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3 Reasons to Buy Joby Aviation Like There’s No Tomorrow

3 Reasons to Buy Joby Aviation Like There’s No Tomorrow

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-09-22 01:15:00
8
1

Joby Aviation Soars While Legacy Transport Stalls

Urban air mobility isn't coming—it's already taxiing on the runway. Joby Aviation represents the bleeding edge of transportation technology, positioning itself as the crypto of the skies while traditional automakers remain stuck in traffic.

Disruptive Technology Adoption Curve

Joby's electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft cuts through conventional infrastructure limitations. The technology bypasses gridlocked highways and outdated rail systems—moving people point-to-point at helicopter speeds with EV quietness.

Regulatory Moats and First-Mover Advantage

The company cleared critical FAA certification hurdles that ground competitors. This regulatory lead creates barriers to entry that rival Bitcoin's network effect—once established, competitors face years of catch-up.

Massive Total Addressable Market

Urban air mobility targets a $1 trillion global transportation market. Joby's technology scales across ride-sharing, emergency services, and logistics—the triple threat that makes traditional investors wish they'd bought Tesla earlier.

While Wall Street analysts debate quarterly earnings, Joby builds the transportation equivalent of decentralized finance—infrastructure that renders traditional models obsolete. The only question isn't if aerial mobility arrives, but whether your portfolio will be along for the ride.

1. It's ahead of rivals in the FAA certification process

Certification from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is the make-or-break hurdle for eVTOL companies. Right now, Joby is separating itself from the pack.  For context, the certification process involves five stages. As of Aug. 4, the company was 70% complete with its side of the fourth stage, with the FAA over 50% complete with its side.

Joby is currently preparing an FAA-conforming aircraft for testing purposes, the assembly of which will put it into the final certification stage. The company now expects FAA pilots to start testing aircraft with flights as early as next year.

Meanwhile, the last we heard from, another eVTOL start-up and Joby's rival, it was "focused on the fourth and final phase of the certification program" and had "received FAA approval for [about] 15% of the compliance verification documents." That was taken from its first-quarter shareholder letter, which was echoed almost verbatim in its second-quarter earnings call three months later.

Side view of Joby Aviation eVTOL flying over a runway.

Joby eVTOL. Image source: Joby Aviation.

That said, the WHITE House's new eVTOL Integration Pilot Program (eIPP) could see both companies accelerating through the final parts of this process. Although it's unclear how this will affect Joby's timeline for FAA Type Certification, the sense of urgency in Washington is a good sign that things could pick up.

2. Friends in all the right places

As I said above, Joby is a pre-revenue company. That said, the company is not just twiddling its thumbs, waiting for FAA approval. It's making some big moves and getting investments from blue chips in the industrials sector.

Let's start with the moves. At the beginning of August, Joby formed a collaboration with defense contractorto develop a hybrid variant of its eVTOL (gas turbine) for defense purposes. This could open up a new revenue stream for Joby, one that could potentially generate income before its commercial eVTOLs take flight.

At the end of the same month, Joby completed its acquisition of Blade Air Mobility. This was a strategic MOVE aimed at unlocking infrastructure in key urban markets like New York City for when its eVTOLs are certified.

At the beginning of the summer, Joby signed a memorandum of understanding (MoE) exploring a distribution agreement with Saudi Arabian-owned family business Abdul Latif Jameel for the potential delivery of up to 200 Joby aircraft valued at about $1 billion.

Then there's, which plans to invest $500 million in Joby ($250 million has already been delivered), and, which has invested in Joby in the past and plans to integrate its air taxis into its network in the future.

3. A strong balance sheet

Finally, it's worth pointing out that Joby had about $991 million in cash and short-term investments on its balance sheet at the end of June. If we add in the other $250 million from Toyota, that gives it $1.24 billion. Since its annual cash burn has been, on average, about $500 million, that should give it two years to operate before it needs a fresh cash injection.

Is Joby a buy?

There's a moment in every bold technology's journey when application stops being hypothetical and starts becoming real. I think Joby is getting very, very close to that moment. Although impediments to progress are also real -- and we shouldn't overlook the fact that Joby is pre-revenue -- momentum is swinging in the company's favor.

For investors who believe eVTOLs have the potential to open a new market, now is the time to buy its stock before tomorrow arrives with taxis in the sky.

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