On January 7, 2026, the White House called for the largest defense budget in American history.
$1.5 trillion for fiscal year 2027. A 66% increase from current levels. The kind of number that forces an entire sector to reprice.1
The market noticed. Defense stocks have been on a tear. Kratos soared 196% in 2025. AeroVironment gained 76%. Northrop Grumman broke out to all-time highs.

But the real story is not the budget number.
It is what the budget is buying.
Drones. Thousands of them. Hundreds of thousands of them.
The Pentagon has announced plans to spend $1 billion to purchase more than 340,000 American-made drones by 2027,2 with 30,000 of those due by July 2026.3
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth issued a directive ordering every Army squad to be equipped with unmanned systems by the end of 2026.4
This is not a wish list. It is a mandate.
And there is a reason it is happening now.
Ukraine changed everything.
The war proved that cheap drones can destroy tanks worth $10 million. That 117 drones can hit five airbases and cause $7 billion in damage in a single night. That the future of warfare is not fighter jets with ten-year procurement cycles. It is expendable systems that can be built fast, deployed fast, and replaced fast.5
The US Army is rewriting its battle doctrine based on what it learned from Ukraine.6
That is not a research paper. That is a procurement signal.
Now add the part most investors still have not fully processed.
The Chinese drone market just got locked out.
In December 2025, the FCC added foreign-made drones to its Covered List, effectively banning new models from DJI and other Chinese manufacturers from entering the US market.7
DJI controlled nearly 80% of the American drone market.8
That door is now closing.
Someone has to fill the gap.
And the mandate is clear. In June 2025, the President signed an executive order directing federal agencies to prioritize American-manufactured drones. The order specifically stated that the Department of Defense must be able to procure drones manufactured in the United States.9
Here is where it gets interesting.
Most investors are chasing the same names. The Lockheeds. The Northrops. The billion-dollar defense contractors fighting over the same contract pools.
The smarter money is looking one layer deeper.
Because the companies that can actually manufacture drones at scale, deploy them through service networks, and meet the certification requirements for government procurement are those companies that could win the next decade.
That is exactly the lane one small NASDAQ-listed company has been building for years.
Not a concept. Not a pitch deck. A company that is already building drones, generating revenue, and scaling a national Drone-as-a-Service network while the rest of the market debates timelines.
The company is ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA).
ZenaTech is not just another drone manufacturer. It is building a full‑spectrum unmanned systems platform that now includes a maritime drone defense system, quantum navigation for GPS‑denied operations, and a manufacturing footprint aligned with emerging Green‑to‑Blue UAS certification pathways.
Top 7 Reasons
Investors Are Paying Attention Right Now
The defense sector is repricing in real time. Drone stocks are moving. Policy is shifting. And the companies that can manufacture, certify, and deliver are the ones getting watched.
Here is why ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) keeps showing up on that list.
1
The defense tailwind is not a forecast. It is a policy. Trump has called for $1.5 trillion in defense spending. The Pentagon wants 340,000 drones by 2027. Every Army squad must have unmanned systems by the end of 2026.10
2
The DJI ban just handed American manufacturers the market. DJI controlled nearly 80% of US commercial drones. The FCC just blocked new Chinese models from entering the market.11 Someone has to fill the gap. ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is building an Arizona facility to manufacture drones specifically for US military compliance.
3
1,225% revenue growth is not a projection. It already happened. Q3 2025 revenue hit $4.35 million versus Q3 2024. Nine-month 2025 revenue reached $7.73 million versus $2 million for all of 2024. ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is not talking about growth. It is reporting it.
4
Drone-as-a-Service is the differentiator no one else has built. ZenaTech is rolling up low-tech field service industries and modernizing them with AI-enabled drones, automation, and data-driven workflows. Twenty acquisitions completed. National rollout in progress. Target of 25 by June 2026. This is recurring revenue with infrastructure already scaling across eight-plus states.
5
The US military has already tested their drones. Paid trials with the Air Force and Navy are complete. Not proposals. Completed field tests. ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is already inside the pipeline.
