NEW YORK, May 28, 2026, 10:04 EDT
Unusual Machines shares surged at the open Thursday in New York after news reports said the Trump administration is talking about funding U.S. drone makers. The coverage drove attention back to the Orlando drone-parts supplier. The stock climbed up to 52% at one point, and was last up 41% at $26.52.
Washington’s push to boost local drone manufacturing has U.S. officials in talks to fund smaller drone suppliers, Reuters said, citing the Wall Street Journal. If the talks lead to deals, firms like Unusual Machines, Neros (backed by Sequoia), and Performance Drone Works could get fresh cash. Some of the proposals on the table could give the government equity and debt stakes.
Unusual Machines has told investors that policy is starting to move its way. In an investor presentation filed to the SEC on May 26, the company pointed to a potential $3 billion to $5 billion market for U.S. drone parts, a Pentagon drone push worth about $1 billion, $220 million-plus in cash, $26 million in inventory, $60 million in short-term investments, and no debt.
Unusual Machines listed its headquarters at 5728 Major Blvd. in Orlando and said its shares trade under the ticker UMAC on NYSE American in a presentation filed Tuesday with its 8-K.
Drone stocks picked up buyers. Red Cat jumped about 25%, with AeroVironment up around 14%. Investors moved money into several names, not just a single company, as they weighed possible gains from any wider U.S. funding push.
The numbers are messy. Unusual Machines said first-quarter revenue jumped 296% year over year to $8.1 million earlier this month. But the company posted a $7.3 million operating loss and about $9.9 million in operating expenses as it hired staff, added inventory, and grew its capacity.
Chief Executive Allan Evans said the spending was intentional. He told shareholders the company is “still much too small” and described “overwhelming” demand signals, but said the target is to grow “without burning cash too quickly.”
The risk is there too. A Zacks piece on Yahoo this week pointed out the same thing: fast revenue growth, but inventory is building and operating losses are getting bigger. That could squeeze margins if orders don’t pick up.
Unusual Machines reported raw material and prepaid inventory of $25.8 million at March 31, up from $13.9 million at the end of December. The company said it placed roughly $75 million in raw material orders after a $150 million stock sale in March, pricing shares at $17.
UMAC was moving up before Thursday too. A technical analysis out Thursday showed UMAC closed at $18.83, still holding its daily uptrend. But intraday signals showed it might pause, as the shares moved above their upper Bollinger band, a usual signal of high volatility.
Funding is still up in the air. Reuters said it couldn’t independently verify the Journal’s report. The White House, Pentagon and the companies didn’t answer requests for comment. Unusual Machines flagged risks in its own presentation, saying results may fall short of what’s expected and warning about the risks of rapid growth and ordering inventory before customer demand materializes.
Unusual Machines is trading more like a proxy for U.S. drone supply chains than a basic parts supplier right now. The question is how quickly government demand, new business, and improved margins show up to back up the move.