
JetZero plans to build US$4.7B plant in North Carolina, aims to create 14,500 jobs
JetZero CEO and co-founder Tom O'Leary speaks during a ceremony on Thursday, June 12, 2025, announcing that the company will build its manufacturing facility for its future Z4 passenger jet at Piedmont Triad International Airport in Greensboro, N.C. (Walt Unks/The Winston-Salem Journal via AP)
GREENSBORO, N.C. — JetZero Inc. announced plans Thursday to build its first manufacturing plant for a next-generation passenger jet in central North Carolina, a project that if successful would create more than 14,500 jobs there in a decade.
The California-based startup intends to build the factory at Greensboro's airport, investing $4.7 billion. The planned hirings from 2027 through 2036 would be the largest job commitment in North Carolina history, according to Gov. Josh Stein.
The company previously identified Greensboro as one of three finalists for the factory to build its fixed-wing — also known as all-wing or blended-wing — Z4 aircraft, which JetZero says will be up to 50 per cent more fuel-efficient than traditional tube-and-wing airliners.
JetZero has said it's already raised about $300 million toward investment in the Z4 project, including a U.S. Air Force grant to build and fly a demonstrator model by 2027.
United Airlines and Alaska Airlines also are project investors and have made conditional purchase agreements for their fleets, the company said. JetZero aims for the planes to go into service in the early 2030s, with a goal of completing 20 airplanes per month at full production.
Stein, on hand with JetZero executives and other officials for the formal announcement at Piedmont Triad International Airport in Greensboro, cited North Carolina's robust aerospace industry and the first manned powered flights at Kitty Hawk by the Wright brothers in 1903.
'North Carolina is the perfect location,' Stein said. 'North Carolina was first in flight. We are also the future of flight.'
The jobs would pay minimum average salaries of more than $89,000, according to the state Department of Commerce, which provided details of the project discussed earlier Thursday by a state committee that awards economic incentives.
State and local monetary and training incentives for JetZero and the project described at the committee meeting could exceed $2.35 billion by the 2060s if investment and job-creation thresholds and other requirements are met.
A portion of state incentives awarded by the committee — more than $1 billion over 37 years — is based on a percentage of income taxes withheld from plant workers' paychecks. The incentives also include up to $785 million from Guilford County and Greensboro and up to $450 million from the General Assembly in part to help with infrastructure, officials said. The project includes a research facility for composite structures.
A commerce department official said that JetZero, headquartered in Long Beach, California, looked for over a year for a plant location, examining 25 sites in 17 states.
JetZero, currently with just 225 workers, enters a jet purchasing market dominated by industry behemoths U.S.-based Boeing and European Airbus.
'We have already shown strong commercial interest and momentum to meet the real airline demand for this aircraft,' CEO Tom O'Leary said. 'So this is more than just a factory. It's a launchpad for a new chapter of American aerospace.'
While a variant of the Z4 would have tanker and transport uses in the military, JetZero has said that it would focus first on building a commercial jetliner with about 250 seats and a range of 5,000 nautical miles.
The five-year-old company says the plane's shape will reduce drag and the mounting of engines on the top and back of the plane will make it much quieter than traditional airliners. The Z4 would run on conventional jet fuel but could be converted to hydrogen fuel, according to JetZero.
JetZero says Z4 travelers will board through larger doors and into shorter but wider cabins, and aisles will be less congested as bathrooms will be far away from galleys where meals are prepared.
'It's going to deliver a better passenger experience than you've ever had before on any other plane,' O'Leary said.
Stein said the state is already home to more than 400 aerospace companies. And the Piedmont Triad airport has emerged as an industry hot spot, with Honda Aircraft placing its headquarters there and Boom Supersonic building its first full-scale manufacturing plant for next-generation supersonic passenger jets.
The central location and easy access to interstates also lured Toyota to build an electric battery plant in adjoining Randolph County.
