Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Get In Touch
    • About Us
    Trending
    • The Food Security Hedge , Why Wall Street Firms Are Quietly Buying Up Farmland Across the Southern Hemisphere
    • The Career Advice That Worked in 2015 Will Get You Nowhere in 2026
    • The Real Reason Financial Stress in America Is at a Decade High
    • BYD Stock Breaks an Eight-Month Sales Decline With 80% Export Growth — and the Real Question Is Whether China Margins Hold
    • Joby Aviation Stock Is at $11.79 — One FAA Review Gate From the First Commercial Air Taxi Flight in U.S. History
    • HGRAF Stock Jumped From $0.15 to $8.37 in a Year — Here’s What HydroGraph Clean Power Is Actually Building
    • TEM Stock Is Down 53% From Its 52-Week High — Here’s What Tempus AI’s Q1 Numbers Actually Say About the Business
    • Jim Cramer’s Palantir Investment Outlook: “Amazing Company,” $200 Price Target, and the Valuation Warning He Won’t Stop Giving
    Radio TandilRadio Tandil
    • Home
    • Finance
    • Business
    • Stock Market
    • News
    • Spanish News
      • Opiniones
      • Negocios
      • Deporte
      • Noticias Internacionales
    Wednesday, June 3
    Radio TandilRadio Tandil
    You are at:Home » Joby Aviation Stock Is at $11.79 — One FAA Review Gate From the First Commercial Air Taxi Flight in U.S. History
    Joby Aviation Stock
    Joby Aviation Stock
    Stock Market

    Joby Aviation Stock Is at $11.79 — One FAA Review Gate From the First Commercial Air Taxi Flight in U.S. History

    Radio TandilBy Radio Tandil3 June 2026No Comments4 Mins Read46 Views
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    Earlier this year, a Joby Aviation plane took off from a lower Manhattan helipad, flew silently over the East River, and landed close to JFK Airport in less than ten minutes. Depending on the specific cruelty of New York traffic, a cab ride would normally take between forty-five minutes and two hours. There were no paying passengers on the aircraft. As part of the federal eVTOL Integration Pilot Program, it was a demonstration that provided Joby with actual routes to operate in urban airspace prior to the final FAA certification.

    The $11.7 billion market capitalization, however, feels less like pure speculation and more like a wager on something that already exists and just needs one more regulatory gate to start charging for it because of the actual fact that the aircraft successfully and silently flew across one of the world’s most controlled airspace environments.

    Joby Aviation is finished. Stage 4 of the FAA’s five-step type certification procedure, with its aircraft and revenue service separated by a formal assessment. In collaboration with Delta Air Lines, the business hopes to start commercially in the United States in late 2026. It also wants to launch concurrently in Dubai. These goals are more than just aspirational since they have been articulated with enough specificity—particular partners, specific routes, and precise infrastructure integration plans.

    Additionally, they are not assured. The most difficult stage of the certification procedure is FAA Stage 5, which the agency had to create from the ground up because the airworthiness requirements for electric vertical takeoff aircraft are novel for aviation regulation. In the US, no one has ever done this on a commercial basis. Joby is the furthest along, but crossing the finish line and being farthest along are two different things.

    It is not because the eVTOL industry has settled on a winner that the competitive landscape has become much clearer over the past two years. In 2023, Lilium filed for bankruptcy. Volocopter came next. A number of other early-stage competitors have either ceased operations or merged. Joby and Archer Aviation are essentially the only companies in the U.S. at anything approaching commercial readiness, and Joby has the stronger cash position, the FAA’s continued advancement, and the more advanced partnership infrastructure.

    In one version of this, Joby’s position is actually strengthened by the consolidation because the companies that failed eliminated some of the infrastructure and regulatory crowding, and the government’s attention, which was previously divided among a dozen contenders, is now focused more on those who can truly deliver. Joby was chosen for early operations in ten U.S. states by the White House-backed eIPP program. That indicates the direction of federal assistance.

    Despite the operational progress, the stock’s current position is unpleasant due to the financial picture. Revenue for the first quarter of 2026 was $24 million, which is actual money but far less than the $11.7 billion market capitalization suggests. Although the company anticipated spending up to $370 million in the first half of 2026 alone, the cash position of over $1.73 billion offers significant runway. This indicates that the burn rate is not insignificant and that there is a genuine need for ongoing capital discipline or new funding.

    Most analyst models do not forecast profitability before 2030. Owners of JOBY are purchasing the expectation that this aircraft will be certified, that the service will launch, that the Delta partnership will produce significant early revenue, and that the model will scale in a way that justifies the current market capitalization sometime in the second half of this decade. They are not purchasing current earnings.

    Joby Aviation Stock
    Joby Aviation Stock

    There is a sense that the JOBY tale is one of those truly intriguing investment scenarios where both the bull and bear cases are legitimate, given that the stock has been trading between $7.49 and $20.95 over the past year, a range that represents real uncertainty rather than illogical volatility. With a billion dollars in government assistance, Delta’s distribution, and a head start that consolidating rivals can’t quickly close, the bull thesis is that the first commercial eVTOL operator in U.S. history captures a market that cities fervently want to exist.

    The worst-case scenario is that capital burn increases, FAA certification declines, and the market that everyone anticipates emerging in 2026 continues to emerge the next year. The plane is currently in flight. One step away is the certification gate. Some of these questions will have clear answers by late 2026.

    electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) FAA Stage 5 timing Joby Aviation Stock
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleHGRAF Stock Jumped From $0.15 to $8.37 in a Year — Here’s What HydroGraph Clean Power Is Actually Building
    Next Article BYD Stock Breaks an Eight-Month Sales Decline With 80% Export Growth — and the Real Question Is Whether China Margins Hold
    Radio Tandil
    • Website

    Related Posts

    HGRAF Stock Jumped From $0.15 to $8.37 in a Year — Here’s What HydroGraph Clean Power Is Actually Building

    3 June 2026

    Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Share Price Rebounds 14% After FY26 Results Beat Expectations — but US Tariffs Are Still the Open Question

    3 June 2026

    Cloudflare Stock Recovered 67% From Its 52-Week Low — and Analysts Are Still Debating Whether the Valuation Makes Sense

    3 June 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Opiniones 3 June 2026

    The Food Security Hedge , Why Wall Street Firms Are Quietly Buying Up Farmland Across the Southern Hemisphere

    A field that was formerly scrubland is now planted with soybeans somewhere on the western…

    The Career Advice That Worked in 2015 Will Get You Nowhere in 2026

    The Real Reason Financial Stress in America Is at a Decade High

    BYD Stock Breaks an Eight-Month Sales Decline With 80% Export Growth — and the Real Question Is Whether China Margins Hold

    © 2026 Radio Tandil
    • Get In Touch
    • About Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.