5 stocks under $10 Wall Street thinks are ready to run big

5 stocks under $10 Wall Street thinks are ready to run big
Devesh Kumar
13 Jun 2026, 16:00 PM

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SATL (Satellogic)

Buy SATL. The news points to a concrete demand catalyst: a new defense contract plus raised revenue/EBITDA-loss outlook. Earth-observation is a “pay for outcomes” market, so contract wins can quickly translate into credibility, follow-on orders, and better unit economics. At ~$10 with a ~$10.60–$11+ Street target range, the setup is asymmetric if more government/commercial data deals land.

Key Risk: Defense spending delays or contract scope shrinks, cutting expected high-margin revenue and pushing the stock back below targets.

SOUN (SoundHound AI)

Buy SOUN. The second-order angle: if voice AI keeps moving from pilots to repeat deployments in cars and customer-service systems, it drives higher switching costs and data flywheels (better recognition, faster tuning, more integrations). That tends to improve retention and margins, not just top-line growth—exactly what the Street is underwriting with a Strong Buy consensus.

Key Risk: Customers stall after pilots (no sustained deployments), so revenue growth stays weak and the “data flywheel” never turns into durable margins.

  • Analysts back under-$10 stocks tied to emerging tech themes.
  • Quantum, AI and fintech names dominate bullish analyst picks.
  • Wall Street targets imply strong upside for overlooked stocks.

Several stocks trading below $10 are drawing fresh attention from Wall Street analysts, even as broader markets remain focused on mega-cap technology names.

The appeal is not simply that these shares look cheap.

Each company sits inside a larger investment theme, from quantum computing and voice AI to fintech automation, space imaging and electric aviation.

The risks are high, and many of these businesses are still proving their models.

But as of June 2026, analysts see meaningful upside in a handful of overlooked names where small price tags are tied to potentially large markets.

5 stocks under $10 Wall Street thinks could break out

1. Quantum Computing Inc. is one of the more speculative names on the list.

The company, known by its ticker QUBT, is trying to build hardware and software tools that make quantum computing more practical for enterprises.

Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Troy Jensen remains a cautious voice.

According to TipRanks, Jensen kept a Neutral rating and a $10 price target on QUBT, while estimating that the company could reach about $375 million (approx. ₹35.2 billion) in sales by 2035 if it captures 5% of the quantum market.

That caution sits against a more bullish broader view. TipRanks data shows a Strong Buy consensus on QUBT, based on three Buys and one Hold over the past three months.

The average price target of $17.50 implies roughly 77% upside from recent levels.

2. SoundHound AI (NASDAQ: SOUN) offers a different kind of AI exposure.

Instead of large language models or chips, the company focuses on voice-based artificial intelligence used in cars, restaurants and enterprise customer-service systems.

TipRanks recently showed a Strong Buy consensus on SOUN, with five Buys and one Hold, while other aggregators have been more restrained.

The stock’s average target is around the mid-teens, suggesting analysts still see upside if enterprise adoption keeps improving.

The key risk is execution as SoundHound needs customers to move from pilots and partnerships to sustained revenue growth.

3. Blend Labs (NYSE: BLND) is the turnaround story in the group. The fintech software company helps banks and lenders automate mortgage, consumer-loan and deposit-account workflows.

The stock was hit hard during the housing slowdown, when mortgage activity weakened and investors lost patience with growth software names.

Since then, Blend has been cutting costs, improving margins and adding AI tools for financial institutions.

Canaccord recently lowered its Blend Labs price target to $4.50 from $5.25, according to TipRanks, but kept a Buy rating.

The firm cited Blend’s continued push on growth, profitability and product expansion despite a difficult mortgage backdrop.

4. Satellogic (NASDAQ: SATL) is less flashy but has one of the clearest business cases.

The company provides high-resolution Earth-observation data, a market driven by demand from governments, defence agencies and commercial customers.

Northland analyst Michael Latimore recently raised his target on SATL to $11 from $9 and kept an Outperform rating after the company won an $18 million (approx. ₹1.7 billion) defence contract.

Latimore also lifted his FY26 revenue estimate to $45 million (approx. ₹4.2 billion) and narrowed his expected EBITDA loss, helped by the contract’s high-margin profile.

Wall Street’s consensus rating on SATL is Strong Buy, with four Buys and one Hold. The average target of $10.60 implies about 41% upside.

5. Archer Aviation (NYSE: ACHR) is the highest-risk, highest-imagination name here.

Electric air taxis still sound futuristic, and the path to commercial scale remains expensive, regulated and uncertain.

Still, analysts are not treating Archer as a meme stock.

The company has made progress through the FAA certification process for its Midnight aircraft, and investors are watching infrastructure plans, defence opportunities and institutional backing closely.

Investing.com data shows an average 12-month price target of about $10.61 for ACHR, with six analysts recommending Buy and no Sell ratings.

MarketBeat puts the average target closer to $11.83, implying more than 100% upside from recent levels.