North Carolina's previous largest economic development project, measured by employment, was revealed in 2022, when Vietnamese automaker VinFast announced plans to build an electric vehicle manufacturing plant in Chatham County, promising 7,500 jobs.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
AST SpaceMobile: A High-Risk, High-Reward Play on the Future of Connectivity
Forget what you thought you knew about satellite phones. While market attention remains fixed on artificial intelligence and quantum computing, a Texas-based company is making significant strides in its mission to revolutionize global internet access. AST SpaceMobile (NASDAQ: ASTS) is on the verge of launching a commercial space-based cellular network that communicates directly with the smartphone in your pocket. After a volatile journey since its 2021 public debut, a series of critical developments in 2025 are bringing its ambitious vision into sharp focus. Here's what you need to know about this high-profile space stock. A work in progress AST SpaceMobile's first-quarter 2025 results underscored the capital demands of its ambitious mission, reporting a $63 million operating loss driven by heavy research and development (R&D) and manufacturing investments. But that figure now comes with important context. In a pivotal breakthrough, the company secured a term sheet granting it long-term (80-plus years) access to 45 megahertz (MHz) of premium lower mid-band spectrum in North America through a settlement with Ligado. To fund the deal, AST also lined up $550 million in non-recourse financing. This is a game-changing development. It locks in a vital strategic asset and injects substantial capital without shareholder dilution, resolving a major financial overhang and providing the company with a much clearer path forward. Armed with this backing, AST's projections look increasingly credible: gateway equipment bookings of roughly $10 million per quarter and its first major revenue surge, estimated at $50 million to $75 million, in the second half of 2025. The transition from R&D to commercial deployment is no longer theoretical. It's in motion. A market opportunity redefined The global mobile connectivity market is a behemoth, generating over $135 billion in 2024. Yet, vast swathes of the planet and billions of people remain disconnected due to the economic and geographical limitations of terrestrial cell towers. AST SpaceMobile aims to close this digital divide by transforming space into the ultimate cell tower. The company's next-generation Block 2 BlueBird satellites, featuring massive 2,400-square-foot communications arrays, are engineered to deliver up to 10 times the bandwidth of their predecessors. This technological leap represents a fundamental reimagining of telecommunications infrastructure, offering solutions to challenges such as rural tower maintenance, the high cost of 5G densification, and network outages caused by natural disasters. A deepening competitive moat AST SpaceMobile's core advantage is its ability to deliver broadband directly to standard, unmodified smartphones -- eliminating the need for specialized terminals. Unlike traditional satellite internet providers, AST enables seamless roaming between terrestrial and space-based networks, creating a user experience that mirrors existing mobile coverage. That advantage just became more defensible. The company's new long-term agreement for premium L-Band spectrum is a strategic coup, establishing a regulatory and resource barrier that few can match. Combined with a growing patent portfolio and spectrum-sharing deals with major carriers like AT&T and Verizon, AST is locking in a lead that's increasingly hard to close. But urgency is rising. SpaceX's Starlink may be limited to text messaging in its Direct-to-Cell beta, yet it has already completed its first-generation satellite constellation -- proof of its rapid deployment capability. To rival AST's broadband ambitions, Starlink must still secure new spectrum access and enhance its hardware. However, its momentum highlights the importance of AST's early mover edge. Other players are also closing in. Lynk Global, backed by SES, is advancing commercial operations, signaling that the race for direct-to-device dominance is well underway. A valuation demanding a long-term view As of mid-June 2025, AST SpaceMobile has surged 81% year to date, lifting its market cap above $12.5 billion. For a company just beginning to generate revenue, this valuation is undeniably priced for the future. Traditional satellite operators, such as Iridium, offer limited benchmarks. A better comparison might be early-stage biotech or deep-tech firms -- businesses where value hinges on scalability and binary execution milestones. If AST succeeds in launching its commercial service and captures even a modest share of its massive addressable market, today's valuation may prove conservative. The upcoming launch cadence is pivotal. AST plans five orbital launches over the next six to nine months, beginning in July 2025. The goal is to enable continuous cellular broadband coverage across the U.S., Europe, and Japan by 2026. Execution on that timeline could mark the company's transition from promise to reality, thereby justifying the market's confidence. Risks remain, but so does the asymmetric upside The bullish case for AST SpaceMobile has sharpened. With financing secured and spectrum access locked in, the investment thesis now rests squarely on operational execution. The biggest risks are no longer financial -- they're physical. Satellite manufacturing is complex, and any launch failure could derail the rollout timeline. Regulatory headwinds may also emerge, particularly as astronomers raise concerns about light pollution and radio interference from growing satellite constellations. Still, for investors with high risk tolerance and a long-term horizon, AST offers a rare asymmetric opportunity. The company has cleared major technical, strategic, and financial hurdles. Now comes the hardest part: executing at scale. Success would mean not just delivering broadband from space, but reshaping the entire architecture of global connectivity. That's a transformation worth watching closely. Should you invest $1,000 in AST SpaceMobile right now? Before you buy stock in AST SpaceMobile, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and AST SpaceMobile wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $653,702!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $870,207!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor 's total average return is988% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to172%for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 9, 2025


Globe and Mail
2 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Snap Is Getting Ready to Launch AR Glasses. Does That Make SNAP Stock a Buy?
