Key Takeaways
- AVAV shares climbed 10.7% Thursday, finishing at $190.89
- The company secured a $500 million fixed-price U.S. Army contract for counter-UAS technology
- William Blair analyst Louie DiPalma suggests the deal involves the TITAN C-UAS platform
- This positive development comes after recent challenges including a scrapped SCAR contract and June accounting issues
- The defense contractor reported 133% year-over-year revenue growth to $642 million in its latest quarter
The past several months have been challenging for AeroVironment investors. Shares plummeted from above $392 to below $140 after a government contract cancellation and accounting disclosure in June. Thursday’s 10.7% surge to $190.89, driven by a half-billion dollar Army contract award, provided much-needed relief.
The Department of Defense announced that AeroVironment received a fixed-price agreement from the U.S. Army covering “the procurement of commercial counter-unmanned aerial systems and counter-small-unmanned aerial systems capabilities.” The agreement extends through June 29, 2029.
Louie DiPalma, an analyst at William Blair, believes the contract centers on the company’s TITAN platform. The TITAN system employs radio frequency capabilities to neutralize drone threats and features rapid deployment capability in under five minutes.
According to DiPalma, AeroVironment management reported that TITAN orders more than doubled during fiscal 2026.
Future Growth Opportunities
TITAN represents just one piece of AeroVironment’s growth strategy. Company leadership has indicated confidence that the LOCUST high-energy laser platform could land a production contract within the next three months. The LOCUST system features AI-driven targeting capabilities and operates at under $5 per shot.
Additionally, the Freedom Eagle-1 counterdrone missile interceptor platform is anticipated to receive a production contract around fall 2027.
The strategic importance is clear: ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East have elevated drone and counter-drone capabilities to priority status for defense organizations globally.
Background: Navigating Recent Setbacks
Understanding the company’s recent trajectory is essential. Earlier this year, the government terminated the BADGER phased-array antenna contract connected to the SCAR satellite initiative. When AeroVironment revealed an accounting error involving SCAR asset write-downs on June 22, shares were already struggling.
AVAV traded above $392 before the initial stop-work order. The stock fell to approximately $150 ahead of the accounting error announcement, then declined further below $140 prior to this week’s fourth-quarter results — which exceeded analyst expectations.
Thursday’s rally pushed shares back above the $190 threshold.
On the financial front, AeroVironment delivered $642 million in revenue for its latest quarter, representing 133% year-over-year expansion. The autonomous systems segment fueled most of that growth, increasing 79% to $492 million.
This $500 million Army contract represents a significant step in what appears to be a substantial order book recovery for the defense contractor.



