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Fuzzy Panda Research

US cybersecurity research firm that published short-sell analysis on drone-sector companies.

Last refreshed: 10 May 2026

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Common Questions
What is Fuzzy Panda Research and how does it investigate drone companies?
Fuzzy Panda Research is a US short-sell research firm that publishes critical analyses of publicly traded companies, often targeting defence-tech and drone manufacturers. It publishes reports questioning financial claims or operational assertions while holding short positions in the target companies.
Has Fuzzy Panda Research published reports on Red Cat or AeroVironment?
Fuzzy Panda Research has published short-sell analysis on US drone manufacturers including Red Cat Holdings, raising questions about revenue claims and contract substance. The firm is cited in drone-industry analysis as a source of sceptical counter-views.Source: Fuzzy Panda Research publications
How credible are Fuzzy Panda Research reports?
Fuzzy Panda's reports have prompted official responses from company management teams and, in some cases, SEC inquiries. Short-seller research in defence-tech carries weight because it often surfaces supply-chain or accounting discrepancies that institutional analysts with underwriting relationships are slower to flag.

Background

Fuzzy Panda Research is a US-based independent short-sell research firm that publishes critical analyses of publicly traded companies, typically releasing reports shortly before or during short positions. The firm gained attention in the drone-defence sector through research questioning the financial claims and operational assertions of US drone manufacturers.

Fuzzy Panda's work is cited in the drone-industry-defence topic as a source of sceptical counter-analysis against the revenue and contract claims of companies including Red Cat Holdings and AeroVironment. Short-seller reports in defence-tech carry particular weight because they often surface supply-chain or accounting discrepancies that institutional analysts with underwriting relationships are slower to flag.

The firm does not disclose its ownership or principal researchers publicly, a common practice among short-sell research firms. Its reports have prompted official responses from company management teams and, in some cases, SEC inquiries.

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