Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Drones: Industry & Defence
10MAY

Red Cat lands NATO order via NSPA, Kyiv tie-up

3 min read
14:35UTC

Red Cat Holdings reported Q1 2026 revenue of $15.5 million on Thursday 7 May, up 849% year-on-year. A NATO ally placed a Black Widow order routed through the NATO Support and Procurement Agency, and Red Cat signed a partnership with Ukraine's Spetstechnoexport for next-generation unmanned systems.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Red Cat broke into NATO procurement via NSPA and tied up with Kyiv's state arms exporter in the same quarter.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Red Cat makes small military drones, notably the Black Widow, which the US Army selected as its standard short-range reconnaissance aircraft. This week the company reported that a NATO member country ordered Black Widows through the alliance's shared purchasing agency, and a separate Asia-Pacific country placed another order. Red Cat also signed a deal with Spetstechnoexport, Ukraine's state arms exporter, to develop next-generation drone systems together. Ukraine and a US company are collaborating on drone designs at exactly the moment Ukraine's export regulator is blocking other drone sales abroad. That apparent contradiction reflects two different Ukrainian government bodies running separate policies simultaneously.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Two structural features explain why Red Cat reached NATO procurement while still reporting a net loss of $26.6 million.

First, the FCC ban on Chinese-origin drones created a captive-market condition in US procurement that does not apply directly in NATO. Red Cat's Black Widow gained NSPA approval through its US Army programme-of-record status: the Army SRR designation acts as third-party quality assurance that NSPA can rely on without running its own evaluation cycle.

This is the same mechanism used by larger US primes; NSPA routinely catalogues US Army programme-of-record winners without independent qualification tests.

Second, the Spetstechnoexport partnership inverts the export-suspension narrative established around Ukraine's state arms exporter. Kyiv's export regulator has been blocking interceptor drone sales to Gulf buyers, but Spetstechnoexport, which handles state-authorised exports, is simultaneously partnering with a US-listed company to develop next-generation systems. The two tracks operate under different Ukrainian ministerial authorities, which is why they can coexist.

First Reported In

Update #8 · The week defence-AI got priced

Red Cat Holdings· 10 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Red Cat lands NATO order via NSPA, Kyiv tie-up
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. The Spetstechnoexport partnership inverts the SSEC export-suspension narrative: Kyiv's state arms exporter is collaborating with a US-listed firm at the same moment Ukraine's regulator is blocking interceptor sales to Gulf buyers.
Different Perspectives
Procurement sceptics
Procurement sceptics
Two identically sized IDIQs to different primes within seven weeks, and a five-nation pact where one partner moves weeks ahead of the rest, could just as easily read as an industrial base still improvising vendor mix as a deliberate hedging doctrine. Neither ceiling appears sized against a validated requirement yet.
Chinese component suppliers
Chinese component suppliers
FCC and Pentagon-level restrictions on Chinese-origin airframes and motors have progressively excluded DJI-linked suppliers from federal counter-drone catalogues, narrowing the field JIATF-401 and Gauntlet II can buy from to a short list of certified domestic bidders. Beijing reads the exclusions as protectionism dressed as security policy.
Quantum Systems
Quantum Systems
Blackstone, Airbus, Advent and Noteus reportedly priced the Munich drone maker at $8 billion, more than double its prior mark, on the strength of 19,000 Ukraine missions rather than confirmed revenue. It is betting production capacity, not current sales, is what buyout capital is now paying for.
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
Britain released the first LEAP effector money three weeks after its defence secretary quit over the size of the drone budget, splitting £3.16 million across three small firms rather than one contractor. It expects the other four LEAP partners to follow its pace, not set their own.
JIATF-401
JIATF-401
The task force handed AeroVironment a $500 million counter-drone ceiling identical to Perennial Autonomy's from seven weeks earlier, while its own Gauntlet II red team prepares to attack the drones the winners of that sprint will build. It expects to keep several qualified suppliers warm rather than certify one.
DroneShield
DroneShield
DroneShield appointed retired Rear Admiral Lee Goddard as an independent director from 1 July, its second board move since founder Oleg Vornik's April exit. The ASIC probe into November's disclosures and share sales stays open, so the admiral steadies the story without closing the file.