Red Cat Holdings reported Q1 2026 revenue of $15.5 million on Thursday 7 May, up 849% year-on-year from $1.6 million 1. Gross margin improved 64.8 percentage points to 12.7%. Cash stood at $131.9 million. Net loss widened to $26.6 million from $23.1 million. At that growth rate, the cash position funds at least two more quarters before Red Cat needs external capital to reach its $150-180 million run-rate target.
The headline development sits in the order book. A NATO ally placed a Black Widow drone order routed through the NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA), The Alliance's institutional procurement arm. A second Asia-Pacific ally placed a separate Black Widow order. Red Cat signed a partnership with Ukraine's Spetstechnoexport for next-generation unmanned systems, and a definitive agreement to acquire Canadian Quaze Technologies (~$25 million in stock) is pending Investment Canada Act clearance, anticipated this month. The Blue Ops maritime division launched third-generation uncrewed surface vessels with integrated drone payloads. Management projects an annual revenue run rate of $150-180 million in the short to medium term.
NSPA aggregates allied demand and runs procurement against pooled NATO budgets; a bilateral Foreign Military Sale (FMS) is one nation buying from another. An NSPA-routed order draws on alliance-pooled funding rather than a single nation's defence budget, which changes which procurement officials can release the next contract. That re-routes which budget signs the next purchase order.
The Spetstechnoexport partnership inverts the Ukraine State Service for Export Control (SSEC) export-suspension narrative : Kyiv's state arms exporter is collaborating with a US-listed firm at exactly the moment Ukraine's regulator is blocking interceptor sales to Gulf buyers. The Quaze acquisition adds wireless-power charging autonomy to the portfolio, the supply-side counterpart to the orders.
