Shares of Rocket Lab USA (NASDAQ:RKLB) rose 5% on Monday, continuing a recent stretch of gains following upbeat analyst remarks and company disclosures made at the Space Symposium.
Stifel analyst Erik Rasmussen raised his price objective on the company to $105 from $90 while keeping a Buy rating in place. The new $105 target equals the Street High for Rocket Lab. For context, the shares finished trading on Friday at $84.80.
Rasmussen said he met with Rocket Lab management at the 41st annual Space Symposium and reiterated his strong conviction in the company. He pointed to Rocket Lab's position as a leading pure-play space company and cited consistent revenue growth, a sizeable and growing backlog, and the scheduled debut of the Neutron rocket later this year as key positive attributes. Rasmussen described Rocket Lab as a vertically integrated space prime with differentiated products across a widening set of opportunities - including government work, hypersonics, the Space Development Agency, and next-generation space infrastructure.
The analyst also highlighted the company's strategic evolution - moving beyond being primarily a launch provider to building out operator capabilities that span launch services, satellites, components and subsystems, and advanced communications.
Market momentum has been notable: shares have climbed 26% over the past five trading days, extending the move that Monday's 5% increase continued.
Separately, Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Andres Sheppard reaffirmed an Overweight rating on the stock and kept an $85 price target. Sheppard noted that Rocket Lab has completed more than 84 successful missions and, on that basis, is the second most frequent launch provider in the United States after SpaceX.
At the Space Symposium on April 14, Rocket Lab unveiled Gauss, an in-house electric satellite propulsion system designed for high-volume production to serve commercial and national security satellite constellations. The company disclosed that its current production line supports annual capacity of more than 200 thrusters.
In addition to product development, Rocket Lab completed the acquisition of Mynaric AG last week. The deal is positioned to bolster the company's offerings in laser-based optical communications.
Investors and analysts appear to be rewarding the combination of expanding product lines, manufacturing capacity for propulsion systems, and strengthened optical communications capabilities, alongside a growing backlog and the pending Neutron launch.
Key takeaways
- Stifel raised its price target to $105 and maintained a Buy rating; the target matches the Street High.
- Cantor Fitzgerald reiterated an Overweight rating with an $85 target; Rocket Lab has conducted over 84 successful missions and is the second-most frequent U.S. launch provider after SpaceX.
- Company developments cited by analysts include the upcoming Neutron rocket debut, the Gauss electric propulsion system with annual capacity above 200 thrusters, and the acquisition of Mynaric AG to enhance optical communications.
Market reaction and analyst coverage played a central role in Monday's move, while company announcements and strategic acquisitions underpin the longer-term narrative cited by analysts.