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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
13MAY

Red Cat holders reject executive pay

2 min read
20:00UTC

Red Cat Holdings shareholders rejected the company's executive pay plan at its 18 June AGM, 58% against, the company disclosed on 25 June.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Red Cat holders rejected executive pay 58% against, the second drone-sector revolt in six weeks.

Red Cat Holdings shareholders rejected the company's executive pay plan at its 18 June annual meeting, with roughly 58% of votes cast against, the company disclosed in an 8-K filing on 25 June 1. Red Cat is a US-listed drone maker whose Teal subsidiary builds first-person-view aircraft. Two of the five director nominees, Nicholas Liuzza Jr. and retired General Paul Funk II, drew more withheld votes than votes in favour, though plurality rules returned both to the board.

An advisory say-on-pay vote changes nothing on its own. The signal matters more than the ballot: Red Cat raised $225 million and won a Japanese order only weeks earlier , yet its own investors used the first clear vote to register dissent.

The same first-strike pattern hit DroneShield in May, when a majority voted against its remuneration report . Two counter-drone firms, two shareholder revolts in six weeks, as valuations built on order books outrun the governance around them.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Red Cat Holdings is a US drone company. At its annual shareholder meeting on 18 June, investors get to cast an advisory vote on how much the company pays its top executives, called a say-on-pay vote. It is not legally binding, meaning the board can still pay executives what it likes, but a heavy 'no' vote sends a clear signal of investor anger. About 58% of votes cast were against Red Cat's pay plan. Two directors up for re-election, Nicholas Liuzza Jr. and retired general Paul Funk II, actually had more votes withheld than votes in favour, yet both kept their seats because Red Cat's rules only require the most votes among candidates, not a majority, to win a board seat.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    A second first-strike-style pay vote at a listed counter-drone company within six weeks makes institutional investors more likely to press governance reform, including majority-voting bylaws, across the sector's other fast-growing names.

First Reported In

Update #14 · UK's £5bn drone bet follows Healey's exit

SEC EDGAR· 5 Jul 2026
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