Trump Administration Weighs Pentagon Loans for U.S. Drone Manufacturers as Defense Stocks Rally

Table of Contents According to reporting from the Wall Street Journal, the Trump administration has entered discussions to deliver direct capital support to American drone manufacturing companies. The revelation triggered significant gains across multiple defense technology stocks during Thursday’s premarket session. The Trump administration is in talks to fund U.S. drone companies, including Unusual Machines $UMAC and Sequoia-backed Neros, per WSJ. Some proposals could include a mix of debt and equity, potentially giving the U.S. government ownership stakes.$LTRX $AVAV $ONDS pic.twitter.com/9GOSNQ7Ait — Wall St Engine (@wallstengine) May 28, 2026 The proposed arrangements may combine traditional loans with equity positions, potentially granting federal authorities partial ownership in participating firms. Negotiations remain fluid with no finalized agreements in place. Driving this initiative is the Pentagon’s Drone Dominance program, a $1.1 billion strategic investment designed to accumulate approximately 300,000 cost-effective attack drones within the next three years. Current American manufacturing capabilities allow for roughly 100,000 drone units annually. This pales in comparison to Ukraine’s output of approximately four million drones in the previous year. Most domestically produced drones exceed the Pentagon’s target unit cost of roughly $5,000 by tens of thousands of dollars. The proposed funding mechanisms aim to enable manufacturers to expand operations while reducing per-unit expenses. Companies under consideration for capital infusion include Performance Drone Works, which secured an Army reconnaissance contract, Sequoia Capital-backed Neros Technologies, and drone component supplier Unusual Machines. Unusual Machines maintains connections to Donald Trump Jr., who holds both shareholder status and an advisory board position. The firm recently revealed that its partner Powerus received approval for Phase II participation in the billion-dollar Drone Dominance Program featuring its MatrixFold drone system. Unusual Machines, Inc., UMAC The Defense Department has submitted a budget request exceeding $54 billion for its Defense Autonomous Warfare Group, representing a dramatic increase from approximately $225 million allocated this year. Unusual Machines shares skyrocketed 33% following the announcement. Red Cat Holdings advanced 13%, while Kratos Defense climbed 8.4%, AeroVironment rose 8%, AgEagle Aerial Systems gained 11.7%, ZenaTech increased 10.5%, and Ondas Holdings jumped more than 9%. Red Cat specializes in compact battlefield reconnaissance drones and has been ramping up production of its Black Widow platform while integrating AI features. The company’s shares have appreciated over 34% since the beginning of the year. Kratos manufactures larger autonomous combat aircraft, including the XQ-58A Valkyrie platform. Despite reporting 22% revenue expansion in its most recent quarterly results, the stock has declined 24% year-to-date. Ondas Holdings just finalized its $196.6 million all-stock purchase of Omnisys Ltd., a military software developer. This strategic acquisition positions Ondas to compete in defense software markets beyond its traditional drone hardware business. Prior to the current administration’s second term, Pentagon drone procurement represented less than 2% of total U.S. commercial and government drone transactions on an annual basis.