BOULDER, Colo., May 15, 2026, 06:05 MDT
- Auddia has submitted a Form S-4 as it moves ahead with a merger with Thramann Holdings—part of a plan to launch McCarthy Finney, slated to list on Nasdaq under the ticker MCFN.
- The company pointed to a finished $12 million financing round, saying this should cover the deal’s cash-at-close requirement.
- AUUD surged in premarket action, changing hands at $1.94—a 59.02% jump over Thursday’s $1.22 close.
Auddia Inc. moved a step further toward its planned transformation on Friday, filing a registration statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for its merger with Thramann Holdings. The small-cap audio tech firm aims to rebrand as McCarthy Finney, shifting focus to become an AI holding company.
The filing kicks off the SEC review, a required step before Auddia can put the merger to a shareholder vote. According to Auddia, the post-merger company will run four AI-focused businesses and list on Nasdaq using the ticker MCFN once the deal closes.
Shares jumped sharply ahead of the bell. As of 7:49 a.m. EDT, AUUD was indicated at $1.94, showing a 59.02% rise from its May 14 close at $1.22, StockAnalysis data show. With a market cap at $6.81 million, the figures highlight the disconnect between Auddia’s latest trading levels and what the company projects internally after the merger.
Jeff Thramann, who runs Auddia and heads Thramann Holdings, described the filing as “a major step toward creating McCarthy Finney.” The planned company aims to consolidate AI workflows, tap engineering talent, and combine infrastructure among its subsidiaries. GlobeNewswire
This marks a stark change in direction. Auddia — mainly recognized for its faidr audio app and tech in the AM/FM radio space — would slot in as just one business under the McCarthy Finney umbrella. The rest: LT350 (AI infrastructure), Influence Healthcare (value-based surgical care), and Voyex, a travel rebooking company leaning on agentic AI—software that manages multi-step processes with minimal human help.
Auddia’s annual report puts its shareholders with roughly 20% of McCarthy Finney once the deal closes, leaving Thramann holding about 80%. That ratio could shift, though—it hinges on how much cash Auddia has at closing, the filing notes.
The deal puts McCarthy Finney at a base-case DCF valuation of $250 million, the company said. Unlike sale prices set by the market, a discounted cash flow (DCF) model relies on projected future cash streams to estimate what a business might be worth. Auddia pointed out that LT350 accounts for roughly half of that modeled figure.
Competitive positioning isn’t simple here. LT350 is steering away from the classic big data-center model; it’s pitching solar parking-lot canopies outfitted with battery storage and GPU cartridges. That puts it loosely in the orbit of public AI infrastructure companies like CoreWeave—known for its AI-native cloud—and Applied Digital, which is focused on AI data centers. Still, Auddia is much smaller and nowhere near as far along.
The merger deal inked in February calls for both Auddia and Thramann to combine into subsidiaries under a new holding company umbrella, leaving Auddia as a wholly owned arm of that entity. As part of the arrangement, Thramann Holdings is set to receive $3.5 million in McCarthy Finney notes as consideration.
Auddia disclosed that its S-4 filing features both a third-party fairness opinion and financial projections. Previously, the company noted that Houlihan Capital gave its fairness opinion to Auddia’s special committee and board at the time the merger agreement got the green light.
Still, there are plenty of ways the deal could fall apart. According to Auddia’s annual report, the merger hinges on stockholder approval, S-4 effectiveness from the SEC, all closing conditions getting met, and the combined company’s shares remaining listed on Nasdaq. The company also flagged the risk of “substantial dilution” for Auddia stockholders, plus warned that if the merger doesn’t go through, Auddia could be hit with extra costs and possibly a termination fee. SEC
SEC review comes next. Then Auddia plans to line up a shareholder vote, assuming the review wraps up and standard conditions are satisfied before closing.