Quantum Cyber (QUCY) opened Monday with a 22.3% premarket pop after announcing the formation of Quantum Drones Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary incorporated in Nevada.
Quantum Cyber N.V. (QUCY)
The move is designed to give Quantum Cyber a dedicated U.S.-based vehicle for defense technology programs and federal procurement bids.
The stock was trading up sharply as of Monday morning, reflecting investor enthusiasm for the company’s pivot toward domestic defense contracts.
Quantum Drones Corporation will target three main areas: autonomous drone warfare, counter-UAS technologies, and next-generation autonomous defense systems.
The subsidiary is structured to act as the domestic procurement arm of Quantum Cyber’s broader System-of-Systems platform — a tech stack that blends artificial intelligence and quantum computing across defense applications.
Quantum Cyber wasted no time on the personnel front. The company named Peter O’Rourke, former Acting Secretary of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs under President Trump, as President and Director of Quantum Drones Corporation.
Robert Liscouski, who brings senior experience in defense, intelligence, and critical infrastructure security, was appointed as Director.
Both appointments signal the company is serious about building credibility with U.S. government procurement agencies — not just announcing intentions.
The timing isn’t accidental. Quantum Cyber pointed to the U.S. Department of Defense’s FY2027 budget request, which includes approximately $55 billion in funding directed at drone and autonomous warfare programs.
That’s a substantial pool of potential contract revenue for a company now formally positioned to compete for it.
On the counter-drone side, the numbers are also moving in one direction. Grand View Research projects the counter-UAS market will grow from $3.1 billion today to $10.6 billion by 2030 — a compound annual growth rate of 27.2%.
Quantum Drones is built to chase that growth through its integration of AI and quantum technologies into counter-drone, naval mine countermeasures, and related defense systems.
The System-of-Systems platform is intended to tie all of these capabilities together — drone warfare, counter-UAS, and autonomous naval applications — under one operational umbrella.
Quantum Cyber had not previously had a standalone U.S. entity dedicated to domestic government procurement before Monday’s announcement.
The Nevada incorporation gives the subsidiary a clear domestic legal identity, which is often a prerequisite for U.S. defense contracting eligibility.
No specific contract awards or formal government partnerships were announced alongside the subsidiary formation.
The company’s announcement also did not include revenue projections or a timeline for when Quantum Drones Corporation is expected to generate income.
As of Monday morning, QUCY was up 22.3% in premarket trading on the back of the news.
The post Quantum Cyber (QUCY) Stock Jumps 22% on New US Defense Subsidiary Launch appeared first on CoinCentral.


