Shares of Applied Aerospace & Defense (AADX) climbed approximately 2% during Monday’s pre-market session following the launch of coverage from six prominent Wall Street firms — with the majority delivering bullish recommendations.
Applied Aerospace & Defense, Inc., AADX
The defense contractor’s initial public offering priced at $20 on June 3. Following its debut, shares dropped to an intraday low of $17.08 before recovering to finish Friday’s session at $20.53. The coordinated analyst coverage provided market participants with fresh insight into the company’s valuation potential.
Among the six institutions, five — including Baird, BofA, Stifel, RBC, and Jefferies — assigned Buy-equivalent ratings. Morgan Stanley stood alone with a Hold recommendation, though even that firm established a $23 price objective.
The consensus price target across all analysts lands near $25, representing more than 20% appreciation from recent trading levels.
Baird established the Street-high target of $30, calculated using 25 times its 2028 EBITDA projection. Analyst Peter Arment characterized the firm as a primary beneficiary of efforts to reconstruct the “Arsenal of Freedom” — referencing World War II-era U.S. production capacity, now applied to contemporary defense expansion.
RBC Capital launched coverage at Outperform with a $24 objective, basing its valuation on 19.5 times projected 2028 adjusted EBITDA of $230 million. Stifel matched that $24 target, highlighting the company’s $1 billion-plus backlog as support for approximately 14% annual organic revenue expansion through 2028.
Wolfe Research entered at Outperform with a $23 target, while Morgan Stanley’s $23 Hold rating conveyed a more measured perspective on the stock’s post-offering valuation.
Applied Aerospace & Defense operates as a mid-tier supplier serving the aerospace and defense sectors. The company manufactures propellant tanks for space launch systems and produces components integrated into SpaceX’s Falcon 9 reusable rocket platform.
Additional product lines include parts for unmanned aerial vehicles and solid-rocket motors utilized in missile systems. The company’s heritage extends beyond a century through the combination of Applied Aerospace Structures and PCX Aerosystems.
Despite recording $522 million in trailing revenue and maintaining a backlog that analysts generally regard as a dependable growth driver, the firm remains unprofitable. This financial reality contributed to the stock’s initial post-IPO weakness.
Several initiating analysts referenced increased U.S. government defense appropriations as a multi-year catalyst for specialized manufacturers such as AADX.
Baird’s “Cold War 2.0” thesis found resonance with other firms, which characterize the present environment as a structural — rather than cyclical — transformation in defense hardware investment priorities.
Broader equity markets provided minimal support Monday, with the S&P 500 trading relatively flat and the Nasdaq posting modest losses. AADX’s pre-market advance stemmed entirely from the analyst coverage launch.
With shares now trading above the $20 offering price and Baird’s $30 target suggesting approximately 43% upside potential, the Buy-to-Hold ratio exceeding 80% stands notably above the typical 55%–60% range observed among S&P 500 constituents.
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