Today: 5 June 2026
Unusual Machines Stock Jumps As Q1 Revenue Nearly Quadruples And Drone Supply Bet Widens
15 May 2026
2 mins read

Unusual Machines Stock Jumps As Q1 Revenue Nearly Quadruples And Drone Supply Bet Widens

ORLANDO, Florida, May 14, 2026, 18:03 EDT

  • Unusual Machines posted first-quarter revenue of $8.1 million, marking a 296% jump from the same period last year.
  • Net income came in at $10.3 million for the drone-parts maker, thanks to investment gains, though the core business remained in the red.
  • The company’s fresh $150 million equity raise is being put to work—it’s buying inventory and moving forward on a $52 million battery deal.

Shares of Unusual Machines surged Thursday, with the Orlando drone parts maker posting first-quarter earnings and revenue that almost quadrupled. Investors, it seems, remain eager to back even the smaller U.S. drone supply-chain players.

Shares last changed hands at $16.93, climbing roughly 12.8% from the prior close, with market data showing an intraday high of $17.85.

The timing is key: Unusual Machines is attempting a rapid shift from its roots as a niche drone-parts supplier into a bigger player in U.S. manufacturing, as defense contracts and tighter controls on some overseas tech send more buyers to American firms. The company reported that it filed its Form 10-Q and posted a shareholder letter after the closing bell.

Unusual Machines posted $8.1 million in sales for the quarter ended March 31, jumping from $2.0 million a year ago. Net income swung to $10.3 million, or 22 cents per share, after a $3.3 million loss, or 21 cents a share, in the same stretch last year, according to the filing.

Profit looks different under the hood. The company’s $7.3 million operating loss stands out, but $17.5 million in other income, driven mostly by investment gains both realized and unrealized, flipped the bottom line positive. That doesn’t add up to a steady operating profit machine.

Most of the revenue boost stemmed from business-to-business sales linked to NDAA and Blue UAS offerings, according to the filing. NDAA-compliant typically means drone parts meet U.S. defense sourcing rules, while Blue UAS points to government-approved drone platforms or components.

Chief Executive Allan Evans described the company as “still much too small” in remarks to shareholders, adding he doesn’t see demand as a ceiling over the next 18 months. Staffing jumped from 81 at last year’s fourth quarter close to 141 by the end of the first quarter; as of Thursday, the headcount topped 190. ACCESS Newswire

The balance sheet leaves management space to try out that thesis. Unusual Machines closed March holding roughly $222.9 million in cash—boosted by a $150 million equity raise at $17 per share—and reported kicking off around $75 million in purchase orders for drone components.

The company is making a push into batteries, too. On May 7, it struck a definitive agreement to buy DroneNX LLC—doing business as Upgrade Energy—in a deal valued at roughly $52 million. That figure includes stock, $1 million in cash up front, and as much as $26 million in additional cash, depending on battery revenue milestones. The transaction still faces standard closing hurdles like an audit.

The story’s not straightforward. Red Cat Holdings, a public defense drone company, fits squarely into the same investor theme—but also buys from Unusual Machines, picking up roughly $1.0 million in inventory in the March quarter, per its latest filing. This week, Red Cat said it wants to raise $200 million through a common-stock offering geared toward general corporate needs and strategic expansion.

Roth Capital kicked off coverage on Unusual Machines, slapping a Buy on the stock and setting a $25 target. The firm points to the push against China-made drone parts, arguing it could open up a multibillion-dollar market. Analysts say Unusual Machines stands to grab a “healthy component share” from the Department of War’s Drone Dominance program. TipRanks

But there’s a catch: Unusual Machines pointed out the need for its customers to actually secure government contracts before placing component orders. The company also acknowledged risks ranging from outdated inventory and production snags to delays, workforce shortages, trouble in the supply chain, and squeezed margins.

Gross margin landed at 32.8% for the first quarter. Evans flagged ongoing inefficiencies tied to new product launches and factory ramp-ups, warning the 40% margin goal probably stays out of reach until late 2026 or maybe even early 2027.

Unusual Machines isn’t getting priced as a reliable earner—investors are watching a race to scale. There’s cash on hand, new money coming in, and orders stacking up. Turning that into steady operating profit, though, is the next hurdle.

Stock Market Today

  • SpaceX IPO Set to Challenge US Stock Market Rally Amid Inflation Fears
    June 5, 2026, 5:27 PM EDT. The highly anticipated SpaceX initial public offering (IPO) is expected next week, aiming to raise $75 billion at a valuation of $1.75 trillion. This blockbuster IPO, the largest ever, coincides with a cautious U.S. stock market facing inflation concerns and potential Federal Reserve interest rate hikes. The S&P 500 fell after nine weeks of gains, pressured by strong jobs data and a semiconductor selloff. SpaceX's diverse business spans rockets, satellite communications, and AI computing. Despite a $4.94 billion net loss in 2025, revenues rose 33% to $18.67 billion. Market watchers see the IPO as a key litmus test for investor appetite amid geopolitical tensions and the growing AI sector, with more mega IPOs from AI firms Anthropic and OpenAI expected to follow.

Latest articles

Scage Future Stock Almost Triples After Multiple Trading Halts

Scage Future Stock Almost Triples After Multiple Trading Halts

5 June 2026
Scage Future ADSs soared 194.58% to $0.8431 on record volume and two volatility pauses, defying a 4.18% Nasdaq plunge, but slid 19.71% after hours as the company flagged ongoing losses, going-concern doubts, and warned that future fundraising could dilute shareholders.
Newmont Stock Just Took a Double Hit — Gold Slumped and Wall Street Sold Off

Newmont Stock Just Took a Double Hit — Gold Slumped and Wall Street Sold Off

5 June 2026
Newmont Corp. shares plunged nearly 8% to $99.71 as gold prices tumbled 3% after strong U.S. jobs data dashed hopes for easier Fed policy, sending Treasury yields higher and pressuring gold miners; trading volume jumped, and Newmont now sits about 26% below its 52-week high, with rising costs and lower Q2 output flagged by management.
Azul claims cargo shipping time can drop from 10 days to 3 days

Azul claims cargo shipping time can drop from 10 days to 3 days

5 June 2026
Azul Logística has launched a dedicated Campinas–Porto Velho freighter route, slashing delivery times to Brazil’s North from over 10 days to as little as 3–4, as part of its post-bankruptcy push for “responsible growth”; investors should watch load factors and demand, as success hinges on filling new Airbus A321P2F flights amid fierce competition and infrastructure challenges.
Dow closes as strong jobs numbers snap string of records

Dow closes as strong jobs numbers snap string of records

5 June 2026
A blowout May jobs report sent the Dow plunging 1.3% to 50,880 and the Nasdaq nearly 4% as investors braced for tighter Fed policy, with chip stocks like Nvidia, Broadcom, and Micron leading an 8% drop in the semiconductor index, erasing hopes for rate cuts and triggering a broad tech selloff.
Microsoft Stock Rises As AI Trade Reignites: Why MSFT Shares Moved Today
Previous Story

Microsoft Stock Rises As AI Trade Reignites: Why MSFT Shares Moved Today

Virgin Galactic Stock Faces A 2026 Spaceflight Test As Cash Burn Narrows But Funding Risk Stays
Next Story

Virgin Galactic Stock Faces A 2026 Spaceflight Test As Cash Burn Narrows But Funding Risk Stays

Go toTop