Bitcoin treasury agency Nakamoto (NAKA) is resorting to a well-known Wall Avenue playbook because it appears to be like to raise its beating-down share value and keep on Nasdaq.
The corporate is looking for approval for a “reverse inventory cut up” that might mix shares at a ratio to be set between 1-for-20 and 1-for-50, in response to a preliminary proxy submitting (Schedule 14A), because it has seen a collapse in its share value to round $0.22. Costs are down roughly 99% from its Could 2025 peak.
A reverse inventory cut up reduces the variety of shares excellent whereas rising the share value proportionally, for instance turning 20 shares at $0.20 into one share at $4. Whereas it doesn’t change the corporate’s underlying worth, it’s generally used to regain compliance with Nasdaq’s $1 minimal bid requirement and keep away from delisting. Nasdaq mandates listed firms to keep up a minimal bid value of $1 per share, and companies that fail to make sure that inside a particular interval danger being delisted.
Nakamoto just lately offered about 5% of its bitcoin holdings, leaving it with 5,058 $BTC, pointing to ongoing liquidity administration.
Different bitcoin treasury companies have taken related steps, together with Try Asset Administration earlier this yr. Most DAT shares have taken a beating in current months, monitoring the collapse in $BTC‘s spot value to roughly $70,000 from over $126,000 in October.
Alongside the reverse cut up, the corporate, in a Type S-3 submitting, registered greater than 400 million shares for potential resale by current traders. This doesn’t elevate new capital, however creates a big overhang that would weigh on the inventory.
The corporate additionally has a shelf registration permitting as much as roughly $7 billion in future securities issuance. That is separate from an on the market (ATM) program of as much as roughly $5 billion, which might enable it to promote newly issued shares immediately into the market over time.





