Could This Drone Delivery Stock Be the Next Shopify (TSX:SHOP)?

The massive gain in popularity of e-commerce has created a number of new opportunities for investors, and Drone Delivery Canada Corp (TSX:FLT) is one of those stocks.

The explosion in popularity of e-commerce and online shopping made millionaires out of many investors. To date, there have been a number of different business that have been positively impacted and have rapidly grown their operations as a result of consumers switching to online shopping.

Shopify is one of those companies. Since it launched in 2015, its stock is up nearly 1,200%. It’s an essential company for the e-commerce business, and therefore its investors, especially the ones who got in early, have been rewarded handsomely.

Another company that’s been largely impacted by the increase in online shopping is Cargojet. Due to the massive increase in demand for shipping, and especially overnight shipping, as most consumers want their purchases as soon as possible, Cargojet has seen its business increase rapidly.

It has more than 90% of the market share for overnight deliveries in Canada and has partnerships with Canada Post as well as Amazon.

It’s clear that as the demand for online goods rises, so does demand for shipping. A lot has been made of the future of shipping, whether it be through driverless cars and trucks or even drones.

Alphabet, Google’s parent company, has been completing a number of test flights recently through its subsidiary company, Wing.

These tests are already showing how fast the deliveries can be made and are demonstrating the endless possibilities of this new technology. Drone delivery is also being looked at to ease congestion, getting more trucks off the road.

One Canadian company for investors to consider that will give you direct exposure to this future industry is Drone Delivery Canada (TSXV:FLT).

FLT is still in the test stages, allowing investors to get in on the ground floor at an extremely generous market cap of less than $120 million.

The testing it’s doing is with a number of pilot-project customers such as Vision Profile, a manufacturing company that will test a drone delivery platform between its facilities in Vaughn, Ontario.

It’s also been testing with Moose Cree Fist Nation to try and help scale the costs of delivering food, medicine, and other necessities to the remote location in northern Ontario.

So far, FLT has been developing its technology since 2014 and has two main services it plans to offer once its operations are up and running.

The first service is depot-to-depot drone delivery service. This will be similar to the pilot project it’s doing with the Moose Cree First Nation in that it’s ideally a logistics solution for rural communities in Canada in need of a reliable delivery service, especially for necessities.

It can also be used in emergency situations to dispatch important medical equipment or even to help with bulk mail shipments from one facility to another.

The second type of service it will offer is depot-to-consumer drone delivery. This is the main service people think about when they hear drone delivery, and the applications for this type of delivery are limitless. Depot to consumer would consist of delivery services directly to a residence or business.

At the moment, FLT thinks its main services will be in food delivery, retail goods, service parts, and emergency road-side assistance.

Currently, it continues to work on its technology to build on the logistics while also tweaking important flight variables such as route planning, telemetry settings for its mission control centre, and planning scheduled maintenance of the drones.

With the pace of technology these days, and the impressive development that’s already been accomplished, drone delivery is closer than we think, so an investment in FLT today could prove to be a millionaire-making decision.

John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Fool contributor Daniel Da Costa has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. David Gardner owns shares of Alphabet (A shares), Alphabet (C shares), and Amazon. Tom Gardner owns shares of Alphabet (A shares), Alphabet (C shares), and Shopify. Shopify is a recommendation of Stock Advisor Canada. CargoJet is a recommendation of Hidden Gems Canada.

More on Tech Stocks

Abstract technology background image with standing businessman
Tech Stocks

Canada’s Homegrown Quantum Stock Just Got More Interesting After Pulling Back

Canada-founded D-Wave is one of the most talked-about, high-risk contenders in quantum computing.

Read more »

woman considering the future
Tech Stocks

2 Cheap Tech Stocks to Buy Right Now

Shopify (TSX:SHOP) and Constellation Software (TSX:CSU) have crashed quite a bit, but, eventually, things will get overdone.

Read more »

moving into apartment
Tech Stocks

If I Could Only Buy and Hold a Single Stock, This Would Be It

Looking for the best stock to buy and hold? Discover why Shopify is a long-term winner in the e-commerce space.

Read more »

looking backward in car mirror
Tech Stocks

1 Magnificent Canadian Tech Stock Down 63% to Buy and Hold for Decades

Gatekeeper Systems stock is down 63% from its highs, but the AI-powered transit safety company has major tailwinds. Here's why…

Read more »

gold prices rise and fall
Tech Stocks

The Only 3 Stocks I’d Consider Buying in March 2026

March 2026 presents unique stock opportunities amid AI spending and geopolitical tensions. Learn which stocks to watch.

Read more »

young adult uses credit card to shop online
Tech Stocks

Shopify Stock Is Still 35% Cheaper Today, And It’s Still a Forever Hold

Shopify is no longer a hype-only story. The business is bigger -- and generating meaningful cash flow.

Read more »

Digital background depicting innovative technologies in (AI) artificial systems, neural interfaces and internet machine learning technologies
Tech Stocks

2 Canadian AI Stocks Poised for Significant Gains

These two Canadian stocks are showing real strength in the AI space, and they’ve got the numbers to back it…

Read more »

Dividend Stocks

The Best Canadian Stocks to Own During a Trade War

In the face of tariffs, Canadian stocks with scale, pricing power, or defence-linked demand can hold up better than most.

Read more »