New York, June 17, 2026, 04:19 (EDT)
- Our Bond ended Tuesday at $1.11, up 108.5%. Early premarket quotes showed it at $1.02.
- The company is swapping $3.3 million of debt for preferred equity and will roll out a municipality-backed project that covers roughly 270,000 people.
- CEO Doron Kempel will hold an investor webinar on Wednesday at 11:00 a.m. ET.
Our Bond Inc. (OBAI) fell 8.1% to $1.02 early Wednesday in premarket trade, giving up some gains after a big jump the previous day. The AI personal security company had announced a debt exchange and a license deal, which sent the stock up 108.5% to $1.11 at Tuesday’s close. Nasdaq premarket quotes came in at 04:15 ET, ahead of the 9:30 a.m. open.
Investors are watching to see if the New York-based firm can use new contracts and reduced balance-sheet pressure to stretch its cash runway. Shares jumped while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.15% on Tuesday—company news, not the broad market, fueled the stock’s rally.
Bond said Ascent Partners Fund LLC swapped about $3.3 million in debt for Series G convertible preferred stock, which can turn into common shares. The conversion price is $2.0265 a share, more than 200% higher than where the stock has been trading, according to the company.
Bond issued 366,941 Series G preferred shares to Ascent, according to a Form 8-K. The shares were exchanged for promissory notes with balances of roughly $2.29 million and $1.01 million. The Series G preferred carries a 10% annual dividend on stated value, with conversion restricted by a 9.99% ownership cap, the filing said.
Bond said a city bought licenses so about 270,000 residents can use its service under a program funded by the local government. The company called this deal validation for its B2G2C strategy, where a government pays for access and gives it to citizens.
Kempel called cities an “exceptionally scalable distribution channel” in the city-deployment release. In a separate statement about the debt exchange, he said Bond is “focused on accelerating growth.” GlobeNewswire
Competition in this space is active. Life360 calls itself a family safety and connection company, focused on a mobile app and its Tile tracking gadgets. ADT claims its lineup covers smart security systems and solutions for personal medical emergencies. Bond is taking another tack with AI-driven services. The company pushes a mix of artificial intelligence, command centers and live security agents, marketing these through employers, city governments and other organizations.
Execution is the risk here. Bond posted first-quarter revenue of $2.35 million and a net loss of $6.70 million. The company said it used $4.41 million cash in operating activities. As of March 31, current liabilities stood at $10.25 million, topping current assets of $5.80 million.
Common shareholders face financing risk here. The Series G terms carry redemption rights and let the conversion price reset if the company sells securities at a lower price. That setup can lead to dilution, cutting the percentage that existing holders own after new shares come out.
Bond faces its next hurdle soon. Kempel has an appearance with investors at 11:00 a.m. ET, where the market expects updates around the unnamed municipality contract, when revenue might hit, and if Tuesday’s rally attracted committed buyers or just short-term traders.