Up 133% this year and still climbing: Why this ASX tech stock just hit a record high

A man flying a drone using a remote controller.

A fresh defence-linked update has put Elsight Ltd (ASX: ELS) back in the spotlight on Tuesday.

At the time of writing, the Elsight share price is up 8.51% to $7.27, after earlier touching a new all-time high of $7.33.

It adds to an already strong run, with the stock up about 133% this year and nearly 1,600% over the past 12 months.

Here’s what was announced.

US defence approval opens new door

The key announcement is that Elsight’s Halo platform has been added to the US Defence Contract Management Agency (DCMA) Blue List.

This is a pre-approved list of technologies that meet strict operational, cybersecurity, and supply chain standards set by the US Department of War.

In effect, this allows US military units to procure Halo directly through an approved marketplace, avoiding the longer traditional procurement channels.

That shortens the path from testing to deployment and removes some of the delays that can slow adoption.

The company said Halo had already met the necessary standards for operational reliability and data integrity, which supported its inclusion on the list.

Positioned in a fast-growing segment

The update lands at a time when US defence spending on drones and autonomous systems is expanding.

Elsight pointed to a proposed US defence budget that includes tens of billions of dollars allocated to drone and counter-drone capabilities.

There is also a broader push to scale autonomous systems across military operations over the coming years.

Halo is designed to provide secure, resilient connectivity for drones and unmanned systems, which becomes more critical as deployment increases.

Being added to the blue list means the platform now sits within a system that is already helping fast-track approved technologies into use.

It also means demand is likely to concentrate among vendors that have cleared these hurdles, with fewer players competing across the space.

What investors are watching next

This announcement does not immediately translate into revenue, but it changes the pathway to getting there.

The focus now shifts to whether this approval actually turns into contracts, pilot programs, and repeat orders over time.

Investors will also be watching how quickly Halo moves from being approved to being used across US defence programs.

After such a strong share price run over the last year, expectations are already pretty high.

That leaves execution as the key variable from here, especially when it comes to turning this into real revenue.

Foolish Takeaway

While investors are piling into Elsight shares, the latest update shows why the market has been pushing the stock higher.

The company has secured a position inside a tightly controlled procurement ecosystem, in a segment that is seeing huge investment.

The next step is showing that this access leads to real use, with contracts being signed and the technology being rolled out more widely.

The post Up 133% this year and still climbing: Why this ASX tech stock just hit a record high appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor Aaron Teboneras has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.