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  • 5 months ago
Firefly Aerospace soared in its Nasdaq debut Thursday, closing at $60.35, up from its $45 IPO price, according to The Wall Street Journal. The Texas-based space company sold over 19 million shares to raise $868 million, drawing close attention as a gauge of IPO market strength and investor interest in space companies. CEO Jason Kim said the funding will accelerate rocket production and launch cadence, citing a $1.1 billion backlog and more than 30 contracted Alpha rocket launches. Losses widened to $231 million, despite growing revenue to $61 million in 2024. Firefly’s customers include L3Harris, the National Reconnaissance Office, and NASA, with three future moon landings scheduled.

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00:00It's Benzinga, bringing Wall Street to Main Street.
00:02Firefly Aerospace soared in its NASDAQ debut Thursday, closing at $60.35,
00:07up from its $45 IPO price, according to the Wall Street Journal.
00:11Texas-based space company sold over 19 million shares to raise $868 million,
00:16drawing close attention as a gauge of IPO market strength and investor interest in space companies.
00:21CEO Jason Kim said the funding will accelerate rocket production
00:23and launch Canaan, citing a $1.1 billion backlog
00:27and more than 30 contracted Alpha rocket launches.
00:30Losses widened to $231 million, despite growing the revenue to $61 million in 2024.
00:36Firefly's customers include L3Harris, the National Reconnaissance Office,
00:39and NASA, with three future moon landings scheduled.
00:42For all things money, visit Benzinga.com.
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