NEW YORK, July 17, 2026, 12:12 p.m. EDT
Sadot Group Inc. NASDAQ:SDOT rose 83.7% to $26.18 early Friday. The surge came after the company disclosed a TradeIQ intellectual-property acquisition and entered into financing arrangements valued at up to $200 million.
The surge brings a more hidden price. Based on the most recent quote, 200,000 shares issued for TradeIQ had a value of $5.24 million. In the purchase agreement, the shares were priced at $2 million.
The seller was also granted $3.95 million in non-convertible preferred stock, featuring a 6% cumulative dividend. Based on its stated value, the deal totaled about $9.24 million, counting $50,000 in cash. This represented a 54% premium over the listed $6 million price.
This is a market-value snapshot, not an accounting projection. The common shares are subject to a 180-day lockup period.
The financing comes with an equity overhang. The original note featured a $3.6 million gross purchase price and a $4 million principal, equating to just 1.8% of the total capacity of the two facilities.
The note’s fixed conversion price stands at $17.81, representing a discount of roughly 32% to Friday’s closing price. If the entire principal converts, it would result in the issuance of approximately 224,600 shares, not accounting for interest or other adjustments. This figure amounts to 22% of Sadot’s total shares as of July 16. Issuing the full amount would surpass the interim 19.99% exchange limit.
Sadot stated it had 1,022,235 shares outstanding as of July 16. This marked a 37% increase from about 744,000 shares following May’s 1-for-20 reverse split.
The comparison highlights the degree to which the headline is still dependent on unresolved factors.
| Item | Headline amount | Immediate cash | Common-share effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| TradeIQ acquisition | $6.0 million listed value | $30,000 paid; $20,000 payable | 200,000 shares allocated |
| Initial senior secured note | $4.0 million principal | $3.6 million gross consideration | Roughly 224,600 shares at $17.81 |
| Remaining note programme | Up to $96 million principal | Not specified | Conversions based on conditions |
| Equity purchase agreement | Up to $100 million | Not specified | Shares issued at 95%-98% of prevailing price |
The table is based on company disclosures. Calculations are derived from the published share count and the midday price.
The second note closing is subject to registration and approval from shareholders. Any further tranches initiated by the company require 30 trading days. The share price has to maintain a $10 VWAP and at least $2 million in daily dollar volume.
The equity line is also optional. Standard advances have a 5% market discount, while accelerated or extended advances have a 2% discount, though both are subject to volume constraints. Each is limited by a 19.99% exchange cap unless shareholders approve otherwise.
The note has an initial interest rate of 8.25% and is due to mature in July 2028. It is backed by nearly all assets held by the company and its subsidiaries.
Trading volume surged, with approximately 14.25 million shares changing hands according to the latest data, almost 14 times higher than the stated number of shares.
Peer movements were less pronounced. Bunge Global SA NYSE:BG increased by 2.5%, with Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. NYSE:ADM up 2.7%. The Andersons Inc. (NASDAQ:ANDE) advanced 1.5%. The divergence indicates a repricing unique to Sadot.
According to an SEC filing signed by CEO Chagay Ravid, a preliminary equity estimate was provided. Management stated that adjusted equity was “in excess of $7 million.” This figure surpasses Nasdaq’s $2.5 million minimum if approved. The estimate is currently unaudited and unreviewed. SEC
Sadot agreed to pay Helena $350,000 by 5 p.m. Friday, with prompt payment set to result in dismissal of Helena’s lawsuit and terminate a previous $10 million equity line. The deadline was still pending at the time of publication.
Risks: Future cash flow is subject to approvals, registration and market conditions. Sadot also cautioned about listing compliance and raised concerns about its ability to remain a going concern.
Investors are approaching two hurdles. The deals call for shareholder approval within the next 50 to 60 days. After that, Sadot needs to convert its optional capacity into cash, while not diluting its small equity base.