Cheap drones rewrote modern warfare. This week three stories — a Kyiv barrage, an Army software push, and a $1.5B Motorola deal — showed the money now flowing to whoever can stop them.

Read these three items from this week's paper together. First, Russia intensified its drone-and-missile attacks on Ukrainian cities, killing at least 22 people in a single Kyiv barrage. Second, the U.S. Army said it is “jailbreaking” its own weapon systems — opening them up so new software can be plugged in quickly — specifically to keep up with the drone threat. Third, Motorola Solutions (MSI), the company best known for police radios, agreed to buy a counter-drone technology firm called D-Fend for roughly $1.5 billion.
Individually, each is a headline. Together they describe a market moving from “battlefield novelty” to “permanent line item.” Cheap drones have changed how wars are fought, and the spending is now chasing whoever can reliably detect and neutralize them.
You can own the defense primes for this — and we do. But Motorola Solutions (MSI) is a more unusual angle. Most of its business is boring in the best way: it makes the two-way radios and dispatch systems in nearly every U.S. police cruiser and fire truck, a steady, recurring-revenue franchise. Bolt a fast-growing counter-drone arm onto that base and you get defense-adjacent growth without betting the whole position on one missile program.
Alongside MSI we reinforced the core defense sleeve — Lockheed Martin (LMT), RTX Corp (RTX), General Dynamics (GD), and Northrop Grumman (NOC) — whose order books keep extending as the threat environment worsens.
We added Motorola Solutions (MSI) at ~1.5% in the Aggressive Growth tactical tiers and reinforced LMT, RTX, GD and NOC. The counter-drone theme is one of the few places where the geopolitical backdrop and the business fundamentals point the same direction.
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