Rocket Lab (RKLB) pulled off two successful launches in less than a week, lifting off from separate countries in the process. The latest mission, called “Insight At Speed Is A Friend Indeed,” launched from the company’s New Zealand site on March 5 and placed a single commercial satellite into a 470 km low Earth orbit.
The customer was listed as confidential, but the clues point strongly toward BlackSky. The mission name, logo design, and orbital parameters mirror a November 2025 launch — “Follow My Speed” — which BlackSky confirmed five days later was carrying one of its Gen-3 satellites.
Rocket Lab USA, Inc., RKLB
During a Feb. 26 earnings call, BlackSky CEO Brian O’Toole said the company’s next Gen-3 satellite was already at the launch site and ready to go. He said BlackSky expects to have eight or nine Gen-3 spacecraft in orbit by year-end, up from four if this mission is confirmed.
Rocket Lab announced the launch just five hours before liftoff — a pattern consistent with the November BlackSky mission.
The New Zealand launch came just six days after Rocket Lab flew a mission out of Launch Complex 2 on Wallops Island, Virginia. That earlier flight carried a hypersonic test vehicle for the U.S. Defense Innovation Unit under the Department of War’s HASTE program.
The back-to-back launches from two different facilities in two different countries underline the operational tempo Rocket Lab has been building. The company is now the most active provider of small-lift launches globally.
The New Zealand mission used Rocket Lab’s Motorized Lightband separation system, which holds a perfect success record across all missions.
This was the 83rd Electron launch overall, counting both orbital and suborbital variants.
Rocket Lab conducted 21 Electron launches in 2025. On the February earnings call, company executives said they expected to top that number in 2026 — possibly by as much as 20%, which would put the target somewhere around 25 missions.
Another Electron launch from New Zealand is already planned for later this month, though details have not yet been released.
In 2025, Rocket Lab completed three launches for confidential customers. Beyond the BlackSky mission in November, a June flight was later linked to EchoStar, and an August mission carried five satellites believed to belong to E-Space.
RKLB stock was down 1.1% in premarket trading on Friday. Short interest on the stock has fallen to 3.7% of the total float.
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