Stock of the Day

April 3, 2026

Ondas (ONDS)

$6.53
-$0.12 (-1.8%)
Market Cap: $3.52B

About Ondas

Ondas Holdings Inc., through its subsidiaries, provides private wireless, drone, and automated data solutions. It operates in two segments, Ondas Networks and Ondas Autonomous Systems. The company designs, develops, manufactures, sells, and supports FullMAX, a software defined radio (SDR) platform for wide-area broadband networks. Its FullMAX SDR platform enables secure and reliable industrial-grade connectivity for truly mission-critical applications. The company also offers Optimus, an AI-powered drone with imaging payloads; the Airbase, a ruggedized weatherproof base station for housing, data processing, and cloud transfer; Insightful, a secure web portal and API, which enables remote interaction with the system, data, and resulting analytics anywhere in the world; and the Raider, a counter-drone system for security and the protection of critical infrastructure, assets, and people from the threat of hostile drones. It serves users in rail, energy, mining, agriculture, public safety, critical infrastructure, and government markets in the United States and internationally. The company is headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts.

Today's Trend

Ondas Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: ONDS) has been gaining attention after announcing an $875.8 million acquisition of DZYNE Technologies, a move that significantly expands its autonomous defense and drone systems capabilities. Investors are reacting to the deal’s potential to lift revenue sharply in 2026 and broaden Ondas’ role in the fast-growing AI-enabled defense market.

Overall, ONDS is trading higher largely because the DZYNE acquisition is seen as transformative, but the stock is also facing valuation concerns and at least one analyst downgrade to price target, which could create some volatility.

Three Stocks Under $20 With Massive Upside Potential

Written By Chris Markoch on 3/31/2026

Glowing green candlestick stock chart trending sharply upward, symbolizing strong market upside and investor momentum.

Even amidst market uncertainty, risk-tolerant investors may want to look at opportunities in stocks trading under $20.

With broad market volatility persisting through the first quarter of 2026, it can feel tough to find growth outside of energy stocks. But history consistently shows that buying quality stocks at depressed prices is almost always a winning formula. Right now, fear-driven selloffs in several sectors have created entry points that patient investors may look back on fondly.

Each of the stocks below carries a consensus analyst rating of Moderate Buy or better, plus a consensus price target reflecting at least 30% upside over the next 12 months. And all three sit outside the energy sector, proving that opportunities exist for investors willing to do their homework.

A Building Materials Play With Major Upside

QXO Inc. (NYSE: QXO) is the largest publicly traded distributor of roofing, waterproofing, and complementary building products in North America, with ambitions to become the tech-enabled leader in the approximately $800 billion building products distribution industry. That's a big vision, and analysts appear to believe in it.

QXO stock is down about 20% in the last month and about 1% in 2026. The pullback is tied to a challenging earnings report that showed weak profitability margins and declining revenue, rattling investor confidence. Still, analysts remain bullish, with a consensus price target of $32.27, 70% above the stock's closing price on March 30.

The caveat? Short interest sits around 17%, meaning retail investors could face some pressure in the near term. QXO may reward patient investors willing to ride that out.

Riding the AI Identity Security Wave

SailPoint (NASDAQ: SAIL) is a leader in unified identity security for enterprises, offering an AI-powered platform designed to address the critical security challenges of modern IT environments. In a world where AI agents and machine identities are multiplying rapidly, that's a growing market with no signs of slowing down.

SAIL stock is down about 7% over the last month and has fallen by about 30% year-to-date, putting it well under $20 at about $13. The drop came after management issued conservative forward guidance that spooked investors, even though the company's annual recurring revenue crossed the $1 billion level, rising 28% year over year. But analysts see a rebound: the consensus price target of $21.49 represents over 60% upside.

What makes SailPoint particularly compelling is the institutional conviction behind it. Buyers are putting $1.45 billion to work versus just $239 million in sales—a lopsided ratio that speaks volumes. With short interest at only 3.4%, there's virtually no headwind from bearish traders, making this one of the cleaner setups on this list.

A High-Risk, High-Reward Drone Defense Play

Ondas Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: ONDS) is a leading provider of autonomous systems and private wireless solutions, targeting customers in rail, energy, public safety, critical infrastructure, and government markets with mission-critical networks, autonomous drones, counter-drone solutions, and artificial intelligence capabilities. Defense spending tailwinds are squarely in its favor.

Trading around $8 per share, ONDS stock has taken a beating. It's down about 15% in the last month and 13% year-to-date. A fourth-quarter loss of $101 million weighed heavily on investor sentiment, overshadowing some genuine operational progress. But the analyst community is sticking with it, with a Moderate Buy consensus and a price target of $17.25, implying more than 100% upside.

Institutional ownership tells an interesting story here. Buyers have committed $705.87 million versus just $104.53 million in sales. But total institutional ownership is only around 37%, meaning there's plenty of room for more institutional money to flow in as the company matures.

The risk is real, though. Short interest at 34% is significant, and that alone is reason to approach Ondas with eyes wide open. This one is strictly for investors with a high-risk tolerance and a long enough runway to let the story play out.

How to Balance Risk Across Speculative Stocks

None of these stocks is without risk, which is precisely why they're trading where they are. For investors willing to take on different levels of risk, spreading exposure across all three could help balance the overall profile. SAIL's near-zero short interest offsets some of the pressure from ONDS's crowded short trade, with QXO sitting somewhere in between.

It's also worth noting that analyst consensus price targets are 12-month projections, not guarantees. They represent informed expectations, not certainties. But for risk-tolerant investors with a 12-month horizon, QXO, SAIL, and ONDS each offer a combination of analyst conviction and meaningful upside that's hard to ignore.

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