The federal government doesn't usually buy stock - but drone investors are now betting that it will.
Shares of small drone makers ripped higher on Thursday after The Wall Street Journal reported that the Pentagon is in talks to take equity stakes in a group of drone companies.
Unusual Machines led the move with a gain of more than 65%, while Kratos Defense climbed 15% and AeroVironment popped 18%. The Drone & Modern Warfare ETF, which trades under the ticker JEDI, rallied 12% alongside them.
Why The Government Wants In
The logic checks out if you think about how the U.S. uses drones now - they're cheap, expendable, and increasingly central to how modern wars are fought.
Equity stakes could let the Pentagon push production higher and bring component costs down at the same time, which lines up with a broader pattern the current administration has been building.
The Trump administration has already taken stakes in companies across critical minerals and semiconductors over the past year, with drones now lining up as the next link in that chain.
The analyst take: Needham's Austin Bohlig told clients the funding angle "makes particular sense for Unusual Machines given the critical and supply-constrained nature of drone components and domestic manufacturing capabilities."
For investors thinking about how defense exposure fits into a broader portfolio, drones now sit closer to chips and minerals than to traditional alternative investments on the risk spectrum.
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The Trump Jr. Angle
One name on the list is going to draw scrutiny - Donald Trump Jr., the president's eldest son, is a shareholder and advisory board member at Unusual Machines.
Any deal involving federal money flowing into a company tied to the first family is going to get a hard look from Congress, which doesn't mean a deal can't happen - just that the path could get bumpy if it does.
According to The Wall Street Journal, the talks have stretched over several months without a public agreement, and the Pentagon hasn't confirmed any of the conversations.
What To Watch
Three things matter from here:
- Whether the Pentagon actually inks any of the deals being discussed.
- Whether equity stakes become standard policy for sectors the government calls "strategic."
- Whether the political fight over the Trump Jr. connection slows the timeline.
If those deals close, the federal government becomes a long-term partner in a young, fast-moving industry, which changes the playbook for every drone investor still watching from the sidelines.
A government cap table is a long way from a government contract.
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