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Defense Autonomous Warfare Group to Receive 24,000% Budget Increase
#1
I was unaware of this particular division within the DOD, but we are all going to learn about it soon enough. Yahoo Finance just put me onto a massive budget increase for DAWG with a handful of names in the defense sector poised to see some serious business if the budget goes through. This is the group that will be closing the modern defense tech gap in drones and robotics weapons platforms. I will let the article explain the rest. 

Quote:Buried inside President Trump's Fiscal Year 2027 defense budget request sits a line item that dwarfs almost every other increase in the document. The Defense Autonomous Warfare Group (DAWG), a Pentagon office that stood up quietly late last year with an initial budget of roughly $225 to $226 million, is slated to receive $54.6 billion in FY2027. That works out to a roughly 24,000% year-over-year increase, or approximately 243x its prior year budget.

The Defense Autonomous Warfare Group is a newly created Pentagon organization designed to unify all US military drone and autonomous weapons programs under a single command structure. It absorbs and supersedes the Biden-era Replicator initiative, which aimed to field hundreds of thousands of one-way attack drones but ran into supply chain bottlenecks. Internal documents reportedly indicate intent to eventually elevate DAWG into a unified combatant command, effectively making it a new branch of the US military. Crucially, most of the $54.6 billion is directed toward research and development. This is a technology race.

Total drone and counter-drone spending in the FY2027 request reaches approximately $74 to $75 billion, tripling FY2026 spending levels. The Department of War's own overview earmarks $53.6 billion for autonomous systems procurement, domestic production capability, and advanced capabilities, alongside $14.4 billion for counter-unmanned systems across 250+ sites. The budget was drawn up before Operation Epic Fury (the Iran war beginning February 28, 2026), meaning the ramp reflects long-term strategic competition with China.
 
  • 1. Kratos Defense & Security Solutions (KTOS)
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions (NASDAQ:KTOS) is the most direct pure-play on DAWG. Its Valkyrie CCA drone and solid rocket motor lines drove Q1 FY26 revenue of $371.0M, up 22.6% year over year, with Unmanned Systems posting 30.9% organic growth and a 1.6x book-to-bill. CEO Eric DeMarco cited a "generational recapitalization of the U.S. defense industrial base underway." Shares are down 29.47% year to date, and insider selling has been persistent.
  • 2. AeroVironment (AVAV)
AeroVironment (NASDAQ:AVAV) is the leading US manufacturer of small and medium military drones, with Switchblade loitering munitions and Puma reconnaissance systems in the field. Q4 FY26 revenue of $1.977 billion trailing twelve months came alongside FY26 record bookings of $2.7B and a 1.4x book-to-bill. CEO Wahid Nawabi flagged "rising global demand across lethal and non-lethal drones, counter-UAS, space and advanced technologies." Shares are down 26.89% year to date, with an analyst target price of $258.61.
  • 3. Palantir Technologies (PLTR)
Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ:PLTR) supplies the AI decision layer for autonomous warfare. The DoW budget specifies $2.3 billion for the Maven Smart System (MSS) and Joint Fires Network, plus $46.0 billion for a multi-year sovereign AI Arsenal. Q1 2026 revenue grew 84.7% year over year, with US Government revenue up 84% to $687 million. The stock trades at 88x forward earnings, a premium that leaves little room for execution slips.
  • 4. Northrop Grumman (NOC)
Northrop Grumman (NYSE:NOC) is the broadest beneficiary across the request. Q1 2026 revenue of $9.88 billion grew 4.4%, with Aeronautics Systems swinging to operating income of $305 million on B-21 production expansion. Backlog stands at $95.61 billion. CEO Kathy Warden pointed to an "unprecedented global demand environment." Northrop selected the Kratos Valkyrie as its CCA aircraft for MUX TACAIR, tying it into the DAWG portfolio. It pays a 1.68% dividend yield.
  • 5. Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII)
Huntington Ingalls Industries (NYSE:HII) is the pure-play on the shipbuilding line. Q1 2026 revenue of $3.10 billion grew 13.3%, led by Newport News Shipbuilding at $1.665 billion, up 19.3%. Backlog is $54 billion. CEO Chris Kastner noted "Shipbuilding throughput has continued to improve with meaningful year over year growth." As sole prime for nuclear-powered carriers and one of two Virginia-class submarine builders, HII is structurally levered to the 18 battle force ships in the request.
Kratos and Aerovironment I have recently gained exposure through the BZZ etf. Although those two companies only make up about 4% each of the index it is pretty obvious where that particular industry is going, especially with Florida getting ahead of the curve and enacting legislation (PDF file on FL government server) laying the regulatory framework for these growing industries. Kratos should be a solid performer on its own right as it will be producing the air frame and solid rocket motors other drone companies will be procuring to develop systems to deliver to the DOD. I sold my Palantir because I did not like Peter Theil and Alex Karp's crazy manifesto. They may perform better next year, but I don't care forget them maniacs.
Northtrop I have exposure through IDEF etf. There are many ETF's with varying levels of exposure, I just  seek the companies I am looking for in their top ten and then check the expense ratios for the lowest fee structure.
The one that is new for me is Huntington. They are shipbuilders and while I know that is an industry of focus for the American Industrial revival, I am not quite certain how much budget allocation is going in that direction. Either way  I know the pentagon is seeking to  increase its shipbuilding capacity and increasing its timeline,  so I will certainly be keeping an eye on it.