Social media company Snap (SNAP) is seeing some lift in its beaten-down stock after the company announced the launch of its lightweight, immersive spectacles next year. These techy eyeglasses are part of the company's aggressive push into augmented reality (AR) products, which are expected to be endowed with artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities. However, Snap has stiff competition in this space, primarily from Meta's (META) Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, which are generally well-accepted by customers. At this juncture, should you consider buying Snap's stock? About Snap Stock Founded in 2010, California-based tech company Snap (SNAP) operates a social media platform that offers the visual messaging application Snapchat. In addition to visual communication, the company is also focused on areas such as augmented reality and camera technology. Snap has a market cap of around $14.3 billion. Once a soaring name on Wall Street, Snap's stock has fallen on hard times recently. It has declined 47% over the past 52 weeks and 23% year-to-date. Just for comparison, the broader S&P 500 Index ($SPX) has gained 11.5% and 2.7% over the same periods. Snap recorded a 52-week high of $17.33 back in July 2024. The stock is now 52% off its high. Despite the stock's recent selloff, Snap is not exactly a cheap buy. Its price sits at 30.21 times forward non-GAAP earnings, which is significantly stretched compared to the industry average of 13.85x. Snap's Q1 Results Surpassed Expectations On April 29, Snap published its first-quarter results, which failed to impress investors, and the stock experienced a sharp 12.4% selloff in the very next trading session. The company's revenue increased by 14% year-over-year to $1.36 billion. The reported figure slightly surpassed the $1.35 billion that Wall Street analysts had expected. At the heart of this double-digit revenue increase was Snap's increase in active users. For Q1, the company's daily active user (DAU) count went up by 9% from the prior year's period to 460 million. While DAUs dropped by 1% in North America and grew slowly by 3% in Europe, the rest of the world segment's DAU numbers grew by 16% year-over-year. Snap's average revenue per user (ARPU) increased by 5% from its year-ago value to $2.96. Snap's ARPU from the North American segment grew by 13%, followed by growth in the European market at 11%, and then the rest of the world at 4%. Based on the top-line and customer growth, Snap managed to gain back some lost ground. While the company still posted a quarterly net loss of $139.6 million, it was significantly lower than the $305.1 million net loss from the year-ago quarter. Its loss per share stood at $0.08, narrower than the $0.19 in Q1 2024 and better than the $0.13 that Wall Street analysts were expecting. Its adjusted EBITDA jumped by a staggering 137% year-over-year to $108.43 million, surpassing the estimated $64.77 million. Snap's Q1 results were not unimpressive. Its top line grew, customer count expanded, and bottom-line losses narrowed. Yet, the company's share prices took a hit because Snap was unable to provide an outlook for the second quarter. The company cited uncertainty due to the macroeconomic pressures as a reason for this. Snap did mention that it had faced headwinds at the start of the current quarter. Analysts do not have high expectations about Snap's future earnings, projecting its Q2 EPS to decline by 23.1% year-over-year to a negative $0.16. For the current year, Snap's loss per share is expected to come in at $0.39, indicating a worsening of 11.4% year-over-year. The situation is expected to improve in the next fiscal year, when the loss per share is projected to narrow by 28.2% to $0.28. What Do Analysts Expect for Snap Stock? Analysts have started to turn sour on Snap's stock. Last month, Loop Capital analyst Alan Gould lowered Snap's price target from $16 to $12, while still maintaining a 'Buy' rating on the stock. While Loop Capital did not reverse its verdict on the stock, the lowering of the price target reflects that analysts are taking a more conservative stance on the company's potential. Morgan Stanley is also pretty conservative about Snap's prospects. Analyst Brian Nowak lowered the price target from $8 to $6.50, while maintaining an 'Equal Weight' rating. Earlier, the investment firm had lowered its price target from $10 to $8 due to macroeconomic uncertainties affecting e-commerce and digital ad sectors. The latest price cut likely stemmed from the same set of reasons. Overall, Wall Street analysts are taking a conservative stance on Snap's stock, giving it a consensus 'Hold' rating. Based on 36 analysts' ratings, seven analysts have given the stock a 'Strong Buy' rating, one rated the stock as a 'Moderate Buy,' and one analyst rated it 'Strong Sell,' while a majority of 27 analysts are playing it safe with a 'Hold' rating. The consensus analyst price target of $9.72 indicates moderate potential upside of 14% from current levels. Key Takeaways Snap's AR push through the new eyeglasses is commendable. However, the launch is still too far away to be meaningful for shares here. Meanwhile, the company faces challenges from the current macroeconomic scenario, which has been marred by concerns about tariffs. Therefore, investors might consider putting off investing in Snap's stock for now.


