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Sidus Space Inc. (SIDU)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q3 showed continued execution on vertical integration and product rollout, but fundamentals remain loss-making: revenue was $1.30M, down 31% YoY, with gross loss of $1.30M as depreciation and mix shift away from legacy high‑margin services weighed on results .
  • Profitability worsened: Adjusted EBITDA loss was $4.0M (vs. $2.5M loss in Q3’24) and net loss was $6.0M (vs. $3.9M in Q3’24), driven by higher depreciation, SG&A scaling, and mix .
  • Liquidity improved post capital raises; cash was $12.7M at quarter‑end (vs. $3.6M at Q2’25), supporting commercialization of Fortis VPX and satellite pipeline; management plans “meaningful cost reduction activities” by end of Q4 to support pathway to profitability .
  • Potential catalysts: nearing completion of the multi‑year Mobile Launcher 2 program enabling capacity pivot to higher‑margin satellite/data and Fortis VPX product commercialization, plus Lonestar’s pathfinder payload on LizzieSat‑5 and FeatherEdge 248Vi design completion to support AI/edge ambitions .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

  • What Went Well

    • Advanced on-orbit capabilities: “Completed commissioning of the AIS sensor on LS3 and established communications with customer site,” strengthening constellation maturity and customer‑visible progress .
    • Product roadmap milestones: “First three [Fortis VPX] products…on track for year‑end validation,” with AI/edge processing platforms broadening dual‑use applications across defense and commercial markets .
    • Balance sheet bolstered to fund commercialization: completed two offerings with ~$15.5M net proceeds in Q3, earmarked to scale product lines and satellites .
  • What Went Wrong

    • Revenue contraction and mix headwinds: revenue fell 31% YoY to $1.30M as the company pivots away from legacy services and recognizes milestone‑based contracts, pressuring near‑term growth .
    • Cost pressure and depreciation: cost of revenue rose 42% YoY (adjusted +20% ex satellite‑related depreciation), driving a gross loss of $1.30M versus a small profit in Q3’24 .
    • Operating leverage negative: SG&A increased to $4.3M (vs. $3.2M in Q3’24); Adjusted EBITDA loss widened to $4.0M; net loss increased to $6.0M .

Financial Results

P&L snapshot (USD)

MetricQ1 2025Q2 2025Q3 2025
Revenue ($M)$0.238 $1.261 $1.298
Cost of Revenue ($M)$1.867 $2.288 $2.597
Gross Profit (Loss) ($M)$(1.628) $(1.027) $(1.299)
SG&A ($M)$4.444 $4.263 $4.332
Adjusted EBITDA (Loss) ($M)$(4.674) $(3.946) $(3.977)
Net Loss ($M)$(6.415) $(5.625) $(6.034)
Basic & Diluted EPS ($)$(0.35) $(0.31) $(0.24)

YoY comparison (USD)

MetricQ3 2024Q3 2025
Revenue ($M)$1.869 $1.298
Gross Profit (Loss) ($M)$0.038 $(1.299)
Basic & Diluted EPS ($)$(0.93) $(0.24)

KPI and revenue composition

KPIQ1 2025Q2 2025Q3 2025
Revenue – Related Parties ($M)$0.078 $0.570 $0.739
Cash & Equivalents ($M, end of period)$11.711 $3.635 $12.734
Weighted Avg Shares (Basic & Diluted) (M)18.228 18.320 24.904

Notes: Adjusted EBITDA is non‑GAAP; see company reconciliations .

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Operating cost actionsQ4 2025None disclosed“Implement meaningful cost reduction activities and operating efficiencies by end of Q4” New qualitative target
Fortis VPX commercialization2026None disclosed“First three VPX products on track for release to production in January 2026; revenue contributions to begin shortly thereafter” New timeline
LISIS‑AT 4 & 5 (build/launch)Late 2026None disclosedTwo additional spacecraft in production for planned late 2026 launch New timeline
Mobile Launcher 2 delivery2025Previously ongoingNearing program completion; facility reconfiguration to support satellites/defense manufacturing afterward Clarified timing

