Rocket Lab to Buy Iridium in $8 Billion Space Communication Industry Deal

The deal comes as satellite connectivity companies race to expand their networks and compete with Starlink.
Rocket Lab to Buy Iridium in $8 Billion Space Communication Industry Deal
The Rocket Lab Mission Control room during the opening of the new Rocket Lab factory in Auckland, New Zealand, on Oct. 12, 2018. Phil Walter/Getty Images
Bill Pan
Bill Pan
Reporter
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Rocket Lab is buying satellite operator Iridium Communications for about $8 billion, marking one of the largest consolidation moves in the space communication industry.

The two companies announced Monday that Rocket Lab will acquire Iridium for $54 per share in cash and stock, valuing the company at about $8 billion. The price represents a 24 percent premium to Iridium’s prior closing share price.

The deal is expected to close in mid-2027, pending regulatory approvals and other conditions.

“This will be one of the most transformative deals in the space industry,” Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck said during a presentation on the acquisition. “It combines Rocket Lab’s launch capability and satellite manufacturing with Iridium’s global satellite communications network and its rare spectrum.”

Iridium currently operates a constellation of 66 satellites, along with 14 on-orbit spares, providing phone and data services using globally harmonized L-band spectrum.

That spectrum, which Rocket Lab officials described as “extremely valuable,” is prized for its ability to travel long distances and penetrate clouds, rain, and foliage. It is widely used in global navigation satellite systems such as GPS, as well as in aviation and maritime communications, radar, and weather-tracking systems.

The acquisition would transform Rocket Lab, currently a launch services provider and satellite manufacturer, into a more fully integrated, end-to-end space company, Beck said.

During the presentation, Beck pointed to three major challenges in building a satellite communications business: securing a globally harmonized spectrum, deploying costly infrastructure before generating revenue, and building a customer base large enough to keep the business running.

By acquiring Iridium, he said, “we think we’ve found a little bit of a shortcut here.”

Adam Spice, Rocket Lab’s chief financial officer, said the deal is expected to be “significantly accretive” to the company’s cash flow and profitability.

For fiscal year 2025, Iridium reported $871.7 million in revenue and $114.4 million in net income. Rocket Lab, by comparison, reported $601.8 million in revenue and a net loss of $198.2 million.

“These impressive and meaningful levels of revenue and profitability contribution are expected to materially transform Rocket Lab’s financial profile,” Spice said during the presentation.

According to Rocket Lab, it has secured commitments for a $3.6 billion bridge loan from Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo to fund the cash portion of the acquisition. The company also plans to use cash on hand, along with additional debt and equity financing, to complete the deal.

The acquisition adds to the intensifying competition in the space communications market. In April, Amazon announced a deal to acquire satellite company Globalstar for $11.5 billion as it seeks to compete more directly with SpaceX’s Starlink, the dominant player in global satellite internet.

Iridium is a pioneer in low-Earth-orbit satellite communications. Its original network began launching nearly three decades ago, but the company filed for bankruptcy protection in 1999 before later reorganizing and rebuilding itself into a profitable satellite services provider.

SpaceX’s Starlink emerged much later. The company launched its first batch of 60 Starlink satellites in 2019 and has since used its own reusable rockets to rapidly expand the constellation while keeping launch costs lower than many competitors. It now operates the world’s largest satellite internet network, with over 10,000 satellites in orbit.