So yea, just a heads up regarding Defense Budget allocation and companies poised to serve the industries of interest for the DOD with this massively increased budget proposal.
#2
(07-08-2026, 01:03 AM)worldstarcountry Wrote: I was unaware of this particular division within the DOD, but we are all going to learn about it soon enough. Yahoo Finance just put me onto a massive budget increase for DAWG with a handful of names in the defense sector poised to see some serious business if the budget goes through. This is the group that will be closing the modern defense tech gap in drones and robotics weapons platforms. I will let the article explain the rest. [Video: https://youtu.be/FtXSTmpESeg]
Kratos and Aerovironment I have recently gained exposure through the BZZ etf. Although those two companies only make up about 4% each of the index it is pretty obvious where that particular industry is going, especially with Florida getting ahead of the curve and enacting legislation (PDF file on FL government server) laying the regulatory framework for these growing industries. Kratos should be a solid performer on its own right as it will be producing the air frame and solid rocket motors other drone companies will be procuring to develop systems to deliver to the DOD. I sold my Palantir because I did not like Peter Theil and Alex Karp's crazy manifesto. They may perform better next year, but I don't care forget them maniacs.
Northtrop I have exposure through IDEF etf. There are many ETF's with varying levels of exposure, I just  seek the companies I am looking for in their top ten and then check the expense ratios for the lowest fee structure.
The one that is new for me is Huntington. They are shipbuilders and while I know that is an industry of focus for the American Industrial revival, I am not quite certain how much budget allocation is going in that direction. Either way  I know the pentagon is seeking to  increase its shipbuilding capacity and increasing its timeline,  so I will certainly be keeping an eye on it.

So yea, just a heads up regarding Defense Budget allocation and companies poised to serve the industries of interest for the DOD with this massively increased budget proposal.

That is quite an increase but as that type of warfare is so new. I don't think it is unprecedented.

Just as the budget for military aircraft went from very little the first year to very much only a few years later. 

They are developing a new warfare system. It is the Ukraine war and battle bots combined. Hopefully no Terminator thrown in.
I know too much and question everything.
Does anyone know the minimum safe distance of ignorance?
Did anyone ask the monkeys how much fun the barrel actually was?
#3
This is the administration where the military Industrial complex stops giving a fuck so long as they make money.  USA/Israel merger?  Lockheed likey. UAE and Qatar pledging 2.6 trillion over 10 years. Cha-ching! Saudi Arabia 600 million?  Our own 1.5 trillion defense budget?  Wowza!

We just gave a bunch of CEOs around Arlington, VA orgasms.  The Gulf States just pledged to spend more than the defense budgets of EVERY EU country combined. 

Like Atlas just "shrugged" off NATO defense spending in the name of "what have you done for me lately?"

But we need a drone program if we are going to be at it with Iran forever. It was just too low-tech to consider a unified versitile program.. The airforce Reapers dont help with their barely above civilian exploding versions. Too expensive to go autonomous vs. autonomous. 

Maybe they realized that if drones can do shows cheaply they can program the things to fly over the strait and target their suicide drones. 

No infantry needed. Just people who can fix and operate drones! Future War!


#4
Well the budget was fairly small to begin with, like some 200 million dollars or so as stated up there. So 24,000% seems huge, but you can represent that percent between a few pennies and a couple hundred bucks.

The important thing to note, if we want to be a driver and not a passenger, just invest where the government is spending its money. There are plenty of robotics and drone, space, nuclear energy based etf's that  have varying allocations of the related companies and different ones for different industries. I don't spend all my time trading, I just like parking my money in emerging industries through managed ETF's and invest in only very specific companies after I have done much more research.

I have parked in a handful of specific mines, mineral extraction/refinement and nuclear energy companies though, with great prospects for growth based on the trajectory of emerging industrial demands. A couple of the  junior mines I expect to go online next year and once a couple of quarters of revenue pumps out I expect the big established miners to buy them out as they tend to do. Otherwise I tend to stick to managed niche ETF's with  the lowest cost fee structures I can find containing the companies of interest in their top ten holdings.

I made my money on Intel and moved on. I will probably buy back in later if the price corrects back below 100$, NVIDIA I am just going to hold for awhile. Its price was pretty  stable for awhile so like Tesla, I just kind of have it there as a way to park my money without too much downside. it is not like any of them are going bankrupt soon and they are still posting great revenue and profits.

Most of the good fast and easy money was already made off the AI companies. They still have long term growth potential, but so much of that is already priced in so upside is going to be slower over the next couple of years, but hey there are always the managed ETF's that keep you profitable by doing the algorithmic trading for us. Those instant micro and options actions that would drive a dedicated single investor insane trying to keep up. Its their job, let them do it. We can just direct the funds that seem best and keep enjoying our days without too much sweating or worrying. Just never get complacent is what I must insist.