NEW YORK, June 5, 2026, 08:02 EDT
- Ondas was quoted at $11.86 in extended trading, down 0.9%, before Friday’s regular Nasdaq open.
- A June 3 filing registered 2.1 million shares for resale by holders tied to the Omnisys acquisition.
- Recent defense orders and a Navy-linked balloon contract remain the bull case, but new share supply is the near-term overhang.
Ondas Inc. shares slipped in early trading on Friday as investors weighed fresh share-sale filings against a run of defense and autonomous-systems contract news that has kept the stock in heavy focus.
The stock was quoted at $11.86 in extended trading, down 0.9%, after closing Thursday at $11.97, up 3.1%. Nasdaq’s regular session opens at 9:30 a.m. Eastern, so early quotes can move sharply on thinner trading before the main market opens.
The issue now is not a lack of news. It is what kind of news investors choose to price first: orders and backlog, or more shares that could come into the market.
Ondas filed a prospectus supplement on June 3 covering the resale of 2,112,674 common shares by selling stockholders. A resale registration is a filing that lets existing holders sell shares from time to time; it does not mean they sold them immediately. The company said it would not receive proceeds from any sale.
That filing followed a Form 4 showing Chairman, CEO and President Eric Brock received 4.5 million shares on June 1 as restricted stock units vested. Restricted stock units are share awards that become owned after vesting. The same filing showed 2,378,245 shares sold at $13.43 on June 2, with the company saying the shares were sold to cover potential tax withholding obligations tied to the vesting.
A related Form 144 notice listed Brock as the person for whose account the securities were to be sold and described the proposed sale as 2,378,245 shares with an aggregate market value of about $32.0 million. The notice said the shares would be sold automatically to cover potential tax obligations linked to the vesting of restricted stock units.
The filings landed just after Ondas said its World View unit had been selected as high-altitude balloon provider for a U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command maritime domain awareness program. The company put the initial contract at about $4.8 million over three months and said World View would support intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, or ISR, meaning data-gathering used to track threats and activity.
“World View’s selection for this operational program is a clear validation of the role stratospheric ISR can play in modern maritime security,” Brock said in that release. Ryan Hartman, World View’s CEO, said the award showed the team could move from demonstration to operational support.
The order story is broader than that single award. Ondas said on May 29 it secured more than $30 million in new orders during May, bringing quarter-to-date orders to more than $110 million across defense, security and autonomous technology. Brock called the May order flow “continued execution,” while Oshri Lugassy, co-CEO of Ondas Autonomous Systems, said customers increasingly want systems that link air defense, counter-drone tools, ISR and ground robotics. Ondas Inc.
That is why the stock’s near-term reaction matters. The shares are being treated less like a quiet communications-equipment name and more like a defense-autonomy trade, alongside companies such as Red Cat Holdings, AeroVironment and Kratos Defense & Security Solutions, which were also higher in early U.S. quotes.
Wall Street remains mostly constructive, though not uniformly so. MarketBeat data showed nine analysts with a consensus “Moderate Buy” rating and an average 12-month target of $17.25, while also listing one sell and one hold rating. Needham’s Austin Bohlig had the most recent listed broker action, reiterating a buy rating with a $23 target on May 19. MarketBeat
The company’s May financial update explains part of that support. Ondas reported first-quarter revenue of $50.1 million, more than 10 times the year-earlier figure, raised its 2026 revenue target to at least $390 million and said pro forma backlog had reached $457 million. The company also said it had $1.48 billion in cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and short-term investments at March 31.
But the risk is clear enough. Resale registrations can weigh on a stock if buyers fear more supply is coming, even when the company receives no cash from those sales. Ondas also warned in its prospectus that its shares carry significant risk, and the filing allows selling holders to dispose of some, all or none of the registered shares over time.
For now, Ondas is trying to sell investors on a bigger defense platform story. Friday’s tape may show whether that story can absorb the more immediate concern: who else may sell, and at what price.