6
Green-to-Blue UAS certification is the gateway to government contracts. For Pentagon work, Blue UAS is the standard, and Green is the fast‑track into it. ZenaTech is already on that path, with Green UAS applications in progress for its IQ Nano, IQ Square and ZenaDrone 1000 drones and the Blue list coming next.12
7
60%+ insider ownership means management is aligned. When leadership owns the majority, incentives point the same direction as shareholders. ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) also has a tight float of approximately 38.9 million shares outstanding.
What comes next is the practical part. What ZenaTech actually builds. How the business model works. And what the timeline looks like from here.
Three Business Lines, One Integrated Drone Company, and a Revenue Engine Already Running
Most investors hear “drone company” and picture a startup with a prototype and a pitch deck.
That is not what ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) has built.
This is a company that designs drones, manufactures drones, sells drones, and operates a national service network that deploys them. It also owns eleven enterprise software brands that generate recurring revenue while the drone business scales.
Three divisions. All working together.
Drone Technology Solutions
In early 2026, the company expanded this division into dedicated drone defense, announcing the ZenaDrone 2000 Maritime Interceptor and the IQ Glider autonomous launch-and-refueling platform.
ZenaDrone 2000 is being engineered as a gas‑powered, sea‑launched interceptor designed to detect, track, and engage multiple slow‑moving hostile drones, giving naval and coastal operators a “drone‑versus‑drone” option instead of million‑dollar missiles.
The IQ Glider is planned as a marine‑based station that lets these intercept drones launch, land, refuel, and redeploy directly from ships for continuous coverage without shore infrastructure.13
The flagship product is the ZenaDrone 1000. It is a medium-sized drone, roughly 7 by 12 feet, with a payload compartment that can carry temperature-controlled cargo like medical supplies or blood. It flies for up to an hour. The arms collapse so it fits in the back of a truck. The nose cone is interchangeable, meaning sensors can be swapped depending on the mission.

ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) also manufactures the IQ series. The IQ Nano is a small indoor drone built for warehouse inventory management. It reads barcodes, feeds data into inventory systems, and eliminates the need for workers to climb shelves with handheld scanners. The IQ Square is a larger outdoor drone used for land surveys, infrastructure inspections, and defense reconnaissance.
Manufacturing happens across three facilities, all of which are in active expansion mode. The UAE facility has been operating since 2022 and expanded to over 22,000 square feet. The Arizona facility handles R&D, sales, and US Defense drone manufacturing and assembly is now being built. The Taiwan subsidiary, Spider Vision Sensors, produces cameras, sensors, motors, and circuit boards with a supply chain built specifically to meet NDAA US defense requirements.
Taken together, this supply chain and facility network is being engineered to support both commercial and defense customers, including future US government procurement that prioritizes NDAA‑aligned, Green‑to‑Blue UAS‑ready platforms.
This matters because roughly 80% of critical electronic components used in drones globally are manufactured in China, a dependency the US government is actively working to eliminate.14
Drone-as-a-Service
This is the part most investors underestimate.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is not just selling drones. It is building a global network of drone-as-a-service operations and a centralized DaaS platform that handles drone data processing, 3D land surveys, and analytics for business and government customers.
The model works in two phases. First, acquire established service companies like land surveyors and inspection firms. These businesses already have revenue, customers, and local relationships. Second, integrate drone technology to make those services faster, cheaper, and safer. Then scale under a unified brand with centralized support.
As of late 2025, ZenaTech has completed 20 acquisitions, 18 in the US, plus one in the UK and another in Canada. The target is 25 acquisitions by June 2026.
The services include land surveys, powerline inspections, solar farm maintenance, telecom tower inspections, precision agriculture, and inventory management. The common thread is replacing slow manual processes with drone-powered speed. This aligns with the fastest-growing commercial drone verticals, which include agriculture at 25-30% growth and infrastructure and construction at 20-25% growth.15
Enterprise SaaS Software
This is the part that keeps the lights on.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) owns eleven software brands serving business and government customers. These include workforce management, compliance, scheduling, and communication tools.
The software division generated $2 million in revenue in 2024. More importantly, it produces recurring revenue that funds drone development without constant dilution.
