Carol M. Craig
Thank you, Adarsh. Good evening, and thank you all for joining us. On our second quarter earnings call, we shared that Sidus Space, Inc. is evolving into a diversified space and defense innovator. Not just a satellite manufacturer, but a company with capabilities that span the full mission life cycle, from low Earth orbit to the lunar environment and beyond. In the third quarter, we continued executing on this strategy by expanding our vertical integration, advancing our LizzieSat constellation, and strengthening partnerships that support both commercial and defense customers. Our goal remains clear: to deliver full-spectrum solutions from design and manufacturing to on-orbit operations and data services, with the agility to meet evolving mission requirements. We are building a company designed for long-term sustainable growth driven by innovation, dual-use and software-defined satellites, all-domain computing solutions, and recurring data-as-a-service opportunities. Over the past eighteen months, we have proven our ability to design, build, launch, and operate advanced multi-mission satellites with extended design life and complex functionality. These are not CubeSats; they are precision-engineered microsatellites built to deliver mission-critical performance. Our vertically integrated model enables scalability and efficiency, allowing us to adapt our manufacturing facility quickly to new priorities. Like our products, our operations are designed for adaptability and speed. Sidus Space, Inc. is already a trusted part of the space supply chain, and our offerings now extend across civil, defense, and commercial markets. This diversification strengthens our ability to support national security programs, including Golden Dome, SDA's proliferated architecture, and NASA's Artemis initiatives. Our multi-mission all-domain approach represents a new model for how space companies operate, combining agility, integration, and strategic focus to meet diverse customer requirements. For those who are new to our story, Sidus Space, Inc. has consistently executed while adapting to a very dynamic environment. During the third quarter, we navigated uncertainty around government funding and shifting federal budgets. However, our diversified revenue model, which spans commercial, defense, and civil sectors, provides a built-in hedge against external risk. Having led through volatile environments such as this for over twenty-five years, I am confident that Sidus Space, Inc. is built to remain resilient and adaptable regardless of the external landscape. Over the last couple of years, we have strategically invested in our infrastructure, technology, and team to build capabilities comparable to larger competitors but with far less capital. The result is a lean, efficient company with a competitive cost structure. An example of that is our software-defined LizzieSats with their five-year design life and redundant systems, delivering high performance at $5 million or less per 100-kilogram satellite, including multiple sensors, and offering strong value for government and commercial customers. During this quarter, we made significant advancements towards completion of the Mobile Launch 2 contract. This program was originally approximately a $4 million contract that expanded to over $8 million over the last few years due to changing requirements and supply chain dynamics. Over nearly four years, we have built and will have delivered 57 complex electronic cabinets for installation at the Kennedy Space Center. With this program now nearing completion, we expect improved gross margins and stronger revenue visibility as well as a reconfigured facility ready for expanded satellite and defense manufacturing. At Sidus Space, Inc., we believe our vertically integrated model sets us apart from our competition. Few U.S. companies can design, manufacture, test, and operate their space hardware entirely in-house while maintaining lean operations. This vertical integration gives us unmatched speed, control, and flexibility, enabling rapid entry into new markets, development of recurring revenue streams, and leadership in the emerging multi-domain space economy as well as the all-domain defense industry. Our recent on-orbit progress continues to validate our approach. We completed commissioning of the AIS sensor on LizzieSat-3 and established communications with the customer site. We continued upgrading our flight software, integrating new algorithms, and activating additional payloads aboard LizzieSat-3. These advances strengthen our constellation architecture and accelerate technology maturation across all past and future LizzieSat-driven satellites. And we successfully demonstrated that our satellites can support multiple sensors on a single versatile platform with the expectation of delivering fused data products that will increase mission value for maritime, environmental, defense, and commercial customers. Our LizzieSat platform is increasingly software-defined, enabling rapid in-orbit reconfiguration and performance optimization. The next-generation hyperspectral and multispectral cameras that we have selected to deliver our data services can adjust spectral bands and imaging modes dynamically, allowing a single satellite to serve multiple missions from maritime awareness to environmental monitoring to defense intelligence. Combined with our onboard AI and our FeatherEdge edge processing suite, LizzieSat is designed to learn and adapt in orbit, improving data quality and operational efficiency over time. As global demand rises for resilient, secure, and cost-effective space capabilities, we believe Sidus Space, Inc. is well-positioned to meet that need. Our modular, multi-use solutions spanning satellites, onboard AI, and VPX SOSA line electronics enable customers to rapidly deploy and reconfigure systems for maritime, environmental, defense, and commercial missions. This flexibility shortens development cycles, reduces costs, and increases mission readiness. A key differentiator is the United States and allied governments prioritize distributed software-defined architectures. This quarter, we completed two successful capital raises with funds to be invested in commercializing all-domain product lines, expanding the LizzieSat constellation with LizzieSat-4 and LizzieSat-5, and advancing our Orlaith AI ecosystem. We also progressed our Fortis DPX computing suite designed for aerospace, defense, energy, robotics, and autonomous systems. The first three products, the Sidus single board computer, FeatherEdge 248 VI Edge computer, and precision navigation timing module are on track for year-end validation. The Sidus single board computer offers on-orbit and terrestrial edge computing. The FeatherEdge 248 VI features artificial intelligence and machine learning processors designed for extreme environments and size-constrained applications. The precision navigation and timing module integrates atomic clocks, M-Code GNSS, and IMUs for GPS-denied operations. This modular Fortis platform establishes a scalable all-domain command and control architecture complementing our space platforms and is expected to contribute meaningfully to revenue starting in 2026. From a program execution standpoint, we remain focused on expanding our technology portfolio and delivering solutions aligned with our long-term vision and mission. A key element of reaching our upcoming milestones is completing the Mobile Launcher 2 contract, which will allow us to shift additional resources toward higher-margin satellite and data programs. As noted earlier, we currently have two additional LizzieSat spacecraft in production for a planned late 2026 launch. These satellites will feature advanced software-defined imagers and increased onboard processing capability. Additionally, we are hosting multiple customer technologies. Customers for these missions and related prelaunch revenue include The Netherlands Organization, Lone Star Holdings, and additional data customers that we have not yet announced. Achieving this initial fast launch cadence was critical to our ability to learn, adapt, and advance our technology in real-time. In just over a year, we launched three Sidus-designed, Sidus-built, hybrid 3D-printed satellites with onboard AI and multiple sensors at a pace that allowed us to rapidly integrate lessons learned into each successive mission. Every launch informs the next, enabling continuous improvement, faster integration, and greater scalability across our architecture. This rapid cadence of innovation is not limited to low Earth orbit. It is foundational to how we are expanding capability across all domains and all orbital classes. Looking beyond LEO, we are developing a lunar-capable LizzieSat platform featuring higher power, advanced radios, and enhanced propulsion. Few U.S. companies can offer this level of multi-domain, multi-orbit versatility. We believe it positions Sidus Space, Inc. as a truly differentiated supplier for the emerging lunar and cislunar mission landscape. In summary, Sidus Space, Inc. continues to execute on its plan to deliver next-generation technologies from dual-use multi-mission satellites, all-domain computing systems, to AI-driven data architectures. Our progress this quarter reinforces the foundation for long-term growth, recurring revenue, and sustained leadership across the expanding space and defense ecosystem. I'll now turn the call over to Adarsh for the financial update.