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Rocket Lab Accelerates U.S. Space Force Launch by Over a Year

MarketDash Editorial Team
9 hours ago
Rocket Lab stock climbs as the company moves its next Electron launch dramatically forward, delivering a Space Force mission in December that was originally scheduled for April 2026.

Rocket Lab Corporation (RKLB) shares rose Wednesday after announcing something pretty remarkable: the company is launching a U.S. Space Force mission tomorrow that wasn't supposed to fly until April 2026. Moving a government space mission forward by nearly 16 months isn't exactly standard operating procedure, and it's a clear signal that Rocket Lab is becoming the go-to provider when customers need something in orbit quickly.

Launch Details

The STP-S30 mission, charmingly titled "Don't Be Such A Square," is set to lift off from Launch Complex 2 at Virginia's Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island. The launch window opens December 18 at 05:00 UTC (that's midnight Eastern time, or 9:00 p.m. Pacific on December 17).

The mission is led by the Department of War's Space Test Program and Rocket Systems Launch Program, and it's carrying some genuinely interesting cargo: the first four DiskSats, disk-shaped spacecraft developed by The Aerospace Corporation. These aren't your typical satellites.

Electron will deliver the DiskSats into a 550-kilometer low Earth orbit, where Aerospace will put them through their paces testing maneuverability, dispenser systems, and electric propulsion for orbit changes. The goal is supporting more flexible and responsive space operations, which is exactly what moving a launch forward by over a year demonstrates in practice.

Rapid Cadence Continues

This will be Electron's 20th launch of the year and Rocket Lab's 78th mission overall. The timing is notable: this launch comes less than a month after the company's previous LC-2 launch, which was part of a record-setting pair of launches within 48 hours from two different hemispheres.

The momentum isn't just with the Space Force. Earlier this week, Rocket Lab completed its first dedicated launch for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, a mission called "RAISE And Shine." Last week, the company also moved up a South Korean Earth-imaging mission into its next available launch slot.

Meanwhile, the company's novel "Hungry Hippo" fairing designed for the larger Neutron launch vehicle has passed qualification testing and is now heading to Virginia ahead of that rocket's maiden launch.

RKLB Price Action: Rocket Lab shares traded up 2.70% at $56.99 during premarket trading Wednesday.

Rocket Lab Accelerates U.S. Space Force Launch by Over a Year

MarketDash Editorial Team
9 hours ago
Rocket Lab stock climbs as the company moves its next Electron launch dramatically forward, delivering a Space Force mission in December that was originally scheduled for April 2026.

Rocket Lab Corporation (RKLB) shares rose Wednesday after announcing something pretty remarkable: the company is launching a U.S. Space Force mission tomorrow that wasn't supposed to fly until April 2026. Moving a government space mission forward by nearly 16 months isn't exactly standard operating procedure, and it's a clear signal that Rocket Lab is becoming the go-to provider when customers need something in orbit quickly.

Launch Details

The STP-S30 mission, charmingly titled "Don't Be Such A Square," is set to lift off from Launch Complex 2 at Virginia's Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island. The launch window opens December 18 at 05:00 UTC (that's midnight Eastern time, or 9:00 p.m. Pacific on December 17).

The mission is led by the Department of War's Space Test Program and Rocket Systems Launch Program, and it's carrying some genuinely interesting cargo: the first four DiskSats, disk-shaped spacecraft developed by The Aerospace Corporation. These aren't your typical satellites.

Electron will deliver the DiskSats into a 550-kilometer low Earth orbit, where Aerospace will put them through their paces testing maneuverability, dispenser systems, and electric propulsion for orbit changes. The goal is supporting more flexible and responsive space operations, which is exactly what moving a launch forward by over a year demonstrates in practice.

Rapid Cadence Continues

This will be Electron's 20th launch of the year and Rocket Lab's 78th mission overall. The timing is notable: this launch comes less than a month after the company's previous LC-2 launch, which was part of a record-setting pair of launches within 48 hours from two different hemispheres.

The momentum isn't just with the Space Force. Earlier this week, Rocket Lab completed its first dedicated launch for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, a mission called "RAISE And Shine." Last week, the company also moved up a South Korean Earth-imaging mission into its next available launch slot.

Meanwhile, the company's novel "Hungry Hippo" fairing designed for the larger Neutron launch vehicle has passed qualification testing and is now heading to Virginia ahead of that rocket's maiden launch.

RKLB Price Action: Rocket Lab shares traded up 2.70% at $56.99 during premarket trading Wednesday.