Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Drones: Industry & Defence
15JUN

DroneShield AGM draws a first strike

1 min read
11:15UTC

DroneShield shareholders delivered a first strike at the 29 May AGM, with 50.51% voting against the remuneration report, even as the CEO's options package passed and a new chair was elected.

TechnologyDeveloping

DroneShield's annual general meeting on Friday 29 May drew a first strike: 50.51% of shareholders voted against the remuneration report 1. The ASX-listed Australian counter-drone firm is one of the sector's most-watched names, and a first strike, an against vote above 25%, formally signals investor dissent on executive pay.

The other resolutions passed. CEO Angus Bean's 290,375-option long-term incentive package cleared with 55.8% support, and Hamish McLennan was elected chair with 82.43% 2. The earlier coverage of this AGM noted the Bean options and remuneration votes were still pending publication ; these are the results.

A 50.51% protest vote against pay, set against the 82.43% backing for the incoming chair, shows investors endorsing the board's direction while rebuking its pay structure. A second strike at next year's meeting could trigger a board spill, so the result is a warning shot rather than a verdict, delivered against a backdrop of rapidly scaling counter-drone demand.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

DroneShield is an Australian company listed on the ASX stock exchange that makes systems to detect and destroy hostile drones. At its annual general meeting on 29 May 2026, shareholders voted on whether to approve the pay package for its senior executives. More than half the shareholders, 50.51%, voted against the remuneration report, which under Australian corporate law is called a 'first strike'. If shareholders give two consecutive first strikes, they can force the entire board to stand for re-election. The new chairman Hamish McLennan was elected with 82% support, suggesting shareholders are broadly positive about the new board direction but unhappy with how CEO Angus Bean's performance options were structured and priced.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Ukraine starts exporting the factory

TechTimes· 7 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
DroneShield / Australian C-UAS sector
DroneShield / Australian C-UAS sector
DroneShield is simultaneously embedded in a US prime's fielded kill chain, selected for the world's largest civil C-UAS deployment, and navigating an open ASIC probe with a first-strike AGM vote on record. Strengthening commercial fundamentals and an unsettled boardroom are running in parallel at exactly the moment US buyers weigh supplier stability.
Ukraine / combat-data exporters
Ukraine / combat-data exporters
Ukrainian firms entered Pentagon Drone Dominance Phase 2 alongside Skycutter (ID:3988), and Red Cat's formal Spetstechnoexport partnership (ID:3987) carries Black Widow to Japan. Combat-proven data is the export Ukraine can monetise while its domestic export ban blocks hardware sales to Gulf states spending millions per salvo on less-proven alternatives.
Anduril investors
Anduril investors
Bernstein Research's Douglas Harned placed the 27-times-revenue multiple in the context of enterprise-software platform primes: the buyer prices a future monopoly on the Lattice software layer, not 2026 earnings. The Helsing Flytrap result and Phase 1 shortfall are the first live tests of those assumptions since the $61 billion valuation closed.
Helsing / European defence-AI sector
Helsing / European defence-AI sector
Helsing's 88% GPS-denied hit rate at Pabrade is its first US Army validation credential, arriving alongside an $18 billion valuation and a Bundestag €1.46 billion framework. Nordic, Baltic, and Central European defence ministries now have a US-scored European alternative to reference in procurement without waiting for a US programme of record.
Pentagon / Defense Innovation Unit
Pentagon / Defense Innovation Unit
The DIU's own programme managers characterised the 43% acceptance rate as within the expected curve for a first-generation industrial ramp. Phase 2's tighter price caps and Chinese-component deadline signal the programme is accelerating supplier-quality selection, not retreating from the 300,000-drone target.
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark accepted Fire Point's Skrydstrup plant after committing to bilateral defence co-production at the B9 Nordic summit in May; the facility sits beside a Danish F-35 base, sharing security perimeters. NATO has published no legal guidance on whether hosting Ukrainian weapons production converts Denmark into a co-belligerent, leaving the host-state obligation unresolved.