Today: 10 April 2026
Anduril’s Fury (YFQ‑44A) Completes First Flight in 556 Days, Accelerating the Air Force’s CCA Program — What’s New Today (Nov. 10, 2025)
10 November 2025
3 mins read

Anduril’s Fury (YFQ‑44A) Completes First Flight in 556 Days, Accelerating the Air Force’s CCA Program — What’s New Today (Nov. 10, 2025)

Published: November 10, 2025

Key takeaways

  • Anduril’s YFQ‑44A “Fury” executed its maiden, semi‑autonomous flight in California on Oct. 31, entering active flight test for the U.S. Air Force’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) program. Air Space Forces Magazine
  • The jet managed its own controls during the sortie—no stick‑and‑throttle operator behind the scenes—with “push‑button” return/landing, according to officials. Reuters
  • Development moved at unusual speed: 556 days from clean‑sheet design to wheels‑up. Air Space Forces Magazine
  • General Atomics’ rival YFQ‑42A also progressed, with a second airframe flown in early November, putting both CCA competitors firmly into flight testing. The Aviationist
  • Expect weapons work and expanded teaming trials next: Anduril says live shots and multi‑ship autonomy are planned as the program marches toward an FY‑2026 production decision. Breaking Defense+1

Fury is flying — and where it flew

The Air Force confirmed Anduril’s YFQ‑44A completed its first flight on Oct. 31 and is now in the flight‑test phase of the CCA program. The sortie occurred from Southern California Logistics Airport in Victorville—near Edwards AFB, where much of the envelope expansion will continue. Air Space Forces Magazine

What “semi‑autonomous” meant on Day One

During the debut, Anduril’s prototype managed its own flight controls and throttle and could return to land at the push of a button—while a human monitored, rather than remotely piloted, the aircraft. Reuters
The company also says lethal actions require human authorization and that the aircraft includes a mission‑abort “kill switch.” CBS News

Designed and built for speed — and scale

Anduril emphasizes rapid, software‑first iteration: executives say the team went from clean‑sheet to first flight in 556 days—exceptionally fast by fighter‑aircraft standards. Air Space Forces Magazine
Looking ahead to production, the company intends to ramp manufacturing in the U.S., with work expected to start next year at an Ohio facility as the program advances. Reuters

The CCA race: two prototypes, one mission

With Fury now airborne, both Increment 1 CCA designs—Anduril’s YFQ‑44A and General Atomics’ YFQ‑42A—are flying. GA‑ASI disclosed on Nov. 3 that a second YFQ‑42A has taken to the air, underscoring the quickening test tempo across the program. The Aviationist
The Air Force plans further testing at Edwards AFB and operational assessments with its Experimental Operations Unit at Nellis AFB, as it refines manned‑unmanned teaming tactics for fielding “substantial operational capability” before decade’s end. Air Space Forces Magazine

What CBS’s new 60 Minutes segment adds

A 60 Minutes Overtime report published Nov. 9 spotlights Fury’s step from reveal to first flight and the Air Force’s push to field autonomous “loyal wingmen” alongside crewed fighters. The piece reiterates Anduril’s human‑in‑the‑loop safeguards and the company’s focus on mass‑producible design choices. CBS News

What’s next (near‑term milestones to watch)

  • Weapons integration & shots: Anduril says it has begun integrating weapons and plans its first live fire in the coming year. Breaking Defense
  • Multi‑ship & teaming trials: Expanded autonomous flights with multiple CCAs and with crewed fighters are on the 2026 roadmap, building the data the Air Force needs to set requirements. Breaking Defense
  • Program decisions: Despite broader acquisition headwinds, the service continues to target an FY‑2026 decision on CCA production. Air Space Forces Magazine

Why it matters

CCA is designed to deliver “affordable mass” and new operational concepts—forward scouting, extra weapons capacity, and risk‑tolerant missions that keep human pilots out of the most dangerous envelopes. Bringing two very different prototypes to first flight in under two years signals the Air Force’s intent to move faster on autonomy and teaming at scale. Air Space Forces Magazine


Source notes for today (Nov. 10, 2025)

  • CBS News / 60 Minutes Overtime (Nov. 9): contextualizes Fury’s first flight and Anduril’s human‑in‑the‑loop controls. CBS News
  • Reuters (Oct. 31): confirms semi‑autonomous flight details, quotes Air Force leadership, and notes Ohio production plans. Reuters
  • Air & Space Forces Magazine (Oct. 31): details location (Victorville), 556‑day development sprint, and forthcoming Edwards/Nellis test roles and program timing. Air Space Forces Magazine
  • The Aviationist (Nov. 4): documents GA‑ASI’s second YFQ‑42A flight, showing parallel progress by both vendors. The Aviationist
  • The War Zone (Oct. 31): provides additional first‑flight context and USAF statements on how Increment 1 informs future CCA requirements and potential buy quantities. The War Zone