No formal numerical guidance (revenue, margins, EPS, tax, OI&E, dividends) was issued in Q3 materials .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q1 & Q2 2025)Current Period (Q3 2025)Trend
AI/edge computing (Orlaith, FeatherEdge)Launched Orlaith; FeatherEdge Gen‑2 commissioning; early customer demos Commissioned AIS on LS‑3; advancing FeatherEdge 248Vi design; on‑orbit AI/data fusion positioning Building capability; moving toward commercialization
Fortis VPX product lineIntroduced SSBC/PNT; pipeline building; VPX SOSA‑aligned strategy First three VPX products on track for production Jan’26; all‑domain revenue opportunity in 2026 Milestones locked; clearer commercialization timing
Supply chain/costsNoted cost pressure and launch scheduling effects Higher CoR from depreciation and inputs; identified operating efficiencies to reduce SG&A Costs elevated; efficiency program underway
Satellite ops/commissioningLS‑3 launch and commissioning; LS‑2 updates; data‑as‑a‑service ambition AIS commissioning complete; multiple payload activation underway; LS‑4/5 builds progressing Constellation maturing; pre‑launch revenue from integrations
Defense/Golden Dome alignmentEmphasis on national security apps and ruggedized systems Explicit alignment with DoD “Golden Dome” for proliferated, software-defined nodes Strengthening defense narrative
Lunar initiativesExtended $120M Lonestar agreement; “LizzieLunar” concept LS‑5 to host Lonestar pathfinder; early mover for lunar-capable platform Executing pathfinder; building credibility
Capital & liquidityRepaid Decathlon note; post‑Q2 offering Two offerings completed; ~$15.5M net proceeds; $12.7M cash at Q3 end Improved liquidity to fund roadmap

Management Commentary

  • Strategy and positioning: “Our multi‑mission, all‑domain approach…represents a new model…combining agility, integration, and strategic focus to meet diverse customer requirements.”
  • Fortis VPX timeline: “Our first three VPX products remain on track for release to production in January of 2026. We expect customer integrations and revenue contributions to begin shortly thereafter.”
  • Program shift: “With [Mobile Launcher 2] now nearing completion, we expect improved gross margins and stronger revenue visibility, as well as a reconfigured facility ready for expanded satellite and defense manufacturing.”
  • Constellation maturation: “We completed commissioning of the AIS sensor on LISIS‑AT 3 and established direct communications with the customer site.”

Q&A Highlights

  • Commercialization cadence: VPX production in Jan’26 with revenue shortly thereafter; early access programs for FeatherEdge underway with government/commercial customers .
  • Satellite commissioning: LS‑3 commissioning progressing with multiple payloads and software updates; LS‑4/5 will add software‑defined imagers and increased onboard processing, expanding addressable use cases .
  • Backlog/mix: Backlog increasingly driven by VPX/SOSA hardware, engineering services, and LISIS‑AT integrations (multi‑year, defense‑aligned) .
  • Cost/efficiency: Management expects “meaningful cost reduction activities” by end of Q4’25 to support profitability trajectory .
  • Defense alignment: Clear articulation of fit with DoD’s Golden Dome for resilient, distributed sensing/communications architectures .

Estimates Context

Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) coverage for quarterly EPS and revenue was not available for Q3 2025; only actuals were recorded.

MetricQ3 2025 ConsensusQ3 2025 Actual
Revenue ($M)N/A*$1.298
EPS ($)N/A*$(0.24)

Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Implication: In absence of published consensus, the print should be interpreted against internal targets and sequential/YoY trends rather than a beat/miss framework.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Execution continues on product and constellation roadmaps, but revenue remains milestone‑ and mix‑driven; near‑term P&L pressured by depreciation and scaled SG&A .
  • Liquidity is sufficient to bridge commercialization milestones (VPX, LISIS‑AT 4/5), with $12.7M cash after capital raises, lowering funding risk near term .
  • Operating efficiency actions targeted by Q4’25 end are the next proof point for margin path; watch for SG&A run‑rate inflection and gross margin lift as ML2 winds down .
  • 2026 is shaping as a pivotal commercialization year (VPX revenue start; LS‑4/5 launch), with potential defense tailwinds from software‑defined, proliferated architectures .
  • Near‑term catalysts: additional VPX design‑ins/orders, third‑party integrations/backlog updates, further on‑orbit payload activations/data customers, and formalizing cost‑reduction outcomes .
  • Lonestar pathfinder on LS‑5 and FeatherEdge 248Vi completion strengthen the AI/edge thesis and potential multi‑orbit data/services revenue streams .
  • With scant sell‑side estimates, price discovery likely hinges on proof of commercialization (orders, backlog, margins) and defense program visibility rather than quarterly “beats.”

Appendix: Additional Relevant Press Releases (Q3 period and subsequent)

  • Lonestar Commercial Pathfinder Mission on LizzieSat‑5 (integration agreement executed) .
  • FeatherEdge 248Vi design completion (high‑performance AI/ML edge computer) .
  • Q3 call scheduling and webcast details .