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Austin, TX
Experience: Intermediate
Platform: NT, SC, MT
Trading: NQ, ES, Micros
Posts: 90 since May 2018
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@tradecombine it was a reverse split so the price should go up, all else equal.
@Bulltripping I'm not a financial adviser so please take this with a grain of salt. As far as I can tell this is what happened.
***EDITED to reflect that the close on 2/1 (according to Yahoo) INCLUDED the effect of the reverse stock split.
They initially announced this offering in a registration statement back in Oct 2020. They didn't know the pricing back then.
The stock closed at 5.78 on 2/1 according to Yahoo. While I believe the reverse-split took place after the close, I think this 5.78 reflects the split.
Right after that, they announced the pricing of the new offering of approx 2.8M units. Each unit was comprised of 1 share of common and 1 warrant. The pricing was $4.30 per unit.
Thus, a unit was valued at 4.30. If the stock is worth C and a warrant worth W, this implies C + W = 4.30
This pricing per unit was probably a mild shock because at the close on 2/1 the post-reverse-split implied value for C was 5.78, while after the pricing the implied value for C was 4.30 minus W.
A couple days after the pricing was announced the stock (ticker CUEN) was trading at 3.59 or so and the warrant (ticker CUENW) was trading at 1.19 or so, implying a value per unit just over the offering price.
Note that the warrant is not a "penny warrant." It's strike is $4.30, which is out of the money, with a 5-year expiration date. Thus, it's value is based on "time value" and it has no "intrinsic value." Exercising it doesn't seem to make sense, because you'd be paying $4.30 for something recently trading for $3.20 or so. However, the folks who bought the units could sell the warrant for the time value.
Looking at their past few 10Q's, their accountants have been giving them a "going concern" qualification, which sometimes indicates significant financial difficulty. Accountants do this because one of the assumptions of financial accounting is that an entity will be able to continue as a going concern, and if that assumption is not met then the financial statements are in some sense suspect.
If you're not familiar with Edgar, it's a useful source for company filings. Here's a link: https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?CIK=1424657&owner=exclude
Also, here's a link to the updated prospectus for the "units" that was filed on Feb 3: https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1424657/000121390021006532/ea134529-424b4_cuentasinc.htm
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