U.S. Drone Makers Rally as Pentagon Funding Deal Talks Progress — UMAC, RCAT, KTOS Soar

Table of Contents According to recent Wall Street Journal reporting, the Trump administration has entered advanced discussions to extend direct capital support to multiple American drone manufacturers. These arrangements may combine traditional debt financing with equity positions, potentially establishing partial government ownership in select companies. Specific deal structures remain under negotiation. The disclosure triggered significant upward movement across drone-related equities during Thursday’s premarket session. Unusual Machines skyrocketed 33%. Red Cat Holdings advanced 13%. Kratos Defense climbed 8.4%. AeroVironment rose 8%. AgEagle Aerial Systems jumped 11.7%. ZenaTech increased 10.5%, while Ondas Holdings posted gains exceeding 9%. Unusual Machines, Inc., UMAC The focal point of this strategic shift is the Defense Department’s Drone Dominance program. This $1.1 billion initiative establishes an ambitious goal: accumulating approximately 300,000 affordable attack drones before 2027 concludes. Current U.S. production capacity hovers around 100,000 annual units. To put this in perspective, Ukraine manufactured roughly four million drones during the previous year. Most American-manufactured systems exceed the Pentagon’s $5,000 per-unit target price by tens of thousands of dollars. The proposed financing mechanism aims to enable rapid production scaling while driving unit costs downward. Pentagon budget requests for the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group have exploded to over $54 billion from approximately $225 million in the current fiscal year. Companies identified as likely funding recipients include Performance Drone Works, which secured an Army reconnaissance contract, Sequoia Capital-backed Neros Technologies, and drone component manufacturer Unusual Machines. Unusual Machines maintains connections to Donald Trump Jr., who holds both shareholder status and an advisory board position. The company’s partner Powerus secured selection for the Drone Dominance Program’s second phase with its MatrixFold drone system. Red Cat specializes in compact battlefield reconnaissance drones. The manufacturer has been ramping Black Widow drone output while integrating artificial intelligence capabilities. Year-to-date returns exceed 34%. Kratos produces larger-scale autonomous combat aircraft, including the XQ-58A Valkyrie platform. First-quarter results showed 22% revenue expansion. The stock has declined 24% year-to-date. Ondas Holdings just finalized its $196.6 million all-stock purchase of defense software provider Omnisys. This transaction repositions Ondas from pure hardware manufacturing into integrated military software solutions. Volatus Aerospace also earned advancement to subsequent stages of the U.S. Drone Dominance Program. The initiative plans procurement of over 300,000 low-cost autonomous platforms across roughly two years. Palantir delivers AI-powered analytics and data platforms utilized in defense operations and battlefield management. Major defense contractors including Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin, and Leidos maintain exposure through their autonomous systems divisions. Prior to Trump’s current administration, Pentagon drone acquisitions represented under 2% of total U.S. commercial and government drone transactions annually. That percentage is projected to expand substantially as defense appropriations accelerate through 2026 and subsequent years.