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Above Food Ingredients (ABVE) Stock Jumps as Delayed 20-F Filing Keeps Investors on Edge
4 May 2026
2 mins read

Above Food Ingredients (ABVE) Stock Jumps as Delayed 20-F Filing Keeps Investors on Edge

Regina, Saskatchewan, May 4, 2026, 13:52 (CST)

Above Food Ingredients Inc. shares jumped roughly 33% Monday afternoon, surging on the Nasdaq despite no new filings or press releases from the food and agtech firm. The stock climbed to $0.7089 after starting the day at $0.54, hitting an intraday peak of $0.8297. Volume swelled to nearly 43.8 million shares.

This development lands as Above Food’s fiscal 2025 annual report remains outstanding. Back on April 20, the company pointed to an ongoing audit. Delays, it said, are partly the result of some subsidiaries heading into receivership—a process where a court-appointed receiver steps in to manage assets or operations.

Form 20-F serves as the main annual report for foreign private issuers listed in the U.S. According to SEC guidance, these issuers are usually required to submit the Form 20-F no later than four months following the close of their fiscal year.

Above Food filed its latest report with the SEC on April 21. The company’s news feed hasn’t changed since the April 20 update about its audit status, which remains the most recent headline. With that in mind, Monday’s price action didn’t follow any fresh company announcement—it looked to be a market move.

The move was notable compared to other food stocks. Beyond Meat edged up roughly 1.1%. Oatly slipped about 1.2%. Ingredion, which makes ingredients, dropped around 2.5% as of the afternoon. All told, action looked focused on Above Food, not a wider push for plant-based or ingredient names.

Earlier, Above Food struck a more upbeat note on timing. On March 27, Chief Executive and Executive Chairman Lionel Kambeitz told investors the company was “fully focused on resolving the final procedural items.” At that point, Above Food had announced its Form 20-F was ready to go, pending just third-party confirmations and a final review.

On April 20, the company pulled back a bit. Above Food said it couldn’t guarantee anything regarding fiscal 2025 performance or when the Form 20-F would land—not until the audit wrapped up and the independent auditor’s report came through.

Nasdaq compliance remains a drag here. Back in February, the company disclosed it got a staff determination letter from Nasdaq, citing non-compliance with Listing Rule 5250(c)(2) due to late interim financials for the six months ended July 31, 2025. At the time, Above Food said the notice carried no immediate impact.

Above Food, which bills itself as an ag and food tech player focused on plant-based protein supply chains and seed development, has pointed to the late filings as a barrier to wrapping up planned deals—Palm Global remains in the mix.

The risk is straightforward enough. Should the audit stretch out, or if the final numbers don’t line up with what investors are betting on, Monday’s gains might not stick around. Lingering Nasdaq compliance issues could also spoil the mood in a hurry. Back in March, the company flagged several possible hurdles for the deal: regulatory timelines, listing questions, integration snags, and plain old delays.

At the moment, Above Food’s narrative is shaped more by activity in a stock still waiting on certain filings than by any fresh business developments. The next significant milestone is still the fiscal 2025 Form 20-F. After that, interim statements—promised by the company—are expected once the annual report lands.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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