ASTS Q1 Earnings Are Out – Massive Revenue Miss Sends Stock Down 12%
Live Blog Update #6 Published
← Back to Full Coverage: Live: Will ASTS Stock Soar Tonight on Q1 Earnings?
AST SpaceMobile just reported Q1 earnings, and the results came in far below expectations as investors continue watching for signs of commercial scaling.
Here are the key numbers:
- Revenue: $14.7 million vs. $36.6 million expected
- EPS: -$0.66 vs. -$0.20 expected
Other highlights:
- Revenue missed estimates by roughly 60%
- EPS missed by roughly 230%
- Revenue still surged 1,952% YoY off a low prior-year base
- Revenue declined 73% sequentially
Quick read:
The quarter reinforces how volatile and uneven ASTS’s early commercialization phase still is.
Investors appear focused on the massive revenue miss and worsening losses, even as the company continues building out its long-term satellite-to-cell network opportunity.
Shares are down roughly 12% following the release.
All Updates from Live Coverage
That wraps up our initial coverage of AST SpaceMobile’s Q1 results. Thank you for stopping by!
Check out management’s earnings call at 5 PM EST for more updates.
The long-term goal is for AST SpaceMobile to build a space-based cellular network capable of connecting standard smartphones directly through satellites.
The problem is that this quarter reminded investors how difficult it is to execute that vision in practice.
ASTS reported revenue of just $14.7 million versus expectations of nearly $36.6 million, while EPS came in far worse than expected. The company still posted eye-popping 2,005% YoY revenue growth, but that figure comes off an extremely small prior-year base.
Importantly, management did not cut guidance. ASTS reaffirmed its $150 million to $200 million FY2026 revenue outlook, roughly in line with Wall Street expectations, signaling the company still believes commercialization timelines remain on track.
The stock is down 8% today after earnings, but the long-term story isn’t fundamentally broken. Investors now want proof that the company can execute launches, manufacturing, regulatory approvals, and commercial deployments on schedule at scale.
One of the most bullish details buried in AST SpaceMobile’s earnings may have been manufacturing capacity.
Management said its dedicated micron production facility in Texas is now fully operational, with enough capacity to support more than 10 satellites’ worth of microns per month. That is a major shift because manufacturing scale has long been one of the biggest questions surrounding ASTS’s ability to deploy its network quickly enough to meet the opportunity.
The company also disclosed it now has more than 500,000 square feet of manufacturing and operations space globally, reinforcing the idea that ASTS is building a true industrial-scale satellite platform rather than a small experimental constellation.
Now investors will likely focus on the next layer of questions during the earnings call:
- Timing for future satellite batches
- Details behind the filing tied to an additional 300 satellites
- Potential partnerships with companies like Meta or Anduril, and whether ASTS could secure expanded government or FirstNet-related contracts
The revenue miss hurt sentiment near term, but the manufacturing buildout may be one of the clearest signs yet that management is preparing for much larger-scale deployment ahead.
Despite the weak earnings report, AST SpaceMobile finished Q1 with nearly $3.5 billion in cash and restricted cash, giving the company significant funding flexibility as it scales its satellite network.
Management also highlighted three new U.S. government awards since March and said ASTS is targeting integration of AI edge computing capabilities by year-end.
CEO Abel Avellan said the company is “accelerating manufacturing, regulatory progress, commercial partnerships, and government programs,” while positioning ASTS to capture the massive direct-to-device broadband opportunity.
AST SpaceMobile announced it achieved record direct-to-smartphone download speeds of 98.9 Mbps over international waters during recent testing.
The company also secured FCC approval for commercial SpaceMobile service in the United States, a key regulatory milestone as ASTS pushes toward broader commercialization.
Management said its partner ecosystem now includes nearly 60 mobile network operators covering more than 3 billion subscribers worldwide, while ground integration efforts are advancing across 15+ countries.
AST SpaceMobile said BlueBird satellites 8, 9, and 10 are scheduled for a Falcon 9 launch in mid-June 2026, marking another major milestone in the company’s direct-to-cell rollout.
Management also said BlueBird 11 through 33 are already in advanced stages of assembly, while its Texas micron facility is now operational, with production capacity supporting more than 10 satellites per month.
ASTS appears to be transitioning from an early testing phase into scaled manufacturing mode, even as near-term financial results remain volatile.
