Here’s what’s happening. Kratos Defense (NASDAQ: KTOS) ran from obscurity to one of the most talked-about defense names on the market, surging well over 200% in the 12 months leading into early 2026. Then it gave a lot of that back.
Despite strong first quarter figures and raised 2026 guidance, the stock has come under pressure, with the year-to-date share price return down roughly 34%. That kind of whipsaw tends to shake out retail holders fast. Institutional money starts asking harder questions. And the story, if there is one underneath the price action, either holds or it doesn’t.
The thing is, the business hasn’t fallen apart. Not even close.
Kratos reported Q1 2026 revenue of $371 million, up 22.6% year over year, and the company lifted full-year revenue guidance to between $1.70 billion and $1.76 billion, with adjusted EBITDA guidance raised as well. That’s not a company stumbling. That’s a company growing fast and telling you it expects the growth to continue.
The company holds a record backlog of roughly $2 billion and a reported opportunity pipeline above $14 billion, supported by large U.S. Space Force, Marine Corps, and Naval Surface Warfare Center contracts across space, unmanned systems, and rocket motors.
Slight tangent, but it matters: the broader defense tech funding wave is real. Defense tech venture capital hit a new all-time record in the first five months of 2026, with more than $14.6 billion flowing into military, national security, and law enforcement startups, surpassing the entire previous full-year record of $9.6 billion set in 2025. That capital is chasing the same themes Kratos has been building for years.
What Kratos Actually Does
The company focuses on unmanned aircraft, satellite communications, missile defense systems, cybersecurity, and directed-energy weapons. Its drones are designed to be sophisticated enough for combat missions while remaining low-cost and expendable, an increasingly critical requirement in modern conflict scenarios.
That last part is the whole point. The Russia-Ukraine war provided the bluntest possible demonstration that autonomous drones and software-defined military systems could outperform legacy hardware at a fraction of the cost. Kratos has been betting on exactly that dynamic since before it was obvious.
KTOS benefits from three structural tailwinds: U.S. drone procurement priorities, attritable warfare doctrine, and hypersonic systems moving to production. These aren’t trends. They’re budget line items now.
The contract wins have kept coming through the pullback. Kratos announced a $446.8 million space systems contract, with the company serving as prime contractor to support the U.S. Space Force’s Systems Command for ground management and integration of the Space Force’s Resilient Missile Warning and Tracking program. And that’s one deal in a string. To date, Kratos has won eight multi-million-dollar contracts since the beginning of 2026.
Where the Risk Lives
Valuation is the honest concern here. KTOS shares have recently traded at a substantial premium, with a valuation of roughly 124x EV/aEBITDA at its peak earlier this year. Even after the pullback, this is not a cheap stock by traditional measures. You are paying for future revenue that hasn’t been recognized yet.
Kratos operates primarily as a government contractor for the U.S. Department of Defense and other national security agencies, making the company highly susceptible to fluctuations in government spending, budgetary constraints, and shifts in procurement policies.
Cash flow is also worth watching. For Q1 2026, Kratos reported cash flow used in operations of $27.4 million and negative free cash flow of $43.1 million. The company is investing heavily in capacity and long-lead materials, which is the right thing to do when you have a $2 billion backlog. But it means patience is required.
Analyst fair value estimates for the company sit around $112, as analysts factor in a mix of recent price target cuts and fresh bullish initiations, with confidence in the company’s long-term growth outlook, margin expansion, and recent contract wins.
The stock is down 34% this year. The backlog hit a record. The contracts are still arriving. That gap between price behavior and fundamental momentum is either a trap or an opportunity. The answer probably depends on what the defense budget looks like over the next 18 months, and right now that’s a tailwind, not a headwind.
Worth a closer look before the next contract cycle gets fully priced in.
Disclaimer: This editorial is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own due diligence or consult a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

