NEW YORK, May 28, 2026, 14:02 (EDT)
AeroVironment Inc. shares surged over 17% Thursday, part of a broad jump in U.S. drone names following news of possible Washington funding for domestic drone producers. AeroVironment also said it landed a $20 million defense materials contract. Shares were last up $31.21 at $212.49 after reaching $216.59 earlier in the session. Volume was close to 3.0 million.
Investors now see drones and counter-drone tech as a policy trade rather than only a defense play. Reuters, citing the Wall Street Journal, said the Trump administration has been talking about funding some drone companies, with the Pentagon and the Office of Strategic Capital involved in the conversations. Reuters said it could not verify the report.
AeroVironment wasn’t listed as a direct funding pick in the report. Unusual Machines, Neros and Performance Drone Works were. Still, AeroVironment traded higher with the sector. The difference is clear on paper, but fast trading ignored it.
AeroVironment said Thursday it landed a 39-month, $20 million contract with the Air Force Research Laboratory for work on advanced ceramics and ceramic matrix composites, materials important for extreme aerospace conditions. Johnathan Jones, a senior vice president at AeroVironment, said the project is about helping to “preserve America’s advantage.” Dr. John Hogan said the contract backs the “future of flight and space operations.” AeroVironment, Inc.
AeroVironment said two days ago that a $20.2 million government boost will let it expand its Huntsville, Alabama plant to ramp up low-rate initial production and speed up full-rate output of the Freedom Eagle-1, its missile designed to counter drones. CEO Wahid Nawabi said the Huntsville location brings the company nearer to “the center of the Army’s air and missile defense ecosystem.” AeroVironment, Inc.
Peers traded higher as well. Red Cat Holdings advanced roughly 32%, Kratos Defense & Security was up almost 14%, and the iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF picked up around 1.9%. The gains ran across other drone and defense stocks, not just AeroVironment.
AeroVironment isn’t just a small drone company now. The company reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $408.0 million, and its funded backlog hit a record $1.1 billion—orders already matched with committed funds. The quarter also saw a $151.3 million goodwill impairment, an accounting charge for lower future value in part of the business.
AeroVironment’s May 2025 buyout of BlueHalo brought in space, cyber and directed-energy tech, but muddied the company’s financials. In its latest quarterly filing, AeroVironment said it’s still working BlueHalo’s controls into its systems and pointed to material weaknesses at BlueHalo before the deal.
Thursday’s rally is running ahead of clear contract wins, with traders betting on policy moves that haven’t fully materialized yet. Government funding is often slow and contracts can get delayed. AeroVironment’s own filings mention risks tied to U.S. government spending, contract results, getting acquisitions to work, and changes in its programs.
Right now, the stock isn’t moving just on earnings. It’s trading like a play on Washington backing drones, interceptors, and defense manufacturing. A shift like that can change a stock’s value fast. The flip side: the gains can fall away if contracts don’t come in.