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Drones: Industry & Defence
30APR

Kratos pours concrete before the orders

2 min read
09:10UTC

Kratos added 106,000 square feet to its Oklahoma City drone campus on 6 July to build more Valkyrie and Firejet, naming no post-expansion target and holding no firm order to fill the space.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Kratos expanded its Oklahoma City drone plant by 106,000 square feet with no firm order yet to fill it.

Kratos added 106,000 square feet to its Oklahoma City campus on Monday 6 July to build more Valkyrie, Firejet and other jet drones. Kratos is a San Diego defence contractor whose jet-powered drones fly as low-cost wingmen alongside crewed fighters. Current output runs at roughly 165 jet drones a year, and the company named no post-expansion target.

Here is the supply side answering the week's demand-side frameworks from the opposite direction: a vendor laying floor space before the firm orders arrive. Kratos is chasing 40 Valkyrie a year by the end of 2027 , a target it set against Anduril's goal of 150 Fury a year from its Arsenal-1 line. The new square footage gives the 2027 number a physical home before a signed production-rate requirement exists to justify it.

Kratos is committing capital to a line no buyer has yet promised to fill, matching from the manufacturer's side the unfunded ceilings the task forces are handing out: both parties keep a production base ready rather than pay for volume anyone has signed. If the orders arrive, Kratos owns the floor to fill them; if they slip, it carries an empty building.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Kratos is an American company that builds jet-powered military drones, including its Valkyrie model. It just added 106,000 square feet to its factory in Oklahoma City so it can build more of these aircraft, but it has not yet said exactly how many more it plans to make. This matters because building factory space is expensive and only pays off if the orders to fill it actually arrive. Companies sometimes expand ahead of confirmed contracts as a bet that the orders will follow, and Kratos is doing that now while it is still negotiating a bigger production deal with the US military.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Kratos's expansion follows directly from its own raised FY 2026 revenue guidance of $1.7-1.76 billion and ongoing negotiations over a Valkyrie low-rate initial production contract targeting 40 aircraft a year by early 2028 .

That sequencing matters: the factory addition is sized to match a production target the company has already told investors it expects to reach, rather than a target it has publicly locked in with a signed contract.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Kratos is committing capital to added floor space before its Valkyrie low-rate production contract is signed, a bet that could leave capacity underused if talks stall.

  • Opportunity

    If the Valkyrie LRIP contract closes near its targeted 40 aircraft a year, the Oklahoma City expansion positions Kratos to fill orders faster than competitors still sizing their own plants.

First Reported In

Update #15 · Two $500m drone deals, still no winner

Kratos Defense· 14 Jul 2026
Read original
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This Event
Kratos pours concrete before the orders
Building factory floor before a production-rate requirement lands is a bet that demand frameworks convert into signed volume.
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