Shares of AST SpaceMobile (NASDAQ:ASTS) have rallied 12.14% intraday to $84.05 from a $75.05 base.
Key Levels Into the Earnings Report
- Resistance: $84.95 session high, then $90.94 and $96.06.
- Support: $75.05, then the May 5 floor at $63.87.
- Volume: 26.65M shares versus a ~15-17M 30-day average.
- Momentum: 14-day RSI at 47.33, neutral after bouncing from 34.13 on May 5.
The stock remains 22.2% below its April highs but holds a 197.23% one-year gain. Intraday volatility of 11.9% and the elevated volume signal traders are bracing for an outsized post-earnings move.
Here is what to listen for when AST SpaceMobile (NASDAQ:ASTS) management speaks on tonight’s earnings call:
Top 5 Analyst Questions
- When does nationwide intermittent service in the U.S., Canada, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and UK actually go paid?
- Cash runway math after $1.06B FY25 capex and the convertible raise?
- Conversion timeline for MNO MOUs into definitive agreements like Verizon (NYSE:VZ) and stc?
- BlueBird 7 launch date and production status of BlueBirds 8–29?
- Recognition cadence on the $175M stc prepayment and government backlog?
Red Flags
- Any softening on the 45–60 satellites by year-end 2026 target
- Another warrant remeasurement charge
- Vague carrier timing language.
Beyond carrier activation, four wildcards could whipsaw tonight’s results in ways consensus hasn’t modeled for AST SpaceMobile (NASDAQ:ASTS).
Launch cadence slippage. BlueBird 7 was encapsulated at Cape Canaveral in February 2026 awaiting a March launch, and management needs launches every 1–2 months to hit 45–60 satellites in orbit by year-end. Any slip resets the H2 commercial activation clock.
Spectrum trigger. A $550M non-recourse delayed draw term loan only unlocks on FCC approval, and L-Band and S-Band priority rights remain pending.
Warrant remeasurement. Non-cash swings have been violent, including a $65.03M charge in Q2 2025, which can distort headline GAAP loss.
Insider overhang. Hiroshi Mikitani disposed of 3,040,000 shares over April 14–15, 2026, a signal retail is already debating.
Bull Case
- Revenue inflection: Q4 revenue of $54.3M beat estimates by 28.56%, with FY2025 growth of 1,505.21%.
- Backlog and partners: Over $1.2B in contracted commitments across 50+ MNO partners with nearly 3 billion subscribers.
- Liquidity: $2.34B cash plus a $1.07B convertible offering funds the satellite ramp.
- Momentum: Reddit sentiment sits at 72 (bullish), and shares are up 11.54% intraday.
Bear Case
- Miss history: Revenue missed by 95.29% in Q2 2025 and 33.13% in Q3 2025; lumpy gateway-driven revenue remains hard to model.
- Cash burn: FY2025 net loss of $341.94M against $1.06B capex.
- Insider selling: Mikitani disposed of 3,040,000 shares in mid-April, alongside coordinated executive sales.
- Valuation: A $29B market cap leaves no room for execution slippage.
Q4 proved AST SpaceMobile could generate meaningful commercial revenue. Q1 now needs to show that revenue can start compounding into a real operating business.
That matters even more with the stock down roughly 22% from recent highs and insider selling increasing scrutiny around near-term execution. The focus now shifts to how quickly ASTS can convert its 50+ mobile network operator relationships into active commercial revenue streams.
Guidance will likely matter more than the quarter itself. Investors want updates on carrier activation, satellite deployment timing, and the pace of commercialization through 2026 and 2027. If management shows adoption is accelerating across major partners like AT&T and Verizon, the company’s path toward potentially approaching $1 billion in annual revenue by 2027 becomes easier to underwrite.
Thomas Richmond is a financial writer and content strategist with 5+ years of experience covering stocks and financial markets. He has published over 250 articles focused on individual stock analysis, helping investors better understand business fundamentals, stock valuations, and long-term opportunities.
Thomas previously served as a Content Lead at TIKR, a stock research platform, where he helped scale the company’s blog to hundreds of articles per month and contributed to a weekly newsletter reaching more than 100,000 investors.
He specializes in breaking down complex companies into clear, actionable insights for everyday investors, with a focus on fundamentals-driven research.
His work has also been featured on platforms including Seeking Alpha and Sure Dividend.
Outside of work, Thomas enjoys weight lifting and soccer.