# The Drone Stock Boom Is Running on Pentagon Promises, Patriotic Sentiment, and Almost No Revenue > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/s/the-drone-stock-boom-is-running-on-pentagon-promises-patriotic-sentiment-and-almost-no-revenue) > Type: Article > Date: 2026-05-28 > Description: The Ukraine war made drone warfare visible to retail investors. Financial influencers with ownership stakes made it tradeable. The companies themselves made it dangerous. In late 2024, the Pentagon committed itself to what officials called "drone dominance," a procurement push that pointed to... *The Ukraine war made drone warfare visible to retail investors. Financial influencers with ownership stakes made it tradeable. The companies themselves made it dangerous.* In late 2024, the Pentagon committed itself to what officials called "drone dominance," a procurement push that pointed to roughly $54 billion a year in spending across drone systems and counter-drone capabilities. Retail traders saw the headline, watched footage from Ukraine, and reached a blunt conclusion: small drone makers were about to become the next great defense trade. That conclusion has been good for stock charts and bad for basic underwriting. A cluster of tiny public companies with thin revenue, weak institutional ownership, and heavy social-media promotion has become a retail proxy for the future of warfare. The buyers are often men in their late 20s and early 30s, active online, politically engaged, and convinced that the battlefield has already shown where U.S. defense budgets are heading. The problem is that a battlefield thesis is not the same thing as an investable public company. The stocks ran first. The operating numbers barely moved. ## The Companies at the Center of the Trade The names pulling in the most retail attention share a familiar public-market profile. They are small, recently public, loosely followed, and easy to move. Several have reverse-merger or spinout histories. Several also have political or celebrity affiliations that show up in investor threads as a substitute for diligence. Here are the core names and the disclosed numbers that matter: - **Swarmer**: Ukrainian drone software company that debuted in March 2025. The stock surged about 1,200% and at one point approached an $800 million market capitalization. Revenue in the prior fiscal year was $309,920. - **Red Cat**: Shares jumped after a November 2024 Army contract announcement, then came under pressure after allegations that the company had overstated the value of the contract and used prohibited Chinese-made components. - **Unusual Machines**: A Red Cat spinout that appointed Donald Trump Jr. to its advisory board. The stock spiked after a $12.8 million Army contract announcement. It has traded at roughly 50 times sales. - **PowerUp**: Backed by Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, and planning a 2025 public listing through a reverse merger. Founder Brett Velicovich was previously involved with Cyberlux, a company now facing investor lawsuits. Two of Cyberlux's funders have been indicted on stock-manipulation charges. - **Ondas**: Entered public markets through a reverse merger with a sports-ticket reseller and has since become one of the sector's more volatile tickers. The valuation gap is the whole story. The Nasdaq's average price-to-sales ratio is around 6 times. Unusual Machines has traded near 50 times sales on the back of a contract worth $12.8 million. Swarmer briefly carried an equity valuation associated with a real industrial business while reporting revenue that would not support a small Brooklyn coffee shop. That mismatch does not prove fraud. It does tell you what the market is buying. Traders are not paying for present economics. They are paying for affiliation, narrative velocity, and the hope that one procurement press release can be extrapolated into an entire supply chain. ## The Backers Who Move the Price This trade depends on endorsement because endorsement solves the hardest problem these companies have: credibility. Swarmer appointed Erik Prince, the founder of Blackwater, as non-executive chairman. That gave investors an instantly legible signal: proximity to hard-power politics, defense contracting, and a certain kind of post-9/11 American security mythology. The company's own filing, however, also acknowledged substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern. It claimed involvement in Operation Spiderweb and said its systems had participated in more than 100,000 real-world missions. That figure was a marketing accelerant. It was not independently verified. The stock still exploded. Eric Schmidt has also become a visible presence around the defense-tech ecosystem. Anduril, Palmer Luckey's private defense startup, has built a following well beyond the usual investor class through direct online media, military aesthetics, and a marketing style calibrated for the same younger male audience buying the smaller public names. Anduril is not listed. The retail energy it creates still has to land somewhere. Often it lands in thinner, lower-quality public proxies. The market structure underneath that enthusiasm matters: - Financial influencers with disclosed ownership stakes have promoted several of the drone names across social platforms. - Major institutions have not built large public positions in the small-drone cohort. - Former Pentagon procurement officials have described parts of the sector as "houses of cards." - One Pentagon official, speaking on background, said the U.S. drone industry has had no significant impact on the Ukrainian