Virgin Galactic Holdings, Inc. (SPCE) is having a rough day, and for good reason. The Richard Branson-founded space tourism venture just dropped news of a financial restructuring that has all the hallmarks of a company trying to buy itself more runway before it runs out of cash entirely.
The Debt Shuffle
Here's what Virgin Galactic announced Tuesday: a capital realignment plan designed to cut its debt load by $152 million. Sounds good on paper, but the details reveal a company performing some financial gymnastics to stay solvent.
The plan involves repurchasing and retiring approximately $355 million in aggregate principal amount of its existing 2.50% convertible senior notes due 2027 through privately negotiated deals with certain holders. To fund this buyback, Virgin Galactic is issuing roughly $203 million in new 9.80% first lien notes due 2028—notes that come with a significantly higher interest rate, reflecting the company's deteriorating financial position.
The company is also selling about $46 million worth of common stock and pre-funded warrants in a direct offering, which means existing shareholders are getting diluted to help pay for all this financial engineering. The remaining debt gets extended to the end of 2028, which Virgin Galactic says better aligns with its planned timeline for commercial operations.
The Revenue Problem
And about those commercial operations: they're not going well. Last quarter, Virgin Galactic brought in just $365,000 in revenue. That's not a typo. Compare that to the company's peak of $4.22 million in the second quarter of 2024, and you can see the trajectory isn't great. The company has missed revenue expectations for five consecutive quarters, according to market data.
Virgin Galactic has been unprofitable every single quarter since going public six years ago, which makes the capital restructuring less of a strategic choice and more of a necessity.
What's Next
CEO Michael Colglazier said in November that the company is on track to begin commercial operations at the end of 2026, though most current customers won't actually fly until 2027 when flight capacity ramps up. As of September 20, Virgin Galactic had approximately $424 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities—funds that are clearly being stretched to cover ongoing expenses while the company waits to generate meaningful revenue.
Investors weren't impressed with any of this. Shares of Virgin Galactic dropped 18.90% to $3.69 on Tuesday, reflecting the market's concern about dilution, higher interest costs, and the long wait until the company can actually start making money from its space tourism ambitions.