Drone warfare has moved from niche capability to central pillar of U.S. defense strategy, and July’s setup for military drone stocks looks unusually attractive. The FY2027 Department of War budget request earmarks $53.6 billion for drone dominance and counter-drone technologies, plus $20.6 billion for counter-unmanned systems, a 424% increase over the FY 2026 enacted level of $3.9 billion. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has signaled budget allocations of up to $74 billion for UAV and USV procurement, and recent Middle East strikes have reset loitering-munitions demand for years to come.
Yet the three purest U.S.-listed military drone plays have sold off hard this month, creating an entry window before FY2027 appropriations firm up. Each has a distinct role in the unmanned kill chain, and each carries a specific risk investors need to price in.
AeroVironment (AVAV)
AeroVironment (NASDAQ:AVAV | AVAV Price Prediction) is the closest thing the market has to a pure-play loitering-munitions leader, thanks to the Switchblade family and the recently absorbed BlueHalo directed-energy business. On July 17, shares changed hands around $147.03, down more than 12% in July and nearly 43% year to date, despite fundamentals moving the other way.
Q4 FY26 was a genuine breakout. Revenue hit $641.62 million, up 133.3% year over year, and adjusted EPS of $1.84 beat the $1.47 consensus. FY26 bookings landed at a record $2.7 billion at a 1.4x book-to-bill, and management guided FY27 revenue to $2.125 billion to $2.225 billion with non-GAAP EPS of $3.02 to $3.34. CEO Wahid Nawabi called fiscal 2026 “a transformational year for AV… the strongest financial performance in our history.”
Analyst positioning backs the setup, with 84% being bullish alongside zero Sell ratings and a $245.38 consensus target against the current share price.
Risk: Gross margin compressed from 36% to 32% on acquisition amortization, and FY26 landed with a GAAP net loss of $265.1 million driven by a $240.7 million goodwill impairment. The SCAR program termination stripped $1.5 billion from unfunded backlog and spawned securities litigation. Integration risk is real.
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions (KTOS)
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions (NASDAQ:KTOS) owns the jet-powered tactical drone niche through Valkyrie, and its sole-source position on multiple Collaborative Combat Aircraft programs makes it a direct beneficiary of the Pentagon’s $4.5 billion in collaborative autonomy funding. Shares traded around $47 on July 17, down nearly 41% year to date after peaking near $130.72 in January 2026.
Q1 FY26 revenue of $371 million rose 22.6% year over year, and Unmanned Systems grew 30.9% organically. Bookings of $605.2 million produced a 1.6x book-to-bill and backlog of $2.01 billion. Management raised FY26 revenue guidance to $1.70 billion to $1.76 billion. CEO Eric DeMarco framed the moment plainly: “There is a generational recapitalization of the U.S. defense industrial base underway and Kratos is committed to doing its part.”
Kratos plans to produce roughly 40 Valkyries annually by the end of 2027, and Northrop Grumman has selected Valkyrie for the MUX TACAIR CCA program. Wall Street is aligned, with 17 Buy or Strong Buy ratings, zero Sell ratings and a $109.86 consensus target.
Risk: Free cash flow is guided to negative $85 million to negative $105 million on CapEx of $155 million to $165 million, forward P/E sits at roughly 80 and stock-based comp has ballooned to $15 million versus $8.7 million a year earlier. The valuation demands flawless execution.
Red Cat Holdings (RCAT)
Red Cat Holdings (NASDAQ:RCAT) is the speculative, high-beta option. The Black Widow ISR drone won the U.S. Army’s Short Range Reconnaissance program, and management is scaling toward a $150 million to $180 million short-to-medium term revenue target. Shares traded around $7.84 on July 17, down nearly 30% over the past month even as the operating story accelerates.
Q1 FY26 revenue of $15.47 million grew 849.3% year over year, gross margin swung to 12.7% from negative 52.1% and the balance sheet holds $131.9 million in cash after a $225 million equity offering. New Black Widow orders arrived from a NATO ally via NSPA and a second Asia-Pacific ally.
CEO Jeff Thompson connected the macro dots directly: “With 2026 shaping up to be a banner year for Red Cat… Secretary of War Hegseth has signaled budget allocations of up to $74 billion for UAV and USV procurement… the Factory is the Weapon.” Analyst coverage is thin but unanimously bullish: All six analysts covering RCAT assign the stock a Buy or Strong Buy rating with a $22 consensus 12-month price target.
Risk: Red Cat is burning cash aggressively, with a $27.3 million Q1 operating loss and $31.95 million in quarterly cash burn. The share count has ballooned to 120.8 million versus 85.5 million a year earlier, inventory jumped to $62.7 million, and the pending Quaze Technologies acquisition still needs Investment Canada Act clearance. Position sizing matters here.
What to Watch Next
All three names have decoupled from a defense budget backdrop that is fundamentally more favorable than it was six months ago. FY2027 procurement dollars begin flowing this fall, and the next Kratos and AeroVironment earnings reports will show whether book-to-bill trends continue above 1.4x. If bookings hold, the current July drawdown will look like a gift.
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