DroneShield’s, Strike’

DroneShield’s ‘First Strike’ on Pay Overshadows a Landmark Year of Growth and a New Chair

30.05.2026 - 06:05:02 | boerse-global.de

DroneShield's AGM revealed a 276% revenue jump to A$216.5M, but 50.51% voted against executive pay, triggering a first strike. Leadership overhaul, institutional exit, and massive capacity expansion to A$2.4B mark a pivotal moment.

Aemetis Aktie: Strategische Weichenstellung - Foto: ĂŒber boerse-global.de
Aemetis Aktie: Strategische Weichenstellung - Foto: ĂŒber boerse-global.de

On the surface, DroneShield’s annual general meeting on 29 May 2026 looked like a coronation for a company hitting its stride. Revenue had jumped 276% to A$216.5 million in fiscal 2025, the counter-drone specialist had just landed a city-wide surveillance network in Kansas City for the 2026 World Cup, and it was plotting a fivefold capacity expansion. Yet beneath the gloss, shareholders delivered a stark rebuke: 50.51% voted against the remuneration report, crossing the 25% threshold that triggers a “first strike” under Australian corporate law. The message was unmistakable — even as the business rockets ahead, executive pay has become a lightning rod.

The AGM also ratified a sweeping leadership overhaul. Long-serving chairman Peter James, who had held the post for a decade and guided the company through its 2016 listing, stepped down. Hamish McLennan, appointed as an independent director and chairman-designate on 1 May, took the gavel immediately. Alongside him, Angus Bean formally assumed the role of managing director and CEO, having replaced Oleg Vornik in April. The boardroom refresh comes at a pivotal moment: DroneShield entered the S&P/ASX 200 last September, drawing broader institutional attention and, as it emerged, a major shareholder exit.

Just as the meeting convened, an institutional heavyweight liquidated its entire stake, feeding Friday’s extraordinary trading volume of 21.7 million shares — well above the weekly average. The shares closed at €2.04, up 1.83% on the day, after touching an intraday high of €2.08. Over the past twelve months, DroneShield has climbed 175.51% by one measure and 181% by another, though it remains 44–43% below its 52-week peak of €3.65. Annualised 30-day volatility stands at 55.33%, underlining the stock’s wild ride.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying DroneShield?

Operationally, the company is doubling down on scale and geographic reach. Management reaffirmed its plan to lift manufacturing capacity from roughly A$500 million to A$2.4 billion per year by the end of 2026, backed by a cash pile of around A$210 million. A new European headquarters and production site in Amsterdam became operational in March 2026, a response to the region now contributing 45% of group revenue. The continent’s importance was underscored by the Kansas City project, announced on 14 May, which deploys a multilayered sensor architecture combining DroneShield’s radio-frequency detection with Echodyne radar to secure the World Cup venue and beyond. The city’s police department is coordinating the effort via Airspace Links’ AirHub portal, and the system is designed to remain in place permanently, distinguishing authorised flights from threats in real time.

The revenue surge has been accompanied by a shift toward higher-margin recurring income. Software-as-a-service sales soared 312% to A$11.6 million, a sign that DroneShield is embedding itself deeper into customer operations. Meanwhile, the company now only reports contracts worth A$20 million or more, a policy that reflects the growing heft of its pipeline, which includes positions on Australia’s LAND-156 counter-drone panel and the U.S. Safer Skies initiative. Market capitalisation stands at roughly A$2.95 billion.

Yet the governance friction cannot be dismissed as a mere speed bump. The first strike on remuneration, if repeated next year, could force a board spill under Australian rules. For now, DroneShield’s management insists the focus remains on execution: capturing defence and civil infrastructure contracts worth billions, building out its European factory, and proving that its urban air-defence model — now on show in Kansas City — can scale globally. The question is whether the boardroom overhaul can placate investors who feel the rewards have grown faster than the company’s accountability.

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