Applied Aerospace & Defense (AADX) stock rose around 2% in pre-market trading Monday after six Wall Street banks launched coverage — and most of them came out swinging with Buy ratings.
Applied Aerospace & Defense, Inc., AADX
The stock IPO’d at $20 on June 3. It quickly slid to a low of $17.08 before clawing back to close Friday at $20.53. The wave of analyst initiations gave investors a clearer picture of what the company might actually be worth.
Five of the six firms — Baird, BofA, Stifel, RBC, and Jefferies — rated the stock a Buy. Morgan Stanley was the lone Hold, though even it put a $23 price target on the name.
The average analyst price target sits around $25, which is more than 20% above where the stock has been trading.
Baird set the highest target on the Street at $30, based on 25 times its 2028 EBITDA estimate. Analyst Peter Arment called the company a core beneficiary of what he described as rebuilding the “Arsenal of Freedom” — a nod to WWII-era U.S. manufacturing, applied to today’s defense buildup.
RBC Capital initiated at Outperform with a $24 target, anchoring its valuation on 19.5 times estimated 2028 adjusted EBITDA of $230 million. Stifel also came in at $24, pointing to a backlog of over $1 billion that it believes can support roughly 14% organic revenue growth per year through 2028.
Wolfe Research joined at Outperform with a $23 target, and Morgan Stanley’s $23 Hold reflected a more cautious take on the stock’s post-IPO valuation.
Applied Aerospace & Defense is a midtier supplier to the aerospace and defense industry. It builds propellant tanks for space launch vehicles and makes components for SpaceX’s Falcon 9 reusable rocket.
The company also supplies parts for drones and solid-rocket motors used in missiles. It traces its roots back over 100 years through the merger of Applied Aerospace Structures and PCX Aerosystems.
Despite generating $522 million in trailing revenue and holding a backlog analysts broadly view as a reliable growth engine, the company is still unprofitable. That’s part of why the stock struggled out of the gate after its IPO.
Multiple initiating analysts pointed to elevated U.S. government defense spending as a multi-year backdrop for specialized manufacturers like AADX.
Baird’s framing of “Cold War 2.0” dynamics was echoed in softer form by others, who see the current environment as a structural — not cyclical — shift in defense hardware investment.
The broader market offered no help on Monday, with the S&P 500 essentially flat and the Nasdaq slightly in the red. AADX’s pre-market move was entirely driven by the analyst activity.
With the stock now back above its $20 IPO price and Baird’s $30 target implying roughly 43% upside, the Buy-to-Hold ratio of more than 80% sits well above the typical 55%–60% range for S&P 500 names.
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