New York, Feb 13, 2026, 08:42 EST — Premarket
- Iridium held steady around $22.39 in premarket trading, following a 21.3% jump on Thursday.
- The satellite operator is projecting service revenue growth for 2026 somewhere between flat and 2%, and now expects lower operational EBITDA, citing a shift in compensation structure.
- Traders juggle robust IoT momentum with weaker patches in broadband and government voice/data subscriber numbers.
Shares of Iridium Communications barely budged in premarket hours Friday, following a sharp 21.3% surge to $22.39 at Thursday’s close. (Investing)
Why does it matter? Iridium leans heavily on steady service revenue and cash payouts, instead of grabbing headlines with big hardware deals. With shares up Thursday, the debate for investors is whether there’s real staying power in IoT demand here, or if the bounce just reflects a quarter that, at least, didn’t drop any unwelcome shocks.
The backdrop is shaky. Rate-sensitive stocks have been lurching around this week. Now, traders are bracing for the January U.S. inflation report, expected later Friday, for the next signal.
Iridium reported fourth-quarter revenue of $212.9 million and net income came in at $24.9 million, or $0.24 per diluted share. Subscriber numbers climbed to 2.537 million—a 3% gain from a year ago—fueled mostly by commercial IoT. CEO Matt Desch pointed to continued focus on “growth opportunities in specialized segments” and highlighted the company’s emphasis on cash generation. (Iridium)
Iridium is looking at flat to 2% growth in total service revenue for 2026, with operational EBITDA pegged between $480 million and $490 million. The company noted that switching all incentive compensation to cash — instead of the earlier mix of cash and equity — will trim operational EBITDA by around $17 million. (Iridium)
The company pointed out a few weak spots likely to get more attention. Commercial broadband revenue dropped for the quarter, tracking a decline in subscribers. Hosted payload and other data service revenue also slipped, with Iridium blaming a delayed payment from an existing customer. (Iridium)
Iridium cited its Enhanced Mobile Satellite Services contract, a seven-year, $738.5 million fixed-price airtime agreement inked back in 2019, as a highlight on the government front. Still, government voice and data subscribers slipped from a year earlier, though revenue from those government services moved higher thanks to a built-in rate hike in the contract. (Iridium)
The company released its earnings in a regulatory filing on Thursday, and published its annual report the same day. (SEC)
The forecast highlights a clear risk: if service revenue stalls or barely rises in 2026, plus operational EBITDA takes a hit from the cash-pay transition, uneven segment momentum could spell trouble. Any slip in subscriber numbers or shaky government demand, and the stock’s exposed.
Macro headlines take the front seat this day. The January U.S. CPI lands at 8:30 a.m. ET, and any surprise could jolt rates. Iridium investors, meanwhile, are combing through analyst notes and the just-filed annual report to spot management’s early takes on 2026 growth. (Reuters)