NEW YORK, June 4, 2026, 04:12 EDT
- Ondas closed down 14.5% at $11.61 on Wednesday and was last shown at $11.21 after hours.
- SEC filings showed CEO Eric Brock sold 2.38 million shares at $13.43 to cover potential tax withholding tied to vested stock awards.
- The drop came despite fresh defense-contract and order headlines, leaving traders to weigh growth against share-supply risk.
Ondas Inc. shares fell hard into Thursday’s early U.S. market hours, as fresh insider-sale and resale filings hit a stock that had been trading near its 52-week high. The Nasdaq-listed defense and autonomous-systems company closed Wednesday at $11.61, down 14.5%, and was last shown at $11.21 in after-hours trading, Google Finance data showed.
The move matters now because Ondas has become a fast-moving name in the drone, counter-drone and autonomous defense trade. After a sharp run, filings that point to potential new share supply can carry as much weight as contract wins.
A Form 4 showed Eric A. Brock, Ondas’ chairman, chief executive and president, received 4.5 million shares on June 1 from restricted stock units, or RSUs — compensation shares that vest over time — and sold 2,378,245 shares the next day at $13.43. The filing said the shares were sold by the company to cover potential tax withholding obligations linked to the RSU vesting.
A related Form 144 — a filing that signals a proposed sale of restricted or control securities — listed 2,378,245 shares with an aggregate market value of about $32.0 million and a June 2 approximate sale date on Nasdaq. Its remarks said the shares would automatically be sold on Brock’s behalf to cover possible tax withholding tied to restricted stock units.
Separately, Ondas filed a prospectus supplement registering 2,112,674 shares for resale by selling stockholders tied to its Omnisys acquisition. A resale prospectus is a document that lets named holders sell shares over time; Ondas said it would not receive proceeds from those sales.
That distinction is important, but it may not comfort short-term holders. The filing does not say the shares will be dumped at once. It does, however, add to the supply overhang in a stock where momentum traders had been leaning on defense-demand headlines.
Those headlines are still real. Ondas said on June 2 that World View, its wholly owned subsidiary, had been selected as the high-altitude balloon provider for a U.S. Navy SOUTHCOM maritime domain awareness program, with an initial contract worth about $4.8 million over three months. ISR means intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance; Brock called the award a “clear validation” of stratospheric ISR, while World View CEO Ryan Hartman said it reflected “trust built through execution.” Ondas Inc.
The company also said late last week that it had secured more than $30 million of new orders in May, taking quarter-to-date orders above $110 million across defense, security and autonomous technology programs. Brock said that momentum was “strengthening our visibility” in defense, homeland security and critical infrastructure markets. Benzinga
The longer backdrop is a business that has been growing off a low base. Ondas reported first-quarter revenue of $50.1 million, more than 10 times a year earlier, and raised its full-year 2026 revenue target to at least $390 million. It also reported pro forma backlog of $457 million at March 31.
Peer moves show how headline-driven the group has become. Red Cat, AeroVironment and Kratos Defense were among drone-related stocks that rallied last week after a report of possible Pentagon funding talks for domestic drone companies; Ondas rose 9% in that same move, Investing.com reported.
The broader tape did not help. Wall Street ended lower Wednesday, with the Nasdaq down 0.89%, the S&P 500 off 0.74% and the Dow down 1.21%, as Middle East tensions and higher crude prices hit risk appetite. Bill Northey, senior investment director at U.S. Bank Wealth Management, told Reuters the market was in a “tug of war” between strong U.S. fundamentals and conflict-related downside risk. Reuters
But the risk case is plain. If more acquisition-linked shares or compensation-related stock reach the market faster than buyers can absorb them, Ondas could stay under pressure even if order flow remains strong. A smaller Navy contract also needs follow-on work to matter financially, and the stock’s rally leaves little room for slower deliveries, weaker margins or a turn against high-growth defense technology names.
For Thursday’s session, the test is whether investors treat the selloff as a filing-driven reset or as the start of a more serious repricing. The company has fresh orders and a louder defense story. The market is asking what that story is worth after new shares come into view.