NEW YORK, May 23, 2026, 13:04 (EDT)
AeroVironment Inc. ended Friday up 6.8% at $174.23, the week’s highest close, ahead of the Memorial Day holiday. The stock is up about 10.3% since last Friday’s $158.00 finish. Volume picked up Friday, with around 1.16 million shares trading.
The timing is key. U.S. markets are closed for the weekend, and Nasdaq won’t open on Monday because of Memorial Day. The next chance to see if Friday’s gains hold will be Tuesday, when regular trading resumes from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET.
AeroVironment’s investor site didn’t show any new Friday company releases. The last updates were a May 20 notice about CEO Wahid Nawabi and CFO Sean Woodward speaking at William Blair’s Growth Stock Conference on June 3, and a May 19 announcement on its software platform.
Week ahead looks straightforward: investors get three days off, then a brief wait before management goes public again. Comments about backlog, contract timing, or BlueHalo integration could stand out. The stock has moved this year on program headlines as much as broader defense trends.
AeroVironment rolled out updates to its AV_Halo software platform on May 19. The announcement added two new tools: INSTINCT, for autonomous uncrewed systems, and DETECT, which uses radio-frequency sensing. Radio frequency covers signals used for both detection and communications, the company said. Nawabi said these updates are aimed at helping forces “see earlier” and act even when networks don’t work. AeroVironment, Inc.
AeroVironment’s numbers are all over the place. In March, the company posted fiscal Q3 revenue of $408.0 million and said bookings hit $2.1 billion for the first nine months of the fiscal year. Funded backlog reached a record $1.1 billion. Funded backlog, as defined by the company, is firm orders with cash appropriated under customer contracts.
AeroVironment jumped 6.8%, leading gains among defense stocks focused on drones and related tech. Kratos Defense picked up 2.8% Friday. Lockheed Martin added 2.0% and Northrop Grumman was up 0.8%. Peers saw firmer action too, but AeroVironment finished at the top of the group.
Analysts call the company a defense story, but say contracts could be risky. William Blair’s Louie DiPalma said earlier Army deals were “significant,” according to a March Barron’s report. Raymond James analyst Brian Gesuale upgraded the stock from Sell to Hold after a slide, though he’s still cautious on backlog growth. Barron’s
Ongoing program updates are keeping debate active. AeroVironment said on May 12 it landed a three-year, $43 million Department of War contract to put its PANTHER phased-array antenna on SkyRange platforms for hypersonic telemetry. On May 6, AeroVironment said its LOCUST laser system finished a counter-drone test in a joint effort with the Department of War and the FAA. Counter-drone, or C-UAS, describes systems to spot or take down unmanned aircraft.
AeroVironment still faces risks. The company logged a $151.3 million goodwill impairment last quarter, an accounting charge after a stop-work order on BADGER phased-array antenna systems for the Space Force’s SCAR program pushed it to mark down the value of an acquired business.
A strong Friday close could unwind next week if investors see it as light pre-holiday trading, or if worries pop up again over government spending schedules, contract timing, or how management handles acquisitions. For now, the stock is moving up, but it still hinges on management turning defense demand into funded orders and more straightforward earnings.