Rocket Lab Corporation (RKLB) closed out 2025 with a flourish, successfully launching its 21st Electron rocket of the year and proving that consistency matters just as much as innovation in the space business.
The company deployed a satellite for the Institute for Q-shu Pioneers of Space (iQPS), a Japan-based Earth imaging company that's become one of Rocket Lab's most reliable customers. This marks the seventh satellite Rocket Lab has launched for iQPS since 2023, and there are five more missions on the books for 2026.
Mission Details
The mission, dubbed "The Wisdom God Guides," lifted off from Rocket Lab's Launch Complex 1 in New Zealand on December 21 at 7:36 p.m. local time (06:36 UTC). The payload was the QPS-SAR-15 satellite, which will enhance iQPS's synthetic aperture radar constellation. That constellation provides near-real-time imagery across 12 orbits, which is incredibly useful for monitoring Earth's surface regardless of weather conditions or time of day.
This was Electron's 79th flight overall and the final launch of 2025. More importantly, it capped a year in which Rocket Lab achieved a perfect mission success rate across all 21 launches. That's the kind of reliability that builds customer confidence and opens doors to bigger contracts.
The next Electron launch is scheduled for early in the first quarter of 2026, keeping the momentum rolling.
Looking Ahead to 2026
Rocket Lab founder and CEO Sir Peter Beck isn't resting on his laurels. "In 2026, we're expanding Electron's global reach with more multi-launch constellation deployments, dedicated missions for domestic civil space and international space agencies in Japan and Europe, and both suborbital and orbital launches with defense applications for hypersonic technology and national security," he said.
"Our new record of annual launches and the breadth of upcoming missions go to show how much of a global impact Electron continues to have on the space industry, and we're looking forward to another year of continued execution in 2026."
The Big Defense Win
Here's where things get really interesting. Last week, Rocket Lab's subsidiary, Rocket Lab USA, Inc., landed its largest contract ever: an $816 million deal from the U.S. Space Development Agency. The company will design and build 18 satellites for the Tracking Layer Tranche 3 (TRKT3) program, which is part of the Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture.
These aren't your average communications satellites. They'll feature advanced sensors for missile warning, tracking, and defense, providing persistent global monitoring of emerging threats, including hypersonic systems. Hypersonic weapons are notoriously difficult to track because they move so fast and can maneuver unpredictably, so having a dedicated constellation to monitor them is a significant national security priority.
This contract underscores Rocket Lab's evolution from a scrappy launch provider into a trusted national security space partner. It's one thing to launch satellites reliably; it's another entirely to build sophisticated defense hardware that the Pentagon trusts to protect against next-generation threats.
Market Response
Investors clearly liked what they heard. Rocket Lab shares were up 4.65% at $73.80 during premarket trading on Friday, hovering near the stock's 52-week high of $73.97. The combination of flawless execution, repeat customer relationships, and massive defense contracts creates a compelling narrative for a company that's proving it can deliver both launches and hardware at scale.




