA program.
Revenue projections for Redwire vary widely depending on who you ask. The bullish case calls for $887.3 million in revenue and $73.2 million in earnings by 2028 — implying roughly 50% annual revenue growth and a $322.7 million swing from today’s loss of $249.5 million.
More conservative analysts put 2029 revenue at around $736.7 million with $64.8 million in earnings.
One valuation model puts fair value at $13.28 per share — about 24% below where the stock is trading now.
The 52-week range for RDW sits between $4.87 and $22.25, and volume on Friday hit 55.4 million — more than double the average of 26 million.
The company’s market cap stands at $3.5 billion as of Friday.
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