In plain English, ZenaTech built a successful software business first, then used that foundation to expand into drones. Instead of learning hardware from scratch, it is leveraging its software expertise to power its drone applications, a key differentiator in a crowded market.
That is not a typical startup playbook. That is a company with cash flow discipline.
The Quantum Edge: Where Drones Meet Next-Generation Computing
Most investors see ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) as a drone company.
That misses a critical part of the story.
ZenaTech is actively building AI autonomy platforms and planning for the next generation of solutions that will incorporate quantum computing applications, including a newly announced quantum navigation system for ZenaDrone platforms, aimed at keeping drones on-mission in GPS‑denied and contested environments for defense and critical infrastructure use.17
This is not a theoretical roadmap. These are active R&D initiatives with practical applications across commercial and defense markets.
Why Quantum Computing Matters for Drones
Traditional computers process data one calculation at a time. Quantum computers leverage quantum mechanics to process vast datasets simultaneously, solving complex problems at speeds that were previously impossible.
For drones, that means real-time data processing, optimized flight paths, and autonomous decision-making with precision that conventional systems cannot match. Drone swarms require exactly this, multiple drones working together as one, all reacting to real-time data in the air.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is advancing quantum initiatives tied to its drone platform strategy, working with AWS and other quantum platforms to develop and test applications that could enhance future drone analytics, coordination, and decision-making. While still in development, these efforts highlight the company’s push to explore where next-generation drone intelligence may be headed.
Eagle Eye: Quantum-Powered Defense Intelligence
The most significant initiative is Eagle Eye, a defense-focused project designed specifically for US Defense and Homeland Security applications.18

Eagle Eye integrates AI drones with quantum computing to deliver predictive mission analysis, enhanced situational awareness, and optimized military logistics.
In plain English, ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is building the intelligence layer that helps military operators anticipate threats, process battlefield data faster, and make better decisions under pressure.
This initiative, combined with the company’s Zena AI development center in the US, positions ZenaTech at the intersection of two massive themes: autonomous drones and quantum computing for defense.
Commercial Applications: Sky Traffic and Clear Skies
The quantum computing division is not limited to defense.
Sky Traffic uses the ZenaDrone 1000 with quantum-powered analytics to help cities optimize traffic flow, plan infrastructure, and improve emergency response.19
Clear Skies applies AI drones and quantum computing to weather forecasting, delivering real-time atmospheric data that supports better forecasting and emergency preparedness.20
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is not waiting for quantum computing to become mainstream. It is building the applications now.
Press Releases
- ZenaTech’s ZenaDrone Develops the IQ Aqua Prototype, an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle Intended to Integrate with its Maritime Defense Architecture and Address Underwater Mine Threats
- ZenaTech to Present its Latest Drone Interceptors, Counter-UAS Defense System, ZenaDrone, and Zena AI Developments at Upcoming Investor Conferences and Industry Events
- ZenaTech Developing an Integrated Counter-UAS System Pairing the Interceptor P-1 Low-Cost Drone with Zena AI Detection and Swarm Command Software
- ZenaTech’s ZenaDrone Interceptor P-1, Single-Use Autonomous Interceptor Drone, Targeted to Sell for Under $5,000 USD
- ZenaTech Develops Low-Cost, Single-Use Autonomous Interceptor Drone for ZenaDrone’s Counter-UAS System for US Defense, Middle East, and Ukraine Use
The Roll-Up Strategy That Is Reshaping How America Gets Drone Services
Most drone companies sell hardware and hope customers figure out the rest.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is playing a different game.
The company is not waiting for businesses to buy drones, learn to fly them, maintain them, and figure out the regulations. It is building a national network that delivers drone services directly. No hardware purchase required. No pilot training needed. Just results.
That is what Drone-as-a-Service means in plain English.
The Model
The strategy works in two phases.
Phase one is acquisition. ZenaTech targets established service companies, primarily land surveyors and inspection firms. These businesses already have revenue, customers, local relationships, and years of operating history. They are cash-flowing from day one.
Phase two is innovation. Once acquired, ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) integrates drone technology into the workflow. Instead of two technicians spending a full day on a land survey using tripods and total stations, one drone-certified technician can complete the job in half the time. Speed goes up. Labor costs go down. Margins improve.
