New York, January 6, 2026, 15:45 EST — Regular session
- Kyivstar shares fall about 4% in afternoon trade, dipping below $13
- Drop comes even as broader U.S. equities trade higher
- Investors look to March results release and management call for the next catalyst
Kyivstar Group Ltd (KYIV) shares slid 4.4% on Tuesday, bucking a broader rise in U.S. equities. The stock was down about 60 cents at $12.91 in mid-afternoon trade after touching $12.63, while the S&P 500 proxy SPY was up about 0.6%.
The move matters because Kyivstar remains a thinly traded, Ukraine-linked listing that can swing sharply on positioning and risk appetite. With few pure Ukraine plays in U.S. markets, investors often treat KYIV as a bellwether for sentiment on the country’s economy and operating risks.
Kyivstar listed on Nasdaq in August 2025 after combining with Cohen Circle, a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC — a shell firm that raises cash and then merges with an operating business. A company prospectus supplement said VEON Amsterdam held 89.6% of Kyivstar’s shares after the listing, and disclosed 7.7 million warrants outstanding; warrants give holders the right to buy shares at a set price and can add supply if exercised. SEC
The selloff also diverged from moves in VEON Ltd, Kyivstar’s ultimate parent, whose U.S.-listed shares were up about 1.6% on the day.
Kyivstar’s most recent corporate updates have focused on keeping its network resilient amid power disruptions and conflict risks in Ukraine. In December, the company said it would acquire a solar power plant operator for about $8.24 million and CEO Oleksandr Komarov said, “Investing in renewable energy is a strategic step.”
The next hard date on traders’ calendars is mid-March. Kyivstar said it will release selected fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 financial and operating results on March 16, 2026, and hold a conference call with senior management on March 17. Stock Titan
But risks remain skewed to headlines: the company operates in a war zone, and renewed infrastructure damage, tougher regulation or weaker consumer spending could hit service quality and cash flow. Investors also watch for any dilution from warrant exercises and for liquidity to thin out quickly in down moves.