Gate News message, April 16 — Vertical Aerospace (EVTL.US), a British electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft manufacturer, announced it has successfully completed its first piloted bidirectional transition flight, marking the world’s first such test conducted under a Design Organization Approval (DOA) regulatory framework. The stock surged nearly 10% in pre-market trading on Thursday, lifting the broader eVTOL sector including Joby Aviation (JOBY.US), Archer Aviation (ACHR.US), and EHang Holdings (EH.US).
A transition flight involves an eVTOL aircraft shifting from vertical takeoff to horizontal cruise and back to vertical landing—widely recognized as the most technically complex phase in eVTOL development. Vertical Aerospace stated the flight validated core technologies powering its commercial air taxi model, Valo. CEO Stuart Simpson called it “the most significant technical milestone in the company’s history,” emphasizing that the team achieved this feat under stricter regulatory oversight than any competitor. While Joby Aviation completed a piloted transition flight in April 2025, Vertical’s distinction lies in its DOA framework—each test generates auditable certification data directly applicable to future Type Certificate (TC) applications, rather than serving as a mere technical demonstration.
Market reaction swiftly transmitted across the sector: Joby Aviation rose 2.7%, Archer Aviation climbed 3.2%, and EHang Holdings gained 2%. At this pre-commercialization stage, major technical milestones are widely interpreted as signals of industry-wide progress acceleration. According to YH Research, the global eVTOL market is projected to reach $42.787 billion by 2032 at a compound annual growth rate of 152.11%; China’s market is expected to expand to 9.5 billion yuan in 2026. Vertical Aerospace’s “certification-first” strategy provides a differentiation advantage as the company advances toward FAA, ANAC (Brazil), and JCAB (Japan) approvals.
On March 30, Vertical Aerospace announced a $850 million financing agreement to support airworthiness certification and pre-production efforts. Its strategic backers include American Airlines, aircraft leasing giant Avolon, helicopter operator Bristow, Brazil’s GOL Airlines, and Japan Airlines. Following the successful flight, American Airlines’ Vice Chairman and Chief Strategy Officer Steve Johnson stated: “Advanced air mobility represents a natural extension of American Airlines’ commitment to innovation and shaping the next generation of travel experiences.” Vertical plans to achieve Valo’s airworthiness certification by 2028, with initial commercial operations targeting high-frequency routes such as London Canary Wharf to Heathrow and New York JFK to Manhattan. However, industry observers note challenges remain: regulatory approval timelines remain uncertain, ground infrastructure development lags aircraft advancement, and public confidence in eVTOL safety requires accumulation of operational data.
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