New York, Feb 26, 2026, 06:58 ET — Premarket
- Ondas shares last changed hands at $10.30 late Wednesday, up roughly 1.5% from their previous close.
- According to a filing, CFO Neil Laird picked up 12,500 shares in the form of vested restricted stock units.
- Traders are eyeing potential follow-on orders, with the company’s full-year report due out in March.
Ondas Inc shares ended Wednesday’s session at $10.30. A disclosure revealed that Chief Financial Officer Neil Laird picked up 12,500 shares in the form of vested restricted stock units. (Ondas Inc.)
This disclosure lands with some weight: Ondas has been a buzzy small-cap in defense and security tech circles, and after a spate of contract news earlier this month, investors have been combing filings for any whiff of insider selling. (Ondas Inc.)
The company also told investors it plans to release results for both the quarter and full year ended Dec. 31, 2025 in March. That update will follow its latest move into counter-drone and autonomous systems. (Ondas Inc.)
Corporate insiders are required to file a Form 4 with the SEC when they buy or sell company shares. RSUs—restricted stock units—represent stock awards that convert into shares upon vesting.
Laird, according to the filing, disclosed the deal was executed on Feb. 24 and cited his positions as CFO and treasurer. (Ondas Inc.)
Ondas, via its Sentrycs unit, announced on Feb. 17 it had delivered and deployed its counter-drone system to a German state police office. The company also has plans to roll out a man-carried product, Sentrycs Scout, at a German exhibition. “Lawful, precise drone mitigation,” Sentrycs CEO Tal Cohen said of the deployment. (Ondas Inc.)
Ondas announced that its Airobotics division landed a “multi-million dollar” order from a European NATO-country customer, following the Iron Drone Raider system’s deployment at a key European international airport. “Airports and urban infrastructure present a multi-billion-dollar global opportunity for civil-compliant counter-drone systems,” Chairman and CEO Eric Brock said. (Ondas Inc.)
Ondas is highlighting a $30 million demining initiative in Israel via its 4M Defense arm. Brock noted an uptick in demand for “technology-driven approaches” in high-risk areas. (Ondas Inc.)
Orders tied to defense and security tend to come in fits and starts, shifting with trials, fluctuating budgets, and procurement timelines that move around. Contract terms are often sparse, and not every pilot order leads to more business down the line.
The next big event for the company is its full-year 2025 report, which management says should drop in March. (Ondas Inc.)