The counter-drone specialist DroneShield has bagged another large U.S. government contract, yet its shares continue to slide as a shareholder revolt and a regulatory probe weigh on sentiment. The dual story — operational strength versus governance anxiety — has created a gulf between the company’s $2.2 billion pipeline and a stock that has lost nearly half its value since October’s peak.
On June 2, the company disclosed a $33 million order package from the Pentagon’s Joint Interagency Task Force 401. The award is split into two pieces: a fixed $13.8 million deal to supply small-drone detection and defeat systems for the Joint Task Force–Southern Border, and a separate IDIQ contract with an initial $19.3 million that carries up to $5.6 million in options over five years. Combined, the second portion is worth $24.9 million, with deliveries running through 2026 and 2027. At least $10 million of that has been earmarked as secured revenue for the current fiscal year.
The $13.8 million portion, to be executed over nine months, will see DroneShield act as lead system integrator, pulling in technology from Echodyne, Silentium and Sentrycs. The systems are destined for two border locations — Laredo and the Rio Grande Valley — with end customers including the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Customs and Border Protection.
The IDIQ contract is structured to bundle hardware, software subscriptions, warranties and services, a shift that DroneShield hopes will build a more predictable revenue base. Recurring income now accounts for 13% of the company’s contracted 2026 revenue of A$154.8 million, up from 7% in the first quarter alone. That figure excludes the latest U.S. award.
The first quarter of 2026 provided tangible evidence of the momentum. DroneShield posted revenue of A$74.1 million, a 121% year-on-year jump. Customer cash receipts hit A$77.4 million, and operating cash flow came in at A$24.1 million — positive for the fourth consecutive quarter. The balance sheet shows A$222.8 million in cash and zero debt.
Yet the operational story is running headlong into a governance storm. At the annual general meeting on May 29, a stunning 50.51% of votes went against the remuneration report. Under Australian corporate law, that constitutes a “first strike.” A second strike at next year’s meeting would force a vote on whether the entire board should stand for re-election.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying DroneShield?
Compounding the unease is an ongoing Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) probe into the company’s market disclosures between November 1 and 20, 2025. The regulator is focusing particularly on a withdrawn announcement concerning a A$7.6 million U.S. order for handheld devices — the company later admitted to an error. The probe also covers share sales by Oleg Vornik, Peter James and other executives during the week of November 6-12. DroneShield says it is fully cooperating, and no formal findings have been released.
Leadership changes are also in play. Angus Bean took the reins as CEO on April 8, 2026, after more than a decade at the company. Hamish McLennan was elected to the board with 82.43% support at the AGM and now chairs it. Peter James stepped down. Bean faces the immediate challenge of converting a record pipeline — which includes 13 opportunities each worth more than A$20 million and a single program valued at A$730 million — into reliable revenue.
The market’s reaction to the latest Pentagon deal was lukewarm at best. Shares in Sydney closed at A$3.072 on June 3, down 0.6% on the day. In euro terms, the stock last traded at €1.82, a 3.6% decline on the Thursday after the announcement. That puts it roughly 48% below the 52-week high of €3.65 hit in October. The 14-day relative strength index sits at 42, and 30-day volatility has annualized at 56%.
A single analyst rating on the stock carries a target of A$4.80, a level that underscores how far expectations have diverged from current price action. The company aims to hit A$1 billion in revenue by 2030, with more than 30% recurring. New hardware and software products are slated for the third quarter of 2026, and external catalysts such as a planned NATO counter-drone supplier pool and the U.S. Safer Skies Act could open further doors.
Half-year results are due in August. Until then, Bean must prove that contract volume can translate into dependable revenue while closing the governance gaps that have soured investor sentiment. If both can be achieved, the operational narrative may finally align with the share price.
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