99% of Drone Companies Will Die & Why Anduril’s Products Aren’t an Ethics Debate | Matthew Steckman
Anduril President Matthew Steckman explains the $20B army contract, why 99% of drone companies will fail, and why offensive cyber was Anduril’s biggest missed opportunity.
- Anduril’s $20B contract is a credit card limit, not obligated spend — it removes procurement friction so the Army can buy faster without re-contracting each time.
- Anduril expects ~$2B revenue in 2026; Lockheed earns ~$100B annually — Anduril is still small in absolute terms.
- In small drones, there is effectively one program to win per category; investors must pick the monopoly or lose everything.
- Steckman says Anduril should have entered offensive cyber 7 years ago — it is now publicly emerging as a major NATO priority and Anduril is playing catch-up.
- Cruise missile airframes are built like bathtubs, using commodity contract manufacturers, giving Anduril elastic production capacity legacy primes cannot match.
- Anduril runs 40%+ gross margins across hardware and software; only ~5 of its 20 product lines are in rate production and cash-flow positive today.
- Going public is strategically necessary in defense: public company status confers an extra level of government trust that private companies cannot access.
- VC-backed defense companies are currently priced at multiples Anduril cannot justify for acquisitions — some reportedly at 100-200x forward revenue.
2026-03-23 · Watch on YouTube