President Trump Just Cut the Budget on Boeing's and Lockheed's Most Important Space Program

In This Article:

Key Points

  • The Trump administration is threatening to cancel Boeing's gigantic SLS space rocket after just three launches.

  • SLS has only launched once already. Future launches are planned for 2026 and 2027.

  • Boeing and Lockheed could be forced to exit the space race in favor of "more cost-effective commercial systems" from SpaceX and Blue Origin.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Boeing ›

Eight years ago, President Donald Trump opened a new age in space when he announced mankind will return to the moon via a new NASA initiative: Project Artemis (although it didn't receive the official name until two years later).

Eight years later, Trump is back in office and... surprise! He's apparently decided to cut funding to NASA, including funding for Project Artemis.

A rocket launches.
Image source: Getty Images.

Cut and shuffle

The White House released its budget proposal for fiscal year 2026, and one of the biggest surprises therein was a 24% cut in NASA funding, which would fall from $24.8 billion this year to $18.8 billion, next year, potentially impacting the revenue streams of many of America's biggest space companies.

To be more precise, I should say the Trump administration plans to cut some programs, and shuffle money around among others. Earth science and space divisions for example (yes, NASA has divisions that aren't "space") would see spending cuts of $1.2 billion and $2.3 billion, respectively.

As for the money that's left, $7 billion would be earmarked for lunar exploration (i.e., Project Artemis) and another $1 billion will go to sending missions to Mars. (But not, apparently, for the Mars Sample Return mission, or MSR. That program, which Rocket Lab (NASDAQ: RKLB) has been angling to win for $4 billion, is now on the chopping block.)

Goodbye SLS, we hardly liked ye

The biggest change contained in the space budget, however, is a plan to axe the Space Launch System (SLS). The SLS was designed by NASA for launching astronauts to the moon and back, along with the Orion space capsule that would carry them, and also the Lunar Gateway space station, where they would dock before descending to the moon. A White House statement described the SLS, upon which all the rest depends, as "grossly expensive and delayed," costing taxpayers "$4 billion per launch and ... 140 percent over budget."

The budget proposal calls for ending SLS launches after just two more launches, in 2026 and 2027. From that point onward, NASA would use "more cost-effective commercial systems that would support more ambitious subsequent lunar missions." Which sounds like code for SpaceX and Blue Origin rockets.