Rocket Lab Corporation (RKLB) shares are holding steady Tuesday morning after jumping 5% on Monday, thanks to a significant engineering milestone that brings the company's Neutron rocket closer to its first flight.
The aerospace firm announced that its unconventional "Hungry Hippo" fairing has passed qualification testing and is now headed to Virginia for integration ahead of Neutron's maiden launch in 2026. It's the kind of technical achievement that doesn't move markets dramatically but signals real progress toward commercial operations.
The Hungry Hippo Difference
So what makes this fairing special? Unlike traditional rockets that jettison their payload fairings into the ocean after reaching space, Neutron's Hungry Hippo design stays attached to the first stage throughout the entire flight.
Here's how it works: The fairing opens its two halves to release the second stage and payload, then closes back up again so the entire first stage can fly back to Earth intact. The whole opening-and-closing sequence takes about 1.5 seconds under flight conditions.
The goal is straightforward: make the rocket more reusable and cheaper to operate. If you can bring the fairing back instead of building a new one for every launch, you save time and money.
During qualification testing, engineers subjected the carbon-composite structure to roughly 275,000 pounds of force to simulate the maximum aerodynamic pressure, or Max Q, that the fairing will experience during ascent. The system passed, confirming it can handle the extreme loads and operate reliably when it counts.
What Happens Next
The fairing has now landed on the East Coast and will be shipped to Launch Complex 3 at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport in Virginia. There, it'll be mated with Neutron's first stage in its final flight configuration.
Before the actual launch in 2026, Rocket Lab plans to conduct static-fire tests and a wet dress rehearsal, basically a full countdown without actually lighting the engines for liftoff.
Meanwhile, the company's workhorse Electron rocket is preparing for its next mission. Rocket Lab announced via X that the launch window has been updated to no earlier than December 12 to allow time for additional checkouts. The mission faced earlier delays due to unfavorable weather in New Zealand.
This will be the company's 19th Electron launch of 2025, carrying the RAISE-4 satellite for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. It's another government contract in Rocket Lab's growing portfolio.
Riding the Space-Sector Wave
The launch delay hasn't dampened investor enthusiasm. Rocket Lab shares recently pushed past $50, riding a broader rally in space stocks. According to market data, RKLB stock has gained over 27% in the past five days alone.
Part of the momentum came from OpenAI's Sam Altman mentioning he was considering acquiring or partnering with a rocket company to compete with SpaceX. That kind of talk gets investors thinking about consolidation and valuations across the sector.
Media reports also suggested SpaceX might be valued near $800 billion, which lifted sentiment for other space companies. However, Elon Musk pushed back on those reports Saturday, calling them inaccurate.
"SpaceX has been cash flow positive for many years and does periodic stock buybacks twice a year to provide liquidity for employees and investors," Musk said in a post on X.
Regardless of SpaceX's exact valuation, the broader takeaway is clear: investors are increasingly interested in the commercial space sector, and Rocket Lab is positioned as one of the leading publicly traded companies in the industry.
Price Action: Rocket Lab shares were up 0.47% at $51.80 during premarket trading on Tuesday.