Then the company scales under a unified brand with centralized services like lead generation, data analysis, and training.
Why Land Surveys
The land survey industry is a case study in disruption waiting to happen.
It is fragmented. Thousands of small firms operate independently with no national coordination. It has a labor problem. It takes eight years to become a licensed land surveyor, and fewer people are entering the profession.21 And the technology is outdated. Many firms still use equipment and methods from the 1980s.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) saw that gap and moved.
As of late 2025, the company has completed 20 acquisitions. Eighteen are in the United States, spread across eight to nine states. The company also has locations in the UK, Canada, Dublin, and Dubai, plus a letter of intent in Australia. The target is 25 acquisitions by June 2026.
Beyond Land Surveys
The playbook does not stop at surveying.
ZenaTech is expanding into powerline inspections, solar farm maintenance, telecom tower assessments, precision agriculture, and warehouse inventory management. Each vertical follows the same logic. Find industries where manual or low-tech processes are slow, expensive, or dangerous. Replace them with drone-powered solutions. Capture the margin improvement.
The Drone-as-a-Service market supports this approach. Recent market research projects the global DaaS market could reach approximately $355 billion by 2032, growing at over 36% annually.22
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is not waiting for that market to arrive. It is building the infrastructure now.
Why This Matters
Hardware sales are lumpy. A customer buys once and disappears for years.
Service revenue is recurring. A customer needs inspections every month, surveys every quarter, inventory counts every week.
That is why the DaaS model changes the math. Every acquisition adds revenue that repeats. Every new vertical expands the addressable market. And every location strengthens the national network.
According to the company, no other drone manufacturer is executing this model at scale.
The Numbers Behind the Noise
The drone market is not a future opportunity. It is a current reality with massive growth projections across every segment.
Commercial Drones
The global commercial drone market size was estimated at $30.02 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $54.64 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 10.6% from 2025 to 2030.23

Key Market Trends & Insights
- The Asia Pacific commercial drone market accounted for the largest market share of 30.8% in 2024.
- The North America commercial drone market is expected to grow at a considerable CAGR of 6.7% over the forecast period.
- Based on the product, the rotary blade segment held the largest revenue share of over 78.9% in 2024.
- By application, the commercial application segment accounted for a revenue share of over 74.02% in 2024.
- By end use, the media & entertainment segment accounted for a revenue share of over 21.4% in 2024.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is targeting the fastest-growing verticals within that market. Agriculture and precision farming are growing at 25-30% annually. Infrastructure and construction inspections are growing at 20-25%. Logistics and delivery applications are growing at 15-20%.24
Military Drones
The global military drone market was valued at approximately $14 billion in 2023. By 2032, it is projected to reach $47 billion.25

That growth is being accelerated by lessons from Ukraine, where drones have become the dominant battlefield weapon. The US Army expects to domestically produce upward of 10,000 small drones per month starting in 2026.26
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) has already completed paid trials with the Air Force and Navy, positioning itself for this wave.
On top of those trials, ZenaTech is now developing the ZenaDrone 2000 Maritime Interceptor and IQ Glider sea‑based launch platform as a cost‑effective “drone‑versus‑drone” defense system for modern asymmetric warfare.
Drone-as-a-Service
The DaaS market is projected to reach approximately $350 billion by 2032, growing at over 36% annually.27
This is the segment where ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) has built its most differentiated position, with 20 acquisitions completed and a national rollout underway.
The policy tailwinds, the DJI ban, and the Pentagon mandates are all converging on the same reality. Demand is here. The question is who can supply it.
The Valuation Gap That Could Define the Next Decade of Returns
Most investors chasing the drone and defense theme are buying the same names everyone else already owns.
Lockheed Martin at $137 billion. Northrop Grumman at $96 billion. L3Harris at $66 billion. These are the giants. They move slowly. And they are priced for what they already are, not for what they could become.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) sits at roughly $142 million.
That is not a typo. That is a 600x gap between where ZenaTech trades today and where the largest defense contractors sit.
The question is not whether ZenaTech will become Lockheed Martin. The question is what happens if it captures even a small fraction of the opportunity in front of it.
