Spire Global, Inc. (SPIR) just landed a spot on one of the Pentagon's biggest contract vehicles—a $151 billion opportunity pool for missile defense work. That sounds impressive, and it is. But the announcement came at an awkward moment: right alongside quarterly earnings that missed badly and guidance cuts that exposed some serious financial headwinds.
The company was selected for the U.S. Missile Defense Agency's Scalable Homeland Innovative Enterprise Layered Defense (SHIELD) program. It's what's called an indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract vehicle, which essentially means Spire now has the credentials to compete for future defense task orders from a $151 billion pot. The satellite-data company can now pitch its space-based intelligence services to U.S. and allied defense partners using its fully operational satellite constellation.
What does Spire actually do? The company's systems collect and analyze radio-frequency signals to support persistent monitoring, real-time geolocation, detection of GNSS interference and spoofing, emergency beacon identification, and emitter tracking across land, sea, and air. That's a lot of jargon, but it boils down to: they watch signals from space and figure out what's happening on the ground.
"Spire's fully deployed constellation and expanding multi-band RF capabilities are delivering the kind of timely, actionable intelligence that today's defense missions demand," said Quintin Jones, vice president and head of North America at Spire. He added that the company aims to expand secure, sovereign-ready data offerings to national security customers.
The Numbers Tell a Different Story
Now for the less exciting part. The contract news arrived alongside disappointing financial results for the quarter ended September 30, 2025. Spire reported revenue of $12.67 million—well below expectations of about $22 million. The company posted an adjusted loss of 40 cents per share, missing estimates for a 31-cent loss.
Management blamed several factors: the sale of its maritime business back in April, revenue recognition timing issues, and uncertainty around renewing an Earth observation data contract. Translation: they sold off a business, some expected revenue got delayed, and they're not sure if a key customer is coming back.
The outlook didn't help matters. Spire forecasts a fourth-quarter adjusted loss of 44 cents to 47 cents per share, compared with estimates near a 24-cent loss. Revenue for the quarter is expected to come in between $14.8 million and $16.8 million, sharply below what analysts were expecting.
For the full year, the company slashed its sales outlook to $70.5 million to $72.5 million from a prior range of $85 million to $95 million. That's a significant haircut. Adjusted earnings guidance now calls for a loss of $1.98 to $1.95 per share. On a GAAP basis, Spire raised its full-year loss forecast to a narrower range of $1.73 to $1.70 per share and guided fourth-quarter GAAP EPS to a loss of 71 cents to 73 cents.
Following the update, Stifel analyst Erik Rasmussen maintained a Buy rating on Spire but lowered his price target to $14 from $17. So there's still optimism, but it's tempered optimism.
SPIR Price Action: Spire Global shares were up 3.99% at $7.30 at the time of publication on Thursday.