For readers new to the acronyms: “CCA” stands for Collaborative Combat Aircraft—uncrewed jets designed to team with crewed fighters. “YFQ‑44A” is the Air Force’s designation for Anduril’s Fury prototype; the Y denotes prototype, F is fighter, and Q signifies uncrewed. U.S. Air Force

Stock Market Today

  • Symbotic Share Price Surges 168% in One Year, Valuation Questions Remain
    April 10, 2026, 5:46 AM EDT. Symbotic's stock has soared 167.7% over the past year to close at US$53.59 but shows a 17.4% decline year-to-date. The company's role in warehouse automation has drawn investor attention, fueling recent price momentum. However, a Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) valuation model estimates an intrinsic share price of about $47.90, suggesting the stock is overvalued by nearly 12%. Symbotic scores 2 out of 6 in valuation checks on Simply Wall St, indicating potential risks. The firm's price-to-sales ratio stands at 2.82, above the machinery industry average of 2.25 but below its 3.44 peer group average, showing mixed signals on price justification. Investors should weigh strong recent gains against these valuation metrics amid ongoing market volatility.

Latest article

Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 10.04.2026

10 April 2026
LIVEMarkets rolling coverageStarted: April 10, 2026, 12:00 AM EDTUpdated: April 10, 2026, 5:50 AM EDT Symbotic Share Price Surges 168% in One Year, Valuation Questions Remain April 10, 2026, 5:46 AM EDT. Symbotic's stock has soared 167.7% over the past year to close at US$53.59 but shows a 17.4% decline year-to-date. The company's role in warehouse automation has drawn investor attention, fueling recent price momentum. However, a Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) valuation model estimates an intrinsic share price of about $47.90, suggesting the stock is overvalued by nearly 12%. Symbotic scores 2 out of 6 in valuation checks on Simply
MARA Holdings Stock Rises Even After Target Cut as Bitcoin Miner Leans Harder Into AI

MARA Holdings Stock Rises Even After Target Cut as Bitcoin Miner Leans Harder Into AI

9 April 2026
MARA Holdings shares rose 1.7% to $9.67 Thursday despite Cantor Fitzgerald cutting its price target to $10. The company recently sold 15,133 bitcoin for $1.1 billion and agreed to repurchase $1 billion in convertible notes at a discount. MARA is expanding into AI and cloud infrastructure, but fourth-quarter revenue fell 6% and it posted a $1.7 billion net loss.
CoreWeave secures fresh $21 billion Meta AI deal as debt push raises stakes

CoreWeave secures fresh $21 billion Meta AI deal as debt push raises stakes

9 April 2026
Meta Platforms signed a new $21 billion deal with CoreWeave for AI cloud computing capacity through 2032, according to a securities filing. CoreWeave shares rose 3.4% in after-hours trading. The agreement adds to a $14.2 billion commitment disclosed last September. CoreWeave also launched $3 billion in convertible notes and upsized a senior-notes deal to $1.75 billion.
Tesla Revives Cheaper EV Push With New Compact SUV as Sales Pressure Builds

Tesla Revives Cheaper EV Push With New Compact SUV as Sales Pressure Builds

9 April 2026
Tesla is developing a lower-cost compact SUV, with initial production planned for Shanghai, Reuters reported Thursday. The company built 408,386 vehicles and delivered 358,023 in the first quarter, leaving its widest gap in at least four years. Reuters said the new SUV likely will not reach production this year. Tesla did not respond to questions about the project.
NIO ES9 Price Starts at 528,000 Yuan as Flagship SUV Bet Faces China EV Slump

NIO ES9 Price Starts at 528,000 Yuan as Flagship SUV Bet Faces China EV Slump

9 April 2026
NIO opened pre-orders for its ES9 flagship SUV Thursday, pricing it at 528,000 yuan with battery or 420,000 yuan under its Battery-as-a-Service plan. March deliveries rose 136% year-on-year, but NIO’s U.S. shares fell 4.9% after the announcement. The ES9 enters a shrinking premium SUV market in China, competing with Li Auto and Aito. CEO William Li warned chip shortages could add up to 10,000 yuan per vehicle.
Generation X Money Meltdown: 95% Have Costly Regrets, 81% Fear Retirement Unaffordable
Previous Story

Gen X’s 2025 Retirement Wake‑Up Call (Nov. 10): New Reports Show a $467K Savings Gap—Here’s What to Do Now

TSMC Stock Skyrockets on AI Boom — Analysts See More Upside
Next Story

TSMC’s October Sales Set New Record but Growth Cools to 16.9% YoY as AI Demand Normalizes; Smartphone Orders Reawaken

Go toTop