Telesat (TSAT) is back on investor radars after a sharp daily decline of about 6.7%, capping a week where the stock fell roughly 18% despite strong performance over the past year.
See our latest analysis for Telesat.
The recent pullback to a share price of $46.79, including a 1-week share price return of down 18.4%, comes after a strong 90-day share price return of 41% and a very large 3-year total shareholder return. This suggests that momentum is cooling as investors reassess risks and expectations.
If sharp moves in satellite and space related stocks interest you, this could be a good moment to scan the sector and look at Wall Street's queuing for one rocket. While SpaceX counts down to its IPO, other companies tied to the new space race are already in orbit. → 20 Compelling Space Companies watchlist · Global Space Race Investing Ideas screener · Scan the sector by valuation on Rocket Lab's valuation page.
With Telesat shares retreating after a very large multiyear run, the key question now is whether the current price reflects an undervalued satellite operator with growing revenue or if the market is already pricing in future growth.
Telesat currently trades on a P/S of 2.5x, while its last close was $46.79 and the stock carries a low overall value score of 1 out of 6.
The P/S multiple compares the company’s market value to its $388.3 million in annual revenue, which can be useful when earnings are negative, as they are here. For a satellite operator with mission critical clients across government, broadcast and enterprise, investors often focus on how reliably revenue converts into future cash flows rather than current profit.
Right now the 2.5x P/S looks expensive compared with both the US Telecom industry average of 1.4x and the peer group average of 2.4x. At the same time, Telesat is flagged as good value versus an estimated fair P/S of 8.7x. This indicates a large gap between where the market is pricing the stock and the level that regression based analysis suggests the ratio could move toward if revenue expectations are met.
Explore the SWS fair ratio for Telesat
Result: Price-to-Sales of 2.5x (OVERVALUED)
However, it is still worth flagging Telesat’s recent net income loss of CA$185.3 million and its concentrated reliance on GEO revenue, both of which could unsettle sentiment.
Wall Street's queuing for one rocket. While SpaceX counts down to its IPO, other companies tied to the new space race are already in orbit. → 20 Compelling Space Companies watchlist · Global Space Race Investing Ideas screener · Scan the sector by valuation on Rocket Lab's valuation page.
Curious whether recent volatility is a warning sign or a second chance? Act promptly, review the key risks and rewards, and weigh the 1 key reward and 3 important warning signs.
If Telesat has your attention, do not stop here. Use this pullback as a prompt to scan fresh opportunities before others move first.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
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