The space industry is having its M&A moment, but BofA Securities analyst Ronald J. Epstein wants everyone to know that buying companies is the easy part. Actually making those acquisitions work? That's where things get interesting.
Following third-quarter earnings, Epstein revised his outlook on three major space players—Rocket Lab Corporation (RKLB), Intuitive Machines, Inc. (LUNR), and Redwire Corporation (RDW)—with a clear message: consolidation is accelerating across the sector, but performance will depend on strong strategy and seamless integration. In other words, don't just buy stuff. Make it work.
Rocket Lab: The Winner's Circle
Epstein boosted his price target on Rocket Lab (RKLB) to $60 from $50, maintaining a Buy rating. The company delivered better-than-expected third-quarter results with impressive profitability, even after stripping out one-time gains. That's the kind of execution Wall Street likes to see.
Sure, the first Neutron launch got pushed to 2026, but Epstein isn't sweating the delay. With over $1 billion in liquidity sitting in the bank, Rocket Lab has plenty of firepower to expand its in-space payload and technology capabilities. This isn't a company scrambling for cash—it's a company positioning for growth.
The recent moves prove it. Rocket Lab just wrapped up its acquisition of Geost, strengthening its end-to-end capabilities. The Mynaric deal is expected to close soon, and there are more expansion targets in the pipeline. The company is building out a comprehensive space infrastructure play, piece by strategic piece.
On the numbers front, Epstein now expects 2025 EPS of ($0.38) versus ($0.42) previously, 2026 EPS of ($0.21) versus ($0.18), and 2027 EPS of $0.04 versus $0.07 earlier. Revenue projections for 2025 and 2026 stay unchanged, while 2027 revenue jumps to $1.702 billion from $1.650 billion.
Intuitive Machines: The Show-Me Story
Intuitive Machines (LUNR) got a price target bump to $9.50 from $8.50, though Epstein maintains an Underperform rating. It's a classic case of "good news, but prove it first."
The acquisition of Lanteris expands opportunities and raises the company's baseline as a space prime. Lanteris brings existing commercial and defense satellite experience along with actual profitability, which adds some much-needed stability. The problem? The market wants to see successful integration and execution before getting too excited.
Epstein notes that while the legacy Lanteris portfolio adds strength, it may grow more slowly than LUNR's existing business. The company could become more competitive for defense programs like Golden Dome, but integration challenges and potential conflicts with Lanteris' current clients could limit near-term gains. Acquisitions always look great on paper until you actually have to merge two corporate cultures, customer bases, and technology stacks.
The analyst now forecasts 2025 revenue at $221 million (down from $262 million), 2026 at $1.021 billion with legacy LUNR at $336 million (previously $374 million), and 2027 at $1.185 billion with legacy LUNR at $437 million (previously $490 million). EPS estimates shifted to ($0.25) versus ($0.42) for 2025, $0.02 versus ($0.25) for 2026, and $0.15 versus ($0.06) for 2027.
Redwire: The Struggle Bus
Then there's Redwire (RDW), which got its price target slashed to $6 from $9 with an Underperform rating reiterated. Ouch.
The revision reflects limited progress on program visibility and ongoing portfolio headwinds stretching into 2026. Epstein had previously flagged program charge management as a major concern, and third-quarter results confirmed those fears in vivid detail.
In its first full quarter including Edge Autonomy, Redwire reported $8.3 million in unfavorable EACs (estimate at completion adjustments), driving negative adjusted EBITDA. Revenue growth missed consensus expectations, and lingering effects from the government shutdown could weigh on fourth-quarter performance. Nothing about this trajectory screams "buy."
Epstein now expects revenue of $338 million for 2025 (versus $415 million previously), $527 million for 2026 (versus $637 million), and $636 million for 2027 (versus $769 million). Those are significant downgrades across the board.
The space sector is consolidating fast, and companies are racing to build comprehensive capabilities through acquisitions. But as these three stocks show, the winners won't be determined by who buys the most companies—they'll be determined by who can actually make those acquisitions work.