Today: 1 July 2026
Datavault AI (NASDAQ:DVLT) gains 21% on $700 million minerals push, but $1 Nasdaq gap holds

Datavault AI (NASDAQ:DVLT) gains 21% on $700 million minerals push, but $1 Nasdaq gap holds

Datavault AI Inc. jumped 21% after outlining its $700 million minerals plan, but the stock still trades a dollar below Nasdaq minimums.

  • Datavault AI was up around 21% at midday after a plan was announced for a proposed Patriot Strategic Metals platform.
  • Trading volume came in at over double the 65-day average, yet the price didn’t move anywhere near the $1 minimum required on Nasdaq.
  • The new deal numbers are big compared to Datavault’s most recent quarterly revenue, but the company said major terms still depend on raising financing and final agreements.

Datavault AI Inc. jumped 21.0% to $0.4234 by midday Wednesday. The company said it is teaming up with Patriot Strategic Metals LLC on a planned strategic minerals platform with an initial Phase I program of up to $700 million. Shares stayed well below the $1 close needed for a Nasdaq cure.

The Philadelphia company said it plans to set up a Strategic Materials Acquisition Platform covering financing, tokenization, settlement and lifecycle work for strategic minerals. In what it called its Phase I plan, up to $62 million would go toward Datavault-linked technology integration, licensing, platform buildout and rollout.

Nathaniel T. Bradley, CEO, said the plan brings together “physical strategic assets” and Datavault’s “institutional grade cyber secure digital infrastructure.” Patriot Strategic Metals managing member John K. Park called Datavault the “technological foundation” powering the platform. Datavault AI Inc.

Datavault jumped 20.4% to $0.4214 at 12:18 p.m. EDT, according to MarketWatch. Volume was heavy at 85.91 million shares, or more than double the 65-day average. The finance feed later reported 89.9 million shares changed hands. The day’s range was tight in dollar terms, between $0.3479 and $0.4430.

Datavault market measureMidday figureInvestor read
Latest price$0.4234Still 57.7 cents under $1
Change from prior close+21.0%Big percentage jump off a low base
Rise needed to reach $1+136%Stock has to more than double to hit $1
Volume89.9 million sharesRoughly 2.2x the MarketWatch 65-day average
Day range$0.3479-$0.4430About a 27% swing from low to high so far

Datavault’s Nasdaq issue comes down to its share price, not the size of any announced deals. Nasdaq sent the company a notice on Feb. 24 because its stock closed under $1 for 30 straight business days. Datavault has until Aug. 24, 2026 to fix that, and the shares need to stay at or above $1 for 10 consecutive business days to comply.

The Patriot plan is much bigger than Datavault’s latest reported numbers. Datavault posted first-quarter revenue of $3.416 million, with a net loss of $53.131 million. The new Datavault-linked allocation at $62 million is nearly 18 times higher than its quarterly revenue.

Deal or filing itemAmount or termComparison
Patriot Phase I programUp to $700 millionEquals about 205x Q1 revenue
Datavault-related allocationUp to about $62 millionWorks out to about 18x Q1 revenue
Planned platform economics25% of net distributable platform profits, unless otherwise agreedNo recorded revenue detailed in the release
Q1 net loss$53.131 millionNear 15.6x Q1 revenue

Datavault’s release said the Phase I plan still needs financing, signed agreements, board sign-off and regulatory checks. The release also said the full Patriot procurement platform features a lined-up revolving facility of up to $20 billion, but that’s still subject to definitive agreements, funding and other terms.

Patriot made its announcement two days after Datavault filed an 8-K outlining a deal to sell 837 bitcoin to Scilex Holding Company for $50 million. Under the terms, Scilex would put up $30 million right away and the rest—$20 million—would come in quarterly payments starting in the fourth quarter of 2026 through Dec. 31, 2028. Scilex could choose to pay the installments in cash, Scilex stock, securities of its public subsidiaries, or any combination.

Datavault said it held 837 bitcoin worth $57.111 million as of March 31 and sold 217 bitcoin to Scilex in Q1 to fund operations. The planned $50 million sale would take out the rest of the 837 bitcoin shown in the March quarter filing if completed on those terms.

Datavault said in a June 29 8-K that it could not guarantee the Scilex bitcoin sale would go through. The company also warned that if talks break down, disputes or even litigation could follow, with possible liquidity problems for Datavault.

Leokadia Głogulska is a financial and technology journalist at TS2.tech, covering stocks, artificial intelligence, space technology and global market developments. She graduated from Wrocław University of Economics and Business and previously worked in financial analysis before moving into business journalism. Her reporting focuses on helping readers understand the market trends, companies and technologies shaping the global economy.

Stock Market Today

  • Labcorp Holdings (LH) Looks Cheaper Than Charles River (CRL) on Key Metrics
    July 1, 2026, 1:17 PM EDT. Investors sizing up Medical Services stocks are comparing Labcorp Holdings (LH) and Charles River Laboratories (CRL) on value. LH has a better Zacks Rank #2 (Buy), while CRL sits at #3 (Hold), pointing to stronger earnings prospects for LH. The numbers give LH an edge: forward P/E ratio is 15.55 with a PEG ratio of 1.96, both lower than CRL's P/E of 20.53 and PEG at 2.59. LH's Price-to-Book is 2.64, ahead of CRL's 3.71. Zacks gives LH a Value grade of B; CRL gets a C. On these marks, LH looks like the better value pick right now.
Walmart stock sinks, wiping $42 billion, raises questions for ad-media value
Previous Story

Walmart stock sinks, wiping $42 billion, raises questions for ad-media value

Go toTop