The Drone-Focused Comps Tell a Different Story
Forget the legacy defense primes for a moment. Look at the companies that focus specifically on drones and unmanned systems.
AeroVironment has a market cap of approximately $15.4 billion. The company makes the Switchblade loitering munition that has become iconic in Ukraine. It was selected for the Pentagon’s Replicator program. It has decades of defense relationships.28
Kratos Defense has a market cap of approximately $19 billion. The stock soared 196% in 2025 alone, driven by its jet-powered drone systems and defense technology portfolio.29
That means AeroVironment is valued at approximately 90x ZenaTech. Kratos is valued at over 85x ZenaTech.
Now ask yourself what those multiples imply.
If ZenaTech executes on its defense pipeline, scales its DaaS business, and lands Green UAS certification, does a 10x move seem unreasonable? That would still leave the company valued at a fraction of AeroVironment.
Red Cat Shows What Happens When Investors Connect the Dots
Red Cat Holdings is the closest pure-play comparison.
The company focuses on military reconnaissance drones. It has relationships with the Department of Defense. It was awarded contracts under the Short Range Reconnaissance program.
Red Cat’s market cap today is approximately $2 billion.30
That is still almost 10x the current valuation of ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) .
But here is the key difference. Red Cat focuses almost entirely on defense. ZenaTech is building across defense, commercial, and Drone-as-a-Service simultaneously. That diversification means ZenaTech is not waiting on a single contract to define its future. Revenue is already flowing from multiple streams.
The Table Makes the Gap Obvious

ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is the only company on this list with an active Drone-as-a-Service network generating commercial revenue today. It is also the smallest by a wide margin.
What the Math Suggests
If the thesis plays out, if defense contracts land, if DaaS keeps scaling, if certifications come through, the re-rate potential is significant.
A move to $500 million would still leave ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) valued at well under one-third of Red Cat’s approximately $1.93 billion market cap.
A move to $1 billion would leave it at under 10% of AeroVironment’s $10.37 billion valuation.
Even at $5 billion, ZenaTech would still sit below today’s roughly $16.6 billion market value for Kratos Defense.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) does not need to become Lockheed Martin to deliver outsized returns. It just needs to prove it belongs in the conversation with the drone-focused players that are already valued in the billions.
The execution is underway. The catalysts are stacking. And the valuation gap remains wide open.
From First Acquisition to 1,225% Revenue Growth in 12 Months
Momentum in a growth story does not show up all at once.
It stacks.
Licenses first. Manufacturing next. Revenue next. Then the contracts and certifications that prove the model works.
That is the arc ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) has been building.
| Date | Milestone |
| 2017-2018 | Company founded with enterprise SaaS software division |
| 2022 | UAE drone manufacturing facility established |
| 2023 | UAE facility expanded to over 10,000 square feet |
| Completed (2023) | Paid drone trials with US Air Force for medical supply delivery |
| Completed | Paid drone trials with US Navy for sub-zero climate operations |
| November 2024 | Drone-as-a-Service division launched with first acquisition |
| November 2024 | Spider Vision Sensors subsidiary established in Taiwan |
| Q1-Q3 2025 | Ten land survey company acquisitions completed across US |
| Q3 2025 | Revenue reaches $4.35 million, up 1,225% year-over-year |
| Q3 2025 | Nine-month revenue reaches $7.73 million versus $2 million for full year 2024 |
| Late 2025 | Total acquisitions reach 20 across US, UK, Ireland, and Dubai |
| December 2025 | Spider Vision Sensors Taiwan facility expansion completed |
| In Progress | Green UAS certification applications for IQ Square, IQ Nano and ZenaDrone 1000 |
| In Progress | Arizona manufacturing facility commissioning for US military production |
| In Progress | Letter of intent for Australia DaaS expansion |
| Target | 25 total acquisitions by June 2026 |
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) has indicated it is planning defense-related announcements in Q1 2026.
The company has also stated it remains on target with its multi-year military engagement plan, with paid pilots representing the first phase of what typically evolves into larger contracts over time.
This is not a company waiting for its story to start. The milestones are already stacking. The question is what comes next.
