New York, June 9, 2026, 15:05 EDT
Ondas Inc. shares fell in Tuesday afternoon trading after the defense-drone company registered a block of stock for resale by holders who received shares in an acquisition, adding a supply concern to a volatile name. The stock was last at $9.61, down 6.7%, after trading between $9.06 and $10.66 on volume of about 57.5 million shares.
The immediate trigger was a Form 8-K filed Tuesday. Ondas said it had filed a prospectus supplement covering the resale, from time to time, of 2,701,420 common shares tied to its acquisition of Israel’s Omnisys Ltd.
That matters because a prospectus supplement — an SEC filing that lets named holders resell shares under an existing registration — can create an overhang even when the company is not selling stock itself. The prospectus said Ondas will receive no proceeds from any sales by the selling stockholders; it also said the sellers may sell some, all or none of the shares, and that the block followed stock installments under a roughly $196.6 million Omnisys purchase price.
The resale block is modest against the disclosed share count, about 0.5% of the 514.5 million common shares outstanding as of June 8 before the newly issued installment. But timing counts. Ondas posted a fresh investor presentation on June 8, keeping attention on a fast-moving acquisition and defense-orders story just as the shares were already moving sharply.
The operating pitch has been growth. In May, Ondas reported first-quarter revenue of $50.1 million, raised its full-year 2026 revenue forecast to at least $390 million, and said pro forma backlog — contracted work or orders not yet turned into revenue — had reached $457 million.
Recent company news has leaned heavily on defense and security demand. On May 29, Ondas said it secured more than $30 million of new orders in May, bringing second-quarter-to-date orders to more than $110 million. CEO Eric Brock called the May order flow a sign of “continued execution,” while Oshri Lugassy, co-CEO of Ondas Autonomous Systems, said, “The future is not one drone, one robot or one sensor.” Ondas Inc.
The company also said last week that its World View unit had been selected as the high-altitude balloon provider for a U.S. Navy SOUTHCOM maritime domain awareness program, with an initial three-month contract valued at about $4.8 million. World View CEO Ryan Hartman said, “This award reflects the trust built through execution.” Ondas Inc.
The tape did not help. Other drone and defense-technology names were lower, with Red Cat Holdings down about 8.9%, AeroVironment off about 5.0% and Kratos Defense & Security Solutions down about 3.5%. Reuters reported that the S&P 500 and Nasdaq fell to more than one-month lows as a technology selloff resumed.
But the filing is not the same as an immediate sale, and it does not by itself change Ondas’ order book. The risk for investors is different: if more acquisition-related stock reaches the market while buyers grow less patient with defense-drone multiples, the shares could stay under pressure before orders convert into revenue.
Execution is the other side of the trade. In its latest annual report, Ondas warned that acquisitions may not meet operational or strategic expectations, could bring integration problems and may dilute existing shareholders. If Omnisys, World View and other recent deals take longer to fold in, the market may look past backlog and focus instead on cash use, share issuance and delivery risk.