XTIA Stock Jumps Into the Long Weekend as XTI Aerospace’s Drone Bet Gets a Fresh Look

XTIA Stock Jumps Into the Long Weekend as XTI Aerospace’s Drone Bet Gets a Fresh Look

May 22, 2026

NEW YORK, May 22, 2026, 15:01 (EDT)

XTI Aerospace shares rose 8.1% to $1.86 in Friday afternoon trading, giving the thinly traded Nasdaq stock a lift before the U.S. Memorial Day break. The stock traded between $1.74 and $1.91 on the day, with a market value near $71.6 million and a 52-week range of $1.22 to $7.43.

The move matters because XTIA is still being judged less like a mature aerospace name and more like a small-cap restructuring story with a drone revenue base. The company’s first-quarter release showed revenue of $27.7 million, gross profit of $5.1 million and a gross margin of 18.6%, while management kept a 2026 revenue target of at least $160 million and said it aimed for breakeven cash flow in the third quarter. Chief Executive Scott Pomeroy said the quarter showed progress toward “a more scalable and financially disciplined operating model.” PR Newswire

That is the nub for investors now. XTI is trying to prove that Drone Nerds, its commercial drone platform, can turn demand for unmanned aircraft systems, or UAS — industry shorthand for drones and related equipment — into recurring hardware, service and software sales.

The company’s latest operating update came on May 19, when Drone Nerds added Agremo’s crop-monitoring and field-analytics platform to its agriculture software offering. Drone Nerds CEO Jeremy Schneiderman said the product gives customers a “more complete drone-based workflow,” while Agremo co-founder Rastko Carapic said the tie-up would expand “AI-powered agriculture workflows across the U.S. market.” PR Newswire

The competitive backdrop is busy. Red Cat, a more defense-focused drone peer, said on May 21 it would deliver Black Widow drone systems under a Japan Ministry of Defense contract, a reminder that public drone stocks are being watched for real orders, not only product road maps. XTI’s current story is different: agriculture analytics, enterprise distribution and lifecycle support rather than a single battlefield drone platform.

The broader tape helped. U.S. indexes were higher Friday, with Reuters reporting gains in the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq as investors headed into a long weekend. Risk appetite in the wider market can matter more for a stock like XTIA because small-cap moves often amplify when volume is limited.

The clock also matters. Nasdaq’s holiday calendar lists Monday, May 25, as closed for Memorial Day, leaving Friday’s late-session trade to sit for three days before regular U.S. equity trading resumes.

But the risk case is plain. XTI reported a $31.7 million loss from continuing operations in the first quarter, including a $21.4 million change in the fair value of warrant liabilities — a non-cash accounting item tied to the changing value of warrants, which are instruments that can give holders the right to buy shares. The company also flagged market adoption, regulation, supply chains, liquidity, negative stockholders’ equity, customer demand swings, ABL credit-facility covenants and possible future non-cash warrant charges as risks. ABL means asset-based lending, a credit line backed by assets such as receivables or inventory.

Liquidity remains the near-term number to watch. XTI said it had $15.2 million of unrestricted cash at March 31, with $4.6 million drawn and $8.1 million of remaining borrowing availability under its credit facility. It also said adjusted EBITDA loss improved to about negative $5 million from roughly negative $10 million in the fourth quarter; adjusted EBITDA is a company-defined measure of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, often used as a rough operating-profit gauge.

For now, Friday’s rally does not settle the argument. It gives XTIA a cleaner tape heading into the holiday, but the next leg depends on whether management can show that Drone Nerds revenue, agriculture software and government or enterprise demand are enough to offset losses, balance-sheet strain and the dilution risk that often shadows small-cap aerospace names.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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