The Stock Setup: Tight Float, Insider Alignment, and a Chart That Just Woke Up
Before the fundamentals, before the thesis, experienced investors look at the stock structure. They want to know who owns the shares, how tight the float is, and whether the chart confirms the story.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) checks every box.
Insider Control Creates Alignment
This is a controlled company under NASDAQ rules. CEO Dr. Shaun Passley controls more than 50% of the voting stock.31 He is a visionary with six advanced degrees and a serial entrepreneur track record of starting and scaling innovative technology and software companies, which gives ZenaTech both tight founder control and experienced leadership.
The top three shareholders collectively control over 54% of the company. Epazz Inc., which is owned by Dr. Passley, holds approximately 25%. Dr. Passley holds approximately 20%. GG Mars Capital holds approximately 9.1%.32
Insiders have approximately $33 million invested in what is currently a sub-$200 million company. When leadership has that much skin in the game, incentives align with shareholders.
Tight Float Means Meaningful Moves
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) has approximately 38 million shares outstanding. Short interest sits at roughly 1.35 million shares, representing about 3.55% of shares outstanding. The days-to-cover ratio is just 1.5 days based on average volume.33
That short interest is modest. This is not a heavily shorted name where bears are piling in. It is a tightly held stock where meaningful news can move the price without requiring massive institutional volume.
The Chart Just Broke Out

The weekly chart tells a compelling story.
After pulling back from highs near $5.40 in September to lows around $3.00 in late December, ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) has staged a sharp reversal. The stock is now trading above $5.00, up over 25% with consecutive green weekly candles on increasing volume.
The 10-day, 20-day, and 50-day moving averages have all turned higher and are beginning to converge in bullish fashion. When shorter-term moving averages cross above longer-term averages on rising volume, technicians call that a sign of accumulation.
Volume has picked up noticeably on the recent green candles, suggesting buyers are stepping in with conviction rather than simply covering shorts.
Analyst Coverage Is Building
Wall Street coverage remains thin, which is typical for a company of this size. Maxim Group analyst Matthew Galinko, a five-star rated analyst, has a BUY rating on ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) with a $7 price target, which he reiterated in November 2025. That target represents nearly 40% upside from current levels.34
For investors who look for opportunities before the crowd arrives, that limited coverage is a feature, not a bug. When only one analyst is paying attention and the rating is BUY, the question becomes what happens when more discover the story.
A PhD, a Fortune 500 CFO, and a Playbook Built for Scale
Big themes attract attention. Turning that attention into durable shareholder value comes down to the people running the company.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is led by operators who have built, scaled, and exited companies before.
The Window Is Open, But It Does Not Stay Open
The setup is as clear as it gets.
Trump has called for $1.5 trillion in defense spending. The Pentagon wants 340,000 drones by 2027. Every Army squad must have unmanned systems by the end of 2026. The DJI ban just closed the door on 80% of the US drone market. And policy now mandates American-made solutions.
At the same time, the Pentagon is shifting toward cost‑effective “drone‑versus‑drone” defenses at sea and on land, the exact category ZenaTech’s ZenaDrone 2000 Maritime Interceptor and IQ Glider system are being developed to address.
ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is not waiting for the tailwind. It is already executing.
Revenue grew 1,225% year-over-year. Twenty acquisitions are complete with five more targeted by June. Paid military trials are done. Green UAS certification is in progress. Manufacturing is scaling in Arizona and Taiwan. And the only analyst covering the stock has a BUY rating with a $7 target.
The company trades at roughly $142 million, while peers focused on a single capability trade at $2 billion, $16 billion, and $19 billion.
That gap does not usually last once the market connects the dots.
Stories like this do not stay quiet for long.
Right now, ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA) is still in the early innings. The catalysts are stacking. The execution is visible. But the broader market has not caught up yet.
That is usually when the best entry points exist. Before the story simplifies. Before the crowd decides it is “safe.” Before the next headline.
The macro tailwind is here. The company is executing. The valuation gap is wide open.
To stay ahead of the next corporate presentation, press releases, and defense-related updates for ZenaTech Inc. (NASDAQ:ZENA), subscribe now and download the latest Corporate deck.