Intuitive Machines jumps in wild trading after moon landing

Intuitive Machines jumps in wild trading after moon landing


Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C lunar lander on display at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center.

NASA

Shares of Intuitive Machines jumped in early trading on Friday after the company’s successful first moon landing.

Intuitive Machines’ cargo moon lander, “Odysseus,” became the first privately developed spacecraft to land on the lunar surface on Thursday – as well as the first U.S. spacecraft to soft land on the moon in over 50 years.

The Houston, Texas company confirmed that the IM-1 mission lander was standing upright and sending data back to Earth.

“Odysseus has found his new home,” Tim Crain, Intuitive Machines’ CTO and IM-1 mission director, said from the company’s mission control.

Intuitive Machines stock initially ripped 40% higher from its previous close of $8.28 a share before paring gains with heavy trading volume. The company has a market valuation of about $1 billion.

Sign up here to receive weekly editions of CNBC’s Investing in Space newsletter.

The company’s stock has already been rallying over the past month as excitement built in the lead up and progress of the IM-1 mission. Intuitive Machines went public via a SPAC a year ago and shares had steadily slid to all-time lows near $2 in January.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

Intuitive Machines stock over the last 5 days.

Wall Street analysts emphasized to CNBC ahead of the landing that the unprecedented nature of the event could lead to volatile momentum trading.

“We’ve never witnessed a publicly traded company go through [a moon landing attempt]. So this is new, not just for investors, but for us analysts as well,” Cantor Fitzgerald’s Andres Sheppard said before the landing.

The IM-1 lander “Odysseus” in lunar orbit on Feb. 21, 2024.

Intuitive Machines

“Odysseus is alive and well. Flight controllers are communicating and commanding the vehicle to download science data,” the company said in a statement Friday morning.

Intuitive Machines’ also noted that the lander is charging its solar panels. The company and NASA expect to hold a press conference later Friday.

The Odysseus lander carried 12 government and commercial payloads — six of which are for NASA under an $118 million contract through the agency’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative.

Intuitive Machines has already won two more CLPS contracts for future lander missions, with IM-2 expected to launch as early as the second half of this year.

Additionally, the company has part of a five-year $719 million contract to provide engineering services to NASA’s Goddard space center in Maryland. Analysts expect the Goddard contract is worth about $11 million per month in revenue for Intuitive Machines.

Here's why the U.S., China, India, Japan and others are rushing back to the moon



Source

Starbucks raises full-year outlook as turnaround takes hold — despite higher gas prices
Business

Starbucks raises full-year outlook as turnaround takes hold — despite higher gas prices

Starbucks on Tuesday raised its full-year outlook for comparable earnings and same-store sales growth after reporting its second straight quarter of traffic growth. “This quarter marked a milestone for Starbucks – and the turn in our turnaround,” CEO Brian Niccol said in a video posted alongside the company’s fiscal second-quarter results. For fiscal 2026, Starbucks […]

Read More
First Vegas-style casino opens in New York City
Business

First Vegas-style casino opens in New York City

New York City’s first full-scale casino with live table games opened to gamblers Tuesday, more than a decade after voters approved an expansion of gambling in the state. Resorts World, owned by Malaysia-based company Genting, beat out gaming giants such as Wynn Resorts, Las Vegas Sands, Caesars Entertainment and MGM Resorts to land one of […]

Read More
FCC launches review of Disney broadcast licenses years ahead of schedule
Business

FCC launches review of Disney broadcast licenses years ahead of schedule

The Federal Communications Commission is seeking an early review of Disney’s broadcast station licenses following concerns around the company’s diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, according to a letter from FCC Chairman Brendan Carr Tuesday. The letter orders the company to file for early renewal for ABC-owned television stations and notes the action is related to an […]

Read More