Unusual Machines closed at $12.84 on October 24, up 8.1% on the day. The stock touched an intraday high of $14.34 before settling back.
After-hours trading saw shares climb to around $13.35. This continues a rally from the mid-$11 range earlier in the week.
Unusual Machines, Inc., UMAC
The jump comes after UMAC announced its largest contract to date. Strategic Logix ordered $12.8 million worth of components for U.S. Army drones on October 23.
The order covers approximately 160,000 parts for the Army’s Rapid Reconfigurable Systems Line program. Needham analysts called it “clear validation” of growing demand for inexpensive domestic drones.
UMAC makes first-person-view drone components that meet strict military sourcing requirements. The company produces goggles, flight controllers, motors, and cameras.
All parts are NDAA-compliant, meaning they follow Pentagon rules about foreign suppliers. The military is actively replacing Chinese-made components across its drone fleet.
This isn’t UMAC’s only recent win. The company announced an $800,000 order from Red Cat Holdings on October 1 for camera and motor parts.
UMAC closed a $7 million acquisition of Australia’s Rotor Lab in September. The deal brought high-performance motor designs into UMAC’s portfolio.
The company plans to open a motor factory in Florida by late 2025. This facility will mass-produce motors domestically.
UMAC also joined Ondas Holdings in an $8 million investment in LightPath Technologies. LightPath makes infrared optics for drone cameras.
The CEO said export restrictions on germanium are pushing customers toward American-made alternatives. China controls much of the global germanium supply used in military optics.
Wall Street rates UMAC a “Strong Buy” with an average 12-month price target of $19.33. That represents roughly 50% upside from current levels.
The military drone market is projected to grow from $15.8 billion in 2025 to $22.8 billion by 2030. Chinese drone maker DJI is effectively banned for federal use.
This creates opportunity for domestic suppliers. UMAC’s strategy focuses on reshoring production to capture this demand.
The company’s Q2 revenue jumped 50.5% year-over-year. Sales beat analyst estimates by about 17%.
UMAC trades at approximately a $400 million market cap. The 52-week high sits near $23 per share.
The company pays no dividend. All focus remains on growth and capacity expansion.
UMAC’s executive vice president said the Red Cat deal shows the value of fast delivery of compliant parts. The Strategic Logix contract covers components for roughly 160,000 drone units in the Army’s rapid reconfigurable systems program.
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