Business

Astra Secures $2.7M from Investors

Image: Astra

There’s been another update in the Astra ($ASTR) financing saga. 

Amid the launcher’s struggle to stay afloat facing dwindling cash reserves and an unfriendly public market, Astra secured an additional $2.7M from investors. The company will still need to secure long-term financing.

The story so far: Astra ventured into the public markets during the SPAC boom of 2021 at a valuation of $2.1B. For a while now, though, the company has been fighting a battle to avoid going the way of Virgin Orbit into bankruptcy. Measures the company has taken included a reverse stock split in September as well as mass layoffs as it shifted focus from rocket to spacecraft development.

Late last month, Astra reported that it had defaulted on a debt agreement by failing to keep $15M in cash reserves. The company has been struggling to raise the long-term financing its investors require.

What now? The $2.7M in net proceeds comes from a deal that extends interim financing secured from JMCM Holdings LLC and Sherpa Ventures Fund II earlier this month. Still no word on a longer-term solution.

About that go-private offer…Cofounders Chris Kemp and Adam London submitted an offer to the company’s board on Nov. 8 that would take Astra private at a ~$30M value, or $1.50 per share. At the time of the offer, that was about double the stock value. Now, though, the per-share price has gone up, and as of EOD Monday is sitting at $1.50 on the dot. The board hasn’t given an update on the status of that offer.

Related Stories
BusinessMilitary

Booz Allen Preps for the Golden Dome

The president wants a Golden Dome missile defense system, and the space industry is standing ready to get him one. Booz Allen Hamilton is the latest space firm to publish a concept for a distributed satellite system that could identify and help to intercept missile attacks in their tracks. The constellation design, which the company […]

BusinessPolicy

State Looking For Industry Input In Colorado Springs

The State Department is asking industry how it can better support American space startups, and it’s looking to kick off the conversation at Space Symposium next month. 

BusinessCivilPolicy

AIA Shares Top Space Priorities For 2025

The list includes nearly three dozen to-dos for government agencies ranging from the DoD to the FAA to NASA.

AnalysisBusinessCivil

US Space Companies Make a Run at Europe

After years of investor malaise and memes about the region’s lack of innovation, investing in the EU is suddenly back in vogue.