DeFi Technologies finds itself in a peculiar bind. Its asset-management arm Valour just logged its second-best month in a year, pulling in $14.6 million in net inflows during April and boosting total assets under management above $550 million. The group’s balance sheet — comprising cash, crypto holdings and equity stakes — stands at roughly $156 million. Yet the stock trades at €0.50 in European markets and has languished below the $1 threshold on the Nasdaq for months.
The discrepancy between operating performance and market valuation has rarely been starker. And time is running out for the gap to close.
Valour’s April surge broke a sluggish first quarter and lifted the company’s net working capital from a deficit into firmly positive territory. Meanwhile, the trading arm Stillman Digital pushed its commission income to $2.9 million. Management has also trimmed operating expenses. The institutional pivot has begun in earnest: new hedge fund structures, European UCITS-compliant funds, and a dedicated index aimed at giving large investors a reliable window into regulated crypto exposure are all being rolled out. The push into Brazil and Europe is expected to drive revenue growth in the second half of 2026.
But on the Nasdaq, the clock is ticking louder than any product launch.
In March 2026, the exchange issued a warning because DeFi Technologies’ stock had fallen below the required minimum bid price of $1. The company has until September 1, 2026, to restore compliance — the stock must close above $1 for at least ten consecutive trading days. Failure means delisting. The board has therefore placed a resolution before shareholders at the upcoming virtual annual meeting on June 29, 2026, seeking approval for a reverse stock split.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying DeFi Technologies?
A reverse split is a standard tool to satisfy listing requirements, but it carries a heavy psychological toll. It signals survival mode rather than growth. That perception is already baked into the share price. The stock’s 52-week high was €3.00; the current level of €0.50 is barely above the 52-week low of €0.42. The 200-day moving average sits at €1.00, the short-term trendline at €0.60. With a relative strength index of 36.4, the stock is technically oversold, yet a 30-day annualized volatility of over 73% means oversold conditions can persist dangerously long.
Trust, not revenue, is the real headwind. In April 2026, the Ontario Securities Commission slapped a temporary trading ban on management after the company missed the filing deadline for its annual financial statements. DeFi Technologies blamed a pending audit report and has since submitted all outstanding documents. But the memory of regulatory slippage lingers. For a small-cap crypto firm, credibility is priced in hard.
Analysts remain cautiously optimistic. B. Riley and Benchmark have both trimmed their price targets — to $0.90 and $2.00 respectively — but maintain buy ratings. They are betting on the institutional transformation and the operational recovery to eventually close the valuation gap. The question is whether that will happen before the Nasdaq deadline forces a more drastic outcome.
The June 29 vote will be a pivotal moment. If the reverse split is approved, it can buy time. It will not, by itself, restore faith. DeFi Technologies needs the market to look past its governance stumbles and see the actual business — the record inflows, the cost discipline, the institutional pivot. For now, the stock remains trapped between a compelling operational story and a trust deficit that only consistent delivery can repair.
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