DroneShield’s, New

DroneShield’s New CEO Gets a Frosty Welcome from Shareholders

31.05.2026 - 08:21:11 | boerse-global.de

DroneShield CEO Angus Bean approved options narrowly, but remuneration report fails with 50.51% opposition, triggering first strike. Stock up 9% on strong cash flows and revenue growth.

DroneShield’s New CEO Gets a Frosty Welcome from Shareholders - Bild: über boerse-global.de
DroneShield’s New CEO Gets a Frosty Welcome from Shareholders - Bild: über boerse-global.de

Angus Bean officially took the helm at DroneShield this week, but the celebration was tempered by a shareholder revolt that saw the company’s remuneration report suffer a “first strike” under Australian corporate law. The stock, meanwhile, has been on a tear — up more than 9% over the past seven days — as institutional buying and strong cash flows mask the boardroom tensions.

The annual general meeting on Friday delivered a split verdict. A narrow 55.8% majority approved Resolution 4, granting Bean 290,375 performance options tied to a three-year vesting period that began on 1 April 2026. The hurdles are steep: the options vest in three equal tranches only if DroneShield achieves rolling 12-month revenue or customer payments of A$300 million, A$400 million and A$500 million respectively. A retention clause further stipulates that half of each vested tranche is forfeited unless Bean stays with the company for another 12 months. Despite the green light, the 44.2% opposition sent a clear warning.

The frostier reception was reserved for Resolution 1, the remuneration report, which failed with 50.51% of votes cast against it. That triggers a first strike under the Corporations Act, placing the board on heightened scrutiny ahead of next year’s meeting. The pay rebellion does not affect the already-approved CEO options, but it underscores a growing faction of shareholders demanding tighter governance. By contrast, the election of Hamish McLennan as a director sailed through with 82.43% support, and a cap increase on non-executive director compensation to A$1.7 million annually from 1 May 2026 passed with 87.19% approval. McLennan now serves as chairman.

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

The governance drama unfolded against a backdrop of solid financial momentum. DroneShield reported first-quarter 2026 revenue of A$74.1 million, a 121% jump year-on-year, with customer payments hitting A$77.4 million. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission has exempted the company from quarterly cash-flow reporting — a privilege reserved for firms with sustainably positive operating cash flow. The balance sheet is debt-free and awash with roughly A$210 million in cash, providing ample firepower for expansion. Europe, the company’s primary market, accounted for about 45% of 2025 revenue, buoyed by geopolitical demand for electronic warfare and counter-drone systems.

The stock closed Friday at €2.04, up 1.83% on the day and 9.23% over the week. The relative strength index sits at 40.3, neutral with a slight lean toward oversold territory. On the Australian exchange, the A$3.40 level is being tested as potential support. Despite a 175.51% gain over the past twelve months, the share remains 44.14% below its October high of €3.65, suggesting room for a recovery if the fundamentals hold.

Short-term catalysts could come from contract announcements by Western military bodies or developments around the US Safer Skies Act, rather than company-specific news. For now, investors have a clear set of performance milestones to track — and a boardroom dynamic that will not easily be smoothed over.

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