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ViaStock Soars: The Monday Rally That Defied Gravity

ViaStock Soars: The Monday Rally That Defied Gravity

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-08-04 05:39:24
19
2

Wall Street blinked—and ViaSat stock ripped through the stratosphere. Here’s why traders scrambled to catch the ride.

Satellite Surprise: No earnings bomb, no merger hype—just pure market mechanics playing out like a SpaceX launch.

Short Squeeze Symphony: Bears got steamrolled as liquidity gaps turned into rocket fuel. Classic case of ‘buy first, ask questions later.’

Institutional FOMO: When hedge funds pile into a satellite play, you know we’ve either entered a new space age… or another bubble.

Closing thought: Another day, another stock moving on vibes rather than fundamentals. At least this one had the decency to orbit actual infrastructure.

Rocketship rising on a stock chart.

Image created by JesterAI.

What Blair said about ViaSat

DiPalma took a sum-of-the-parts approach to arrive at his new valuation for ViaSat, which provides both commercial broadband and narrowband communications services and also has a defense and advanced technologies division providing equipment and services to the government and military.

The analyst pointed out in a note covered on TheFly.com that ViaSat is considering spinning off or IPO'ing its defense technology business, which according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence accounts for about 27% of ViaSat's revenue -- and all of the company's profits.

That WOULD appear to imply there won't be much left worth owning to ViaSat after such an IPO. But according to DiPalma, the company is actually on track to turn free-cash-flow-positive later this year and in line to receive a $568 million payment in 2026. After it pays for and launches its final two ViaSat-3 satellites, positive free cash flow (FCF) is more likely. And that catalyst, combined with the IPO, could double ViaSat's stock price in a year.

Is ViaSat stock a buy?

My worry is that this prediction sounds a bit too "pie in the sky."

On the one hand, yes, building and launching satellites is expensive, and it's a well-known drain on FCF for many satellite stocks. Completing its constellation might turn ViaSat FCF-positive. But ViaSat hasn't generated positive free cash FLOW in more than a decade -- since 2008, in fact -- and most other analysts think it will be 2027 before the company starts generating cash again.

Based on its history, I still consider ViaSat stock a sell.

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