AeroVironment heads into its July 8 earnings report on the back of a 40% weekly surge, with analysts still scrambling to recalibrate after a wave of target cuts and options traders turning the most defensive they have been all year.
The price action tells the most dramatic part of the story. AVAV has ripped from the $139 post-earnings lows to $190.89 — a 40% gain in a single week — extending the bounce that began with the June 29 earnings release. That single-day print triggered a 20% move, and momentum has continued to carry the stock higher. Peers KTOS and MRCY both gained roughly 19% on the week, suggesting some sector tailwind behind the move, but AVAV's magnitude stands apart. Despite the recovery, the stock remains down 6% over the past month — a reminder of how deep the prior drawdown was.
Options positioning has turned sharply defensive into this next print. The put/call ratio hit 0.87 on July 2 — more than two standard deviations above its 20-day average of 0.65 — the highest defensive reading of the past year outside a single spike. That is a notable signal: even as the stock races higher, options traders are paying up for downside protection. Cost to borrow has also jumped aggressively, rising more than 600% over the past week to 4.1%, after spending months below 0.7%. Borrow availability remains moderate at 124% — not squeezed, but the rapid move in borrowing costs signals freshly elevated demand to be short the name heading into the print. Short interest itself eased 6.4% over the week to 8.9% of the free float, as some shorts covered into the rally, but the base remains elevated for a defense name.
The analyst picture is one of cautious optimism under pressure. The consensus sits at Buy, with 11 firms holding positive ratings and a mean target near $259 — still 35% above the current price. But the recent direction of travel is unmistakably downward: Jefferies cut its target from $305 to $229 while keeping Buy, Needham dropped from $400 to $225, and Stifel fell from $315 to $220. Wedbush initiated fresh coverage at Outperform with a $250 target, a constructive signal, while UBS remains the lone holdout at Neutral with a $166 target — below where the stock already trades. The bull case rests on AeroVironment's strong defense backlog, growing global military spending, and the BlueHalo merger opening high-priority DoD markets. Bears point to the SCAR Badger contract loss, the recent financial restatement, material weakness in internal controls, and lowered FY26 guidance as evidence that near-term profitability is still under pressure. The 90-day EPS momentum factor score ranks in the 96th percentile — suggesting estimates are moving up sharply at the longer horizon — yet the short score remains elevated at 64.5, reflecting persistent skepticism in the lending market.
The July 8 print is therefore less about whether AeroVironment's long-term positioning in unmanned systems and defense technology is intact, and more about whether the company can deliver enough near-term margin and revenue clarity to justify a stock that has nearly doubled from its lows in the span of a week.
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