battlefield. That last point matters because the retail case leans so heavily on Ukraine as proof of product-market fit. If the actual operators and procurement people are more skeptical than the stock promoters, the valuation framework starts to look less like defense analysis and more like meme-stock translation. ## What the Ukrainian Battlefield Actually Shows Retail investors are not wrong about the broad military lesson. Cheap drones changed the economics of observation and attrition in Ukraine. First-person-view units have damaged armor, extended reconnaissance capacity, and forced every major military to rethink the cost of exposing expensive systems to disposable airborne threats. But the leap from that reality to a profitable U.S. small-cap equity story is where the thesis starts to break down. The battlefield has demonstrated that drones matter. It has not demonstrated that the current crop of U.S.-listed microcaps can manufacture them at the cost, volume, reliability, and compliance standard the Pentagon will require. Several structural issues sit in the middle of that gap: - The low-cost small-drone market is still dominated by Chinese manufacturers operating on cost curves U.S. companies have struggled to match. - U.S. restrictions on Chinese-origin components raise compliance costs and narrow margins further. - Electronic warfare has become the defining countermeasure to drone swarms, degrading communications and limiting the real-world effectiveness of coordinated systems in contested environments. - Red Cat faces litigation alleging that it misrepresented production capacity and relied on Chinese components that would disqualify it from some of the contracts cited in investor messaging. The Pentagon's procurement commitment is real. The budgetary direction is real. None of that answers the most important public-markets question: which American companies can actually fulfill these contracts at scale and keep any economics for shareholders after compliance, manufacturing, and component costs are accounted for. That is where the retail narrative usually goes quiet. It has a strong view on demand. It has a weak view on unit economics. ## Why This Looks So Familiar Strip away the patriotic language and the battlefield footage and the structure looks old. This is a market segment built on reverse mergers, celebrity or political validation, contract headlines that arrive before proven capacity, and valuation multiples that require the future to show up quickly and in exactly the right form. That was the grammar of the 2020 SPAC cycle. The names were different. The mechanics were not. The outcome of that cycle is worth keeping in frame: - About 95% of SPAC investments from the 2020 vintage lost value. - The median SPAC lost more than half its peak value within 18 months. - Celebrity-backed deals generally underperformed even that weak peer set. PowerUp is using a reverse-merger route into public markets. Its founder's prior company is already tied up in investor lawsuits, and two former funders have been indicted for stock manipulation. That does not make the new vehicle uninvestable on its own. It does mean investors are entering through a structure with less scrutiny, thinner sponsorship, and a worse recent track record than a conventional IPO process. The drone trade has the same internal clock that killed much of the SPAC boom. At first, the market pays for adjacency: adjacency to war, to Washington, to media attention, to charismatic backers, to procurement headlines. Later, it asks for audited numbers, delivered products, recognized revenue, and margins that survive contact with manufacturing reality. That second phase is usually where the romance ends. ## What the Trade Is Really Pricing The market is not treating these companies like normal defense contractors. It is treating them like narrative options. A real defense company gets valued on procurement credibility, production repeatability, balance-sheet durability, and the ability to navigate a customer that pays slowly and demands exact compliance. This cohort trades more like a retail interpretation of geopolitics. Investors are buying symbols: Ukraine footage, Pentagon rhetoric, anti-China sourcing themes, Trump-world proximity, the aura of Silicon Valley defense optimism, and the idea that modern war has made legacy primes look slow. Some of those instincts may prove directionally correct. Drone spending will almost certainly rise. Counter-drone budgets will likely rise with it. Software, autonomy, and loitering munitions will continue pulling a larger share of defense attention. But a correct macro thesis can still be a terrible equity screen. A trader can be right that drones are central to future warfare and still lose money owning a stock at 50 times sales with litigation risk, no institutional sponsorship, questionable sourcing, and a manufacturing problem nobody has solved yet. That is the cleanest way to understand the boom. Retail investors have found the right theme and, in many cases, the wrong instruments. ## The Number That Should End the Fantasy Before Swarmer's stock surged roughly 1,200%, the company reported fiscal-year revenue of $309,920. That is not a typo. It is the number. Everything else in this trade flows from the market's willingness to ignore it. As long as Pentagon headlines, war footage, and online promotion keep feeding the same story, these stocks can keep levitating. Once procurement turns from aspiration to delivery, the sector will have to answer harder questions. Can these companies manufacture at scale? Can they comply with sourcing rules?