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Unusual Machines stock is breaking out and it may have President Trump to thank

Unusual Machines stock is breaking out and it may have President Trump to thank
Wajeeh Khan
May 28, 2026, 11:22 AM

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Unusual Machines (UMAC)

Buy UMAC only as a momentum entry after the breakout holds for 2–3 sessions, because the market is pricing a shift from “defense-adjacent supplier” to a Pentagon-backed domestic counter-UAS partner. The $5M+ counter-UAS components order is real traction, and NDAA-style pressure against Chinese-made drones creates a structural tailwind for US-made, compliant suppliers. Thesis: federal funding lands and accelerates manufacturing toward sustainable profitability.

Key Risk: Pentagon funding negotiations fail or are delayed long enough that the stock’s valuation premium collapses before operating profits improve.

Defense drone supply chain (long US-made components)

Buy a basket/ETF exposure to US defense electronics and drone supply-chain beneficiaries (e.g., iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF (ITA)) to capture broad upside if federal drone funding expands beyond UMAC. Second-order benefit: once one domestic supplier is “approved,” procurement tends to widen to adjacent component makers (sensors, power, counter-UAS subsystems), lifting the whole group even if UMAC’s exact award size is smaller than hoped.

Key Risk: Funding is limited to a narrow set of primes/suppliers, leaving component makers under-allocated and ITA’s upside capped.

  • Trump administration is negotiating funding multiple private-sector drone companies.
  • But Unusual Machines stock may still not be worth owning in 2026 at current levels.
  • UMAC shares are now up a remarkable 150% versus its year-to-date low.

Unusual Machines (UMAC) is breaking out on May 28, following reports that the Trump administration is in active negotiations to funnel federal funding to multiple US drone companies.

Investors are cheering UMAC, believing it’s among those the Pentagon has identified for potential backing, especially since Donald Trump Jr. sits on its advisory board.

Including today’s rally, Unusual Machines' stock is up a remarkable 150% versus its YTD low.

Why Pentagon funding may be bullish for Unusual Machines stock

Direct Pentagon funding will be a watershed moment for a company that, until now been building its defense business one purchase order at a time.

Unusual Machines already secured a $5 million-plus order from Autonomous Power Corporation to supply US-made components for counter-UAS systems, signaling genuine traction on the defense side.

But a formal federal funding agreement would transform UMAC from a defense-adjacent supplier into an embedded partner of the US military-industrial complex — a designation that commands a significant valuation premium.

In short, UMAC shares are ripping higher as regulatory exclusion of Chinese-made drones creates a structural tailwind for NDAA-compliant domestic suppliers.

If Pentagon money lands on Unusual Machines' balance sheet, it will help scale manufacturing and dramatically accelerate the company’s timeline to sustainable profitability.

Why UMAC shares still aren’t worth owning in 2026

Beyond headline excitement, however, the skeptics also retain a compelling case, and it starts with the numbers.

For Q1, UMAC recently reported a per-share loss of $0.21 – much higher than the consensus $0.11 – even as revenue increased on a year-over-year basis.

The apparent $10.3 million net profit was almost entirely inflated by investment gain, not operating performance; the company posted a GAAP operating loss of about $7.3 million on a gross margin near 33%.

That’s not a profitable business; that’s a money manager that also sells drone parts.

Additionally, the dilution story is equally troubling.

The total number of Unusual Machines shares has more than tripled in a single year, meaning existing investors are continuously being “washed out”.

Buying Unusual Machines shares here means taking on enormous risk on a news story that has no confirmed timeline, structure, or dollar amount attached to it.

How to play Unusual Machines at current levels

Even from a technical perspective, UMAC stock is just as unattractive.

Following today’s surge, its relative strength index (RSI) sits in the late 70s, indicating extremely “overbought” conditions, which often precede a meaningful pullback in the near-term.

Plus, much of the upside is already baked into Unusual Machines following its meteoric rally this year.

If the Pentagon deal falls through, gets delayed, or comes in smaller than hoped, the downside from these levels could be just as dramatic as today’s surge.

In conclusion, investors chasing a more than 50% gap-up on an unconfirmed funding negotiation are playing a dangerous game.