Key Takeaways:
- Rocket Lab's contract assets hit a record $2.2 billion, up 108% year over year
- The company signed 31 launch contracts in Q1, more than in all of 2025
- Q2 revenue guidance of $225-240 million topped the $205.2 million consensus
Key Takeaways:

Rocket Lab USA Inc. reported contract assets rose to a record $2.2 billion in the first quarter, up 108% from a year earlier, as the company signed more launch contracts in three months than it did in all of 2025.
"The scale and velocity of demand we're seeing across both launch and space systems is unprecedented in our history," Adam Spice, chief financial officer at Rocket Lab, said. "Our backlog now provides multi-year revenue visibility that we've never had before."
Revenue reached $200.3 million in the quarter ended March 31, beating the consensus estimate of $189.4 million and climbing 63.5% from a year earlier. Space Systems contributed $136.7 million, up 57.2%, while Launch Services added $63.7 million, up 78.9%. The company ended the quarter with $1.48 billion in cash and equivalents.
The backlog growth was driven by 31 new Electron and HASTE launch contracts signed in the quarter, including the largest launch contract in company history — a multi-launch agreement with a confidential customer for five Neutron and three Electron missions. Defense contracts now form a significant portion of the book, with the $816 million Space Development Agency Tranche 3 Tracking Layer award, the $515 million SDA Transport Layer contract, and the $190 million MACH-TB 2.0 hypersonic test program collectively representing about $1.3 billion in defense-related backlog.
The rising contract assets signal that Rocket Lab's transition from a small-launch provider to a vertically integrated space infrastructure company is gaining traction. Management guided second-quarter revenue of $225 million to $240 million, above the $205.2 million consensus, implying about 60% growth from a year earlier. Analysts at Needham raised their price target to $90 from $63, while Stifel Nicolaus lifted its target to $85, both citing the expanding backlog and defense contract wins as key drivers.
For holders, the backlog trajectory suggests revenue visibility extending well into 2028, reducing reliance on spot-market launch demand. The next major catalyst is Neutron's first flight, targeted for the fourth quarter of 2026, which would open the medium-lift market and further expand the company's addressable opportunity.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.