Motorola Solutions announced Monday it has agreed to acquire D-Fend Solutions, an Israeli counter-drone technology company, for $1.5 billion. The deal sent MSI stock up 2.75% to $414.37.
D-Fend, founded in 2016, makes technology that takes control of unauthorized drones mid-flight using radio waves. Rather than jamming signals or shooting drones down, its flagship product EnforceAir overrides drone communications and redirects the aircraft to land safely.
The company’s tech is already deployed in over 30 countries, including NATO members, and is used by the U.S. departments of Homeland Security, Defense, and Justice.
D-Fend has posted annual revenue growth of more than 50% over the last three years. The company expects full-year 2026 revenues of $185 million.
“Rogue drones have transformed our skies into a landscape of unpredictable risk, where simple detection is no longer enough,” said Motorola Solutions CEO Greg Brown.
Part of the deal’s timing comes down to a new law. The Safer Skies Act, passed as part of the FY2026 National Defense Authorization Act, now lets trained state and local law enforcement detect, track, and neutralize drones that pose public safety risks.
That creates a direct new sales channel for D-Fend’s tools in the U.S. domestic market — something Motorola is well-positioned to serve given its deep relationships with public safety agencies.
The anti-drone market was valued at $2.47 billion in 2026 and is projected to reach $8.42 billion by 2031, according to Mordor Intelligence.
This acquisition doesn’t come out of nowhere. Last year Motorola paid $4.4 billion to acquire Silvus, a company providing secure communications and networking for drones. Now, with D-Fend, it has capabilities on both sides — operating drones and neutralizing them.
Motorola has also committed a $100 million investment to expand manufacturing for Silvus at a new Salt Lake City facility producing StreamCaster MANET radios.
On the financial side, Motorola Solutions reported revenues of $11.87 billion with 8% growth over the last twelve months. The company trades at a P/E ratio of 32.6 and maintains a 100% return on equity.
Six analysts have recently revised their earnings estimates upward for MSI, according to InvestingPro data.
The $1.5 billion price tag represents roughly 2% of Motorola’s $66.94 billion market cap.
D-Fend CEO Zohar Halachmi said joining Motorola Solutions will allow the company to tap into the acquirer’s established customer base across public safety, federal, and enterprise sectors.
The transaction is expected to close in Q4 2026, subject to regulatory approvals and customary closing conditions.
Motorola also recently declared a quarterly dividend of $1.21 per share, payable July 15, 2026, to shareholders of record as of June 17, 2026.
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