Sadot Group (SDOT) surged over 41% on Thursday after announcing three material deals: a $6 million software acquisition, a $100 million convertible note program, and a $100 million equity purchase facility.
The company acquired TradeIQ, a predictive-intelligence software platform, from Hong Kong-based Litial Ltd. on July 14, 2026. TradeIQ is designed to layer on top of commodity trading and risk management (CTRM) platforms.
The purchase price was structured as a small cash payment, 200,000 newly issued common shares, and 3,950 shares of a newly designated Series C Non-Voting Non-Convertible Preferred Stock. The seller is locked into a two-year non-compete in the CTRM market.
The Series C Preferred carries a stated value of $1,000 per share and pays a 6% cumulative annual cash dividend, rising to 9% if certain defaults occur. It ranks senior to common stock and is perpetual and non-convertible, though Sadot can redeem it at par plus accrued dividends at its option.
While the preferred stock gives Sadot balance sheet flexibility, it does restrict dividend payments and buybacks on common and junior stock while any Series C dividends remain unpaid. Common shareholders should be aware of that constraint near term.
On the debt side, Sadot closed an initial $4 million tranche within a broader $100 million senior secured convertible note program. These notes bear 8.25% annual interest and mature in 2028.
The company also established a $100 million at-will equity purchase facility, giving it the ability to raise additional capital on demand. Management said these arrangements are intended to support liquidity and growth.
The TradeIQ IP purchase agreement includes 90 days of transition services from the seller and requires delivery of all assets within 21 days of the contract date.
In May 2026, Nasdaq notified Sadot that it no longer met the minimum $2.5 million stockholders’ equity requirement for continued listing. That notice has been hanging over the stock.
In response, Sadot has executed a series of balance sheet actions over recent months, including acquisitions, divestitures, debt-to-equity conversions, and real estate options.
Management now believes these combined steps have lifted adjusted stockholders’ equity above $7 million, which would restore compliance with Nasdaq’s threshold.
However, that determination remains subject to audit review and Nasdaq’s final ruling. The risk of delisting has not been formally removed.
Sadot’s current market cap sits at approximately $11.35 million. Average daily trading volume is around 3.3 million shares.
The stock’s technical sentiment signal is listed as Sell, and it was trading below key moving averages prior to Thursday’s jump.
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