Should I buy DroneShield shares after its US contract win?

A young man looks like he his thinking holding his hand to his chin and gazing off to the side amid a backdrop of hand drawn lightbulbs that are lit up on a chalkboard.

DroneShield Ltd (ASX: DRO) has given investors another reason to pay attention this week.

On Tuesday, the counter-drone technology company announced that it has secured a contract supporting the mission of US Joint Interagency Task Force 401.

The contract has an initial value of $19.3 million, with a further $5.6 million in options over a five-year period. It covers mobile and fixed-site counter-drone solutions, including hardware, subscriptions, warranties, and services.

Why the contract is positive

I think this contract is important for a few reasons.

First, it adds revenue visibility. DroneShield expects at least $10 million of the initial value to be committed revenue for FY26, with the balance expected in FY27.

Second, it shows the company is continuing to gain traction in the United States. That is a key market because defence, government, and critical infrastructure customers are increasingly focused on drone threats.

Third, the contract includes more than just one product sale. It involves mobile and fixed-site systems, along with subscriptions, warranties, and services. I like that because it points to a broader solution rather than a simple equipment order.

Counter-drone technology is not a one-and-done market. Threats change, software needs updating, customers need support, and systems need to remain effective as drones become cheaper, faster, and more capable.

A growing defence need

The main reason I like DroneShield shares is that the problem the company is solving appears to be getting more important.

Drones are now a major part of modern conflict and security planning. They can be used for surveillance, disruption, targeting, and attacks. Outside the battlefield, they can create risks for airports, prisons, public events, critical infrastructure, military bases, and government sites.

That creates demand for technology that can detect, track, identify, and defeat drone threats.

DroneShield is positioned in that market through its sensing, electronic warfare, and command-and-control solutions. The company is also using artificial intelligence to improve its products and help customers respond to fast-changing aerial threats.

There are risks to consider. Defence sales can be lumpy, contract timing can move around, and the share price can be volatile when expectations are high. Investors also need to watch competition, production capacity, margins, and execution.

But I think the latest US contract supports the view that this is not just a speculative theme. Customers are committing meaningful capital to counter-drone capability.

Would I buy DroneShield shares?

Yes, I would buy DroneShield shares after this contract win.

Not because one contract changes everything, but because it adds another piece of evidence to a larger growth story.

The company appears to be gaining credibility with important customers, expanding in the US, and selling into a market where demand could keep rising as drone threats become more widespread.

This is still a higher-risk ASX share. I would not treat it like a mature defence prime or a defensive blue-chip stock. But for investors comfortable with volatility, I think the long-term opportunity is compelling.

Foolish Takeaway

The US contract win is a positive development for DroneShield, but it is not the whole investment case.

The real attraction is the direction of the market. Drones are changing how governments, militaries, and infrastructure operators think about security. That shift could create a long runway for companies with proven counter-drone technology.

DroneShield still has plenty to prove as it scales. But this latest win suggests it is moving in the right direction. For patient investors who can handle the risks, I think the shares remain a buy.

The post Should I buy DroneShield shares after its US contract win? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor Grace Alvino has positions in DroneShield. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended DroneShield. 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.