The IPO market just got its first big space-sector test of 2026.
HawkEye 360 said Monday it plans to go public at a valuation of up to $2.42 billion, the first major space analytics listing since SpaceX rattled the industry awake with its own confidential filing earlier this month. The pricing range and underwriter list both signal that the deal is meant to be more than a side bet.
What HawkEye Actually Does
HawkEye 360 runs a fleet of small satellites that map and analyze radio frequency signals from space, selling that intelligence to defense agencies, maritime regulators, and government operators tracking ships and equipment.
The company is based in Herndon, Virginia, just outside Washington, which isn't an accident since the federal government is one of its biggest customers. The IPO is targeting up to $416 million by selling 16 million shares at $24 to $26 apiece.
The SpaceX Effect
Until this month, the IPO window for space companies had been mostly closed, with volatility, the Iran war, and weak risk appetite keeping private space-tech firms on the sidelines.
SpaceX changed the calculus when it confidentially filed in early April, signaling to the rest of the industry that public markets were open again. HawkEye is the first to walk through the door.
Who's Buying The Story
The underwriter syndicate is heavy for a deal this size, with Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, RBC Capital Markets, and Jefferies all on the cover, which usually means strong institutional interest.
The pitch to investors is intelligence-grade data with a defense-tech moat, and the obvious risk is concentration since a small handful of government contracts can swing revenue in either direction. The company plans to list on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker HAWK once the deal prices.
What To Watch
Pricing day. If HawkEye prices at the high end of the range, it sets a confidence floor for every space-tech IPO that follows in 2026.
If it prices below, the SpaceX-era space rally hits its first reality check.