Globe and Mail
2 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
If I Could Invest $1,000 in Any Growth Stock, It Would Be This One
This year has been rocky for the U.S. stock market. Between the Trump administration's tariff plans (and subsequent backtracks), recession fears, and overall uncertainty, the stock market has been more volatile than usual. Due to the uncertainty, investors have been heading toward value and dividend stocks, shifting away from the growth stocks that have been so popular in recent years. And while this is a strategic move to minimize risk, all isn't lost with growth stocks. Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More » One growth stock in particular that I would consider is Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG)(NASDAQ: GOOGL). With a market cap of more than $2 trillion (as of June 9), Alphabet may not seem like your typical growth stock, but it checks the boxes. And right now, it's a bargain worth considering. It's hard to overlook Alphabet's cheap valuation It's been a tough start to the year for Alphabet, down more than 8% through June 9 and essentially flat over the past 12 months. Of course, this isn't ideal for shareholders, but it does make the stock a lot more attractive for those looking to add shares or make their first purchase. At around 18 times forward earnings, Alphabet's stock is trading below the market (compared to the S&P 500) and is much cheaper than peers like Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta. MSFT PE Ratio (Forward) data by YCharts Trading at a relatively low value alone doesn't make Alphabet's stock a buy, but it does make the upside far outweigh the downside. Alphabet will remain a cash cow for the foreseeable future Alphabet has consistently been one of the top money-making businesses in the world. With subsidiaries that include Google, YouTube, Android, Waymo, and dozens of others, it's easy to see why. For perspective, Alphabet made $90.2 billion in revenue in the first quarter (up 12% year over year), more than companies like FedEx, Johnson & Johnson, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company have made in their last four quarters combined. GOOGL Revenue (Quarterly) data by YCharts Despite the billions Alphabet makes, it's hard to ignore the concentration of the company's revenue streams. Advertising, which includes Google Search and YouTube ads, accounted for more than 74% ($66.9 billion) of Alphabet's total revenue. As advertising goes, so does Alphabet's business. That alone isn't the problem, but some people fear that artificial intelligence (AI) tools could lead to reduced use of Google Search, potentially impacting its core business model. It may have some impact, but I don't think it will be significant, especially as Google incorporates its own AI tools and finds ways to monetize them. Google Cloud is still experiencing high growth Although Google advertising is Alphabet's bread and butter, the company's main growth driver right now is Google Cloud. In Q1, Google Cloud made $12.3 billion in revenue, up 28% year over year. Arguably more impressive than the revenue growth is the operating income growing 142% year over year to $2.2 billion. It takes a lot of scale for cloud computing businesses to be profitable because they have high fixed costs for things like data centers, servers, and other infrastructure. It appears that Google Cloud has reached that scale. Google Cloud (12%) is firmly behind Amazon Web Services (30%) and Microsoft Azure (21%) in market share, and will likely remain in the third spot for the foreseeable future. However, it can be a productive business for Alphabet. Even in the third spot, the cloud pie is expected to grow large enough that Google Cloud could still make a meaningful contribution to Alphabet's financials. Although antitrust scrutiny and court rulings could reshape Alphabet's business down the road, the company is well positioned to remain a dominant force in tech for years to come. You likely won't regret investing $1,000 in the stock when you look back years from now. Should you invest $1,000 in Alphabet right now? Before you buy stock in Alphabet, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Alphabet wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $649,102!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $882,344!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor 's total average return is996% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to174%for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. *Stock Advisor returns as of June 9, 2025 Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Randi Zuckerberg, a former director of market development and spokeswoman for Facebook and sister to Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Stefon Walters has positions in Apple and Microsoft. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, FedEx, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool recommends Johnson & Johnson and recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.