- Virgin Galactic dipped below its October 2019 debut price of $11.75 in Thursday trading.
- The space tourism company went public via a merger with a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC.
- Delays to its spacecraft testing and development have steadily pushed back the beginning of commercial service, which had been planned for 2020.
Shares of space tourism company Virgin Galactic fell below $11.75 in trading on Thursday, bringing it beneath the level the stock debuted at more than two years ago.
Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic went public via a merger with a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, from Chamath Palihapitiya in October 2019. The stock has experienced volatile, speculative trading since then – falling near $7 a share in the months after its debut and climbing as high as $62.80 a share in February 2021.
While the space tourism company said during its debut that it planned to begin flying customers in 2020, delays to its spacecraft testing and development have steadily pushed that schedule back. After launching Branson and three other company employees on a test spaceflight in July 2021, further delays have pushed Virgin Galactic’s beginning of commercial service to late this year.
The company is pre-revenue and loses about $55 million to $65 million per quarter on an adjusted Ebitda basis.
Virgin Galactic stock tumbled to a 52-week low of $11.30 on Thursday morning before paring losses.
Notably, Branson has steadily sold pieces of his stake in Virgin Galactic since the company went public. Across four major stake sales, Branson recouped more than $1.25 billion, although he remains Virgin Galactic’s largest single shareholder.
His global business conglomerate Virgin Group has said in statements to CNBC that proceeds of those stock sales are intended to support Branson’s other leisure and travel businesses that have been affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Source: Business - cnbc.com