NEW YORK, April 29, 2026, 05:04 EDT
AI-adjacent shares stumbled again, and that’s nudged a handful of U.S.-listed tech penny stocks—each still trading below $5—into the spotlight. Five names grabbed notice in just the last two sessions, thanks to fresh product launches, partnership deals or word of new funding.
Timing’s in the spotlight. The Nasdaq Composite dipped Tuesday, with investors wrestling over how quickly AI demand might really scale ahead of big tech earnings, according to Reuters. Chipmakers and data-center stocks—Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom—took the brunt of the selloff. For smaller players, it’s a double-edged setup: AI buzz can juice up valuations, but with risk appetite looking shaky, shaky balance sheets take a hit fast.
Each of these five stocks finished the session under the familiar $5 threshold for penny stocks: Fabric.AI—once known as StableX Technologies—closed at $3.10. Kopin ended at $4.00. Blaize wrapped up at $1.90. RedCloud changed hands at $0.657, while U-BX Technology was last seen at $0.9801. These low-priced shares can swing hard, thanks to their smaller market caps, lighter volumes, and a tighter margin for trading mistakes.
Fabric.AI, which will trade as FABC starting Wednesday but now carries the SBLX ticker, looks like the purest AI-infrastructure pivot among peers. The company dumped its old StableX Technologies name, scrapped a digital-asset treasury plan, and rerouted its capital into MicroLED optical interconnects for AI data centers. A $21.5 million private placement is on deck—convertible preferred stock and warrants, setting the initial conversion price at $2.51 per share. “AI is no longer just software—it’s an industrial process,” CEO Josh Silverman said in the statement. GlobeNewswire
Kopin finds itself on the supplier end of the same trade. The optical-systems firm reported a $15 million initial development order from Fabric.AI, backing work on a demonstration chipset for Neural I/o. That’s a MicroLED-based setup aimed at shuttling data among GPUs, boards, and racks while using less power than copper wiring does. CEO Michael Murray called the partnership a dramatic expansion of Kopin’s market opportunity in AI infrastructure, but added that the technology still needs to prove itself commercially—moving from lab promises to real adoption.
Blaize is taking a different tack in AI—edge inference, which means running models close to where data’s generated, not just in sprawling cloud centers. On Tuesday, the company announced a three-way partnership with Nokia and PT Datacomm Diangraha to roll out hybrid AI inference infrastructure in Indonesia and throughout Southeast Asia. “GPU economics do not scale to thousands of distributed sites,” CEO Dinakar Munagala argued. Datacomm, meanwhile, reported that customer demand for AI inference has jumped over 50% in the last half-year. Blaize, Inc.
RedCloud’s AI push targets the trade and supply-chain level, steering clear of chips. The London-based firm is rolling out three specialist agents as part of its RedAI platform, all trained on $6.9 billion worth of proprietary fast-moving consumer goods transaction data. RedCloud says the agents are built to assist with inventory management, sales, and market planning. Phased live launches are set for the second half of 2026. “Global trade has never had intelligence,” CEO Justin Floyd said. GlobeNewswire
At the far volatile fringe, U-BX Technology is raising $4.55 million through a registered direct offering, the Beijing-based insurance-tech firm said. Priced at 30 cents per unit, each unit bundles a Class A ordinary share plus a warrant for 0.3 of a share. Proceeds are earmarked for general corporate and working-capital needs. For microcap tech outfits like this, the cash injection is critical—underscoring just how tight funding conditions have become.
The landscape’s brutal. Big AI vendors keep research humming thanks to cash and entrenched clients. For tech penny stocks, the only way to keep up is often by leaning on partners, issuing warrants, or tapping the market again and again. When a deal drops, traders spot the upside fast—but shareholders get hit with dilution, dragged-out launches, and the risk of sharp sell-offs.
Listing risk isn’t off the table. Earlier this month, RedCloud revealed it had received a non-compliance notice from Nasdaq after shares spent 30 straight business days under the $1 mark, breaching the exchange’s minimum bid-price rule. The company now faces an Oct. 12, 2026 deadline to fix this—shares need to close at $1 or higher for 10 consecutive business days to get back in good standing.
Here’s the gist: Investors looking for small-cap AI data-center hardware have Fabric.AI and Kopin. Blaize stands out as an edge AI bet. RedCloud? That’s your global trade software-and-data angle. As for U-BX, it’s a high-risk insurtech finance name. Not one of these acts as a stand-in for the big AI platforms. Each stock is a speculative attempt to carve out a place in the current spending wave.