On June 15, BlackSky Technology rose 9.96% overnight, trading at $35.61/share, with turnover of $135,500. The stock rebounded sharply following a steep selloff in previous sessions driven by a shareholder share sale disclosure and broader space sector weakness.
On the news front, SpaceX officially commenced trading last Friday after its IPO attracted over four times oversubscription, with total subscription volume surpassing $250 billion, far exceeding the $75 billion fundraising target. The landmark listing reinvigorated sentiment across the space sector, with peer stock Planet Labs rising approximately 3% on the same day. BlackSky had previously plunged over 13% in a single session due to the convergence of the shareholder sale announcement and sector-wide retreat, leaving the stock exhibiting clear short-term oversold characteristics.
Additionally, BlackSky recently secured a contract modification from the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office to accelerate development of its Aros system as a key commercial alternative for ground-based imaging, providing fundamental support. However, the company reported an EPS loss of $0.82 in its latest quarter, and Jefferies previously downgraded the stock from Buy to Hold, indicating ongoing profitability concerns.
(The above content is based on publicly available market information, generated by a program or algorithm, and is intended solely as a stock movement alert. It does not constitute investment advice or a basis for trading decisions.)
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