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Drones: Industry & Defence
15JUN

Kratos beats Q1, raises guidance, stock falls 5.3%

3 min read
11:15UTC

Kratos Defense reported Q1 2026 revenue of $371 million on Wednesday 6 May, beating analyst estimates of $344.6 million, with EPS of $0.16 against $0.13 expected. Kratos Unmanned Systems revenue rose to $82.6 million, up 30.9% organically, on XQ-58 Valkyrie activity.

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Key takeaway

Kratos beat consensus but the Valkyrie cadence makes a CCA down-selection visible inside the production line.

Kratos Defense reported Q1 2026 revenue of $371 million on Wednesday 6 May, beating analyst estimates of $344.6 million, with earnings per share (EPS) of $0.16 against $0.13 expected 1. Kratos Unmanned Systems (KUS) revenue rose to $82.6 million, up 30.9% organically, driven by XQ-58 Valkyrie activity. Management raised FY2026 guidance to $1.7-1.76 billion, 15-19% organic growth. The stock fell 5.3% after the release. Q1 revenue beat consensus by $26 million; the year-on-year slope is the figure defence-tech analysts will price into FY2027 multiples.

Kratos opened production on a second lot of twelve XQ-58A Valkyrie aircraft in early 2026, according to the Q1 transcript. Kratos is targeting approximately 40 Valkyries per year by end-2027 2, a correction to earlier media shorthand suggesting early 2028. Anduril's Arsenal-1 line, which received Roadrunner production hiring on 22 April , is rated at 150 Fury aircraft per year already, a 3.75x cadence gap on competing Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) platforms. Kratos backlog stands at $2.010 billion as of 29 March, with a Q1 Kratos Government Solutions (KGS) book-to-bill of 1.8 to 1 lifted by a $447 million Space Force prime contract.

Kratos is hedging through hypersonics ($400 million expected in 2026, $700 million in 2027) and a directed-energy weapon prime award expected to ramp from 2027. Anduril has shipped four platforms onto the Arsenal-1 line and signalled fundraising at $60 billion-plus, the inverse strategy of holding diversification hedges in reserve. The market sell-off on a Q1 beat suggests analysts are pricing a worry that Kratos's drone mix is growing slower than the autonomous-systems budget would imply, with Valkyrie revenue at roughly $20 million inside the $82.6 million KUS quarter.

The DAWG $54.6 billion request is large enough to fund both companies at present. FY2028 down-selection pressure is now visible inside the production cadence, not the income statement.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Kratos builds military drones, including the XQ-58 Valkyrie: a jet-powered unmanned aircraft designed to fly alongside crewed fighters as an autonomous wingman. It reported solid financial results this week, but its stock fell because investors noticed a specific problem. Kratos plans to build 40 Valkyries per year by the end of 2027, while its main competitor Anduril already has a factory rated to build 150 of its competing aircraft per year. When the Pentagon eventually picks which company gets the large contract, production capacity is one of the key measures. A 3.75-to-one gap at the current stage is what the market priced into the sell-off.

First Reported In

Update #8 · The week defence-AI got priced

Kratos Defense· 10 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Kratos beats Q1, raises guidance, stock falls 5.3%
The Valkyrie production cadence is the figure defence-tech analysts will price into FY2027 multiples: 40 aircraft per year by end-2027 against Anduril's Arsenal-1 line rated at 150 Fury aircraft per year. The 5.3% sell-off on a beat is a cleaner read on analyst sentiment than the headline numbers. Kratos's hypersonics ramp ($400 million in 2026, $700 million in 2027) is the explicit hedge if CCA narrows to a single prime.
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Anduril investors
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Helsing / European defence-AI sector
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