Today: 28 June 2026
iRobot Stock (IRBT) Plunges After Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Filing: Picea Deal, Nasdaq Delisting Date, and Investor Outlook (Dec. 16, 2025)
16 December 2025
6 mins read

iRobot Stock (IRBT) Plunges After Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Filing: Picea Deal, Nasdaq Delisting Date, and Investor Outlook (Dec. 16, 2025)

iRobot Corporation (NASDAQ: IRBT) — the company that turned “Roomba” into a household verb — is now at the center of a market event investors don’t forget: a pre-packaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy process paired with a deal that hands ownership to its lender and key supplier, Shenzhen PICEA Robotics (Picea). The headline is simple, but the implications for iRobot stock are brutal: Nasdaq trading is set to be suspended on December 22, 2025, and the company has warned that common stockholders are expected to receive no recovery if the plan is approved. SEC+1

As of Dec. 16, 2025, IRBT is trading like a “restructuring equity” story — the kind where the real action is in court documents and creditor agreements, not product launches. Here’s what happened, what’s been reported today, what the company and regulators have actually filed, and what the most realistic “forecast” looks like from here.

What’s driving iRobot stock today

The catalyst is the company’s restructuring transaction: iRobot entered a Restructuring Support Agreement (RSA) with Picea (described as iRobot’s secured lender and primary contract manufacturer), then voluntarily commenced a pre-packaged Chapter 11 process in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. iRobot says it expects to complete the process by February 2026.

In plain English: this is a negotiated restructuring where the company is trying to move fast, keep operating, and exit under new ownership — but that speed often comes with one big tradeoff for public shareholders.

IRBT stock price check: extreme volatility, crash-level repricing

IRBT’s tape reflects that repricing. As of the most recent quote available at the time of data capture (Dec. 16, 2025, 01:15 UTC), iRobot shares were around $1.18, down roughly 73% on the session, with the day’s trading ranging from roughly $0.65 to $2.87 on exceptionally heavy volume.

That level of intraday spread is typical when a stock shifts from “operating business valuation” to “what’s left for equity after creditors get paid,” and when traders pile in around headline risk and potential delisting deadlines.

Nasdaq delisting: the date that matters for IRBT traders

The most concrete near-term milestone isn’t an earnings call — it’s the exchange calendar.

In an SEC filing dated December 15, 2025, iRobot disclosed it was notified that Nasdaq determined to delist the company’s common stock due to the Chapter 11 proceedings, citing Nasdaq Listing Rules 5101, 5110(b), and IM-5101-1. iRobot also said it does not intend to appeal Nasdaq’s determination.

Critically, iRobot stated:

  • Trading will be suspended at the open on December 22, 2025
  • Nasdaq will file a Form 25-NSE to remove the common stock from listing/registration

For market participants, this is the “hard edge” of the story: once trading is suspended, liquidity can evaporate, spreads can widen further, and many brokers restrict trading or routing (even before formal delisting).

The key line for shareholders: “total loss” language

If you read only one sentence about the forecast for iRobot stockholders, it’s this: iRobot says it expects holders of common stock will not receive any equity in the reorganized company, and that all issued and outstanding equity interests will be cancelled, meaning common stockholders would experience a total loss if the plan is approved.

That is not pundit commentary. It’s the company’s own disclosed expectation in connection with its restructuring process.

This is why “price targets” and conventional valuation debates become mostly academic once a Chapter 11 plan points to equity cancellation.

Will Roombas stop working? Why this matters to the stock narrative

iRobot’s consumer footprint is part of why this story exploded beyond finance pages. The company explicitly says it expects to continue operating in the ordinary course during Chapter 11, with no anticipated disruption to app functionality, customer programs, partners, supply chain relationships, or ongoing product support.

That reassurance matters because iRobot is not just selling a gadget; it’s selling an ecosystem that includes cloud services, software updates, warranties, and retailer relationships. Confidence here affects revenue continuity — which affects whether a “fast, pre-pack exit” is plausible.

How iRobot got here: pressure from competition, tariffs, and a failed Amazon exit

Today’s bankruptcy headlines are the final chapter of a longer unwind:

  • The Amazon acquisition attempt (announced in 2022) didn’t close and was ultimately abandoned amid regulatory scrutiny, after which iRobot restructured and cut costs.
  • Coverage and analysis point to intensifying competition in robot vacuums, especially from lower-priced or faster-iterating rivals, and to iRobot struggling to keep pace on features and pricing.
  • iRobot and reporters have also pointed to tariff uncertainty and import costs as meaningful operational headwinds in 2025, complicating forecasting and planning.

The result: iRobot stock didn’t just “drop on news.” It has been sliding under the weight of a shrinking margin of error — and Chapter 11 is what happens when that margin hits zero.

The financial stress signals were flashing months ago

If this feels sudden, the filings and quarterly reports were already waving red flags.

In its Q3 2025 financial results (quarter ended Sept. 27, 2025), iRobot reported:

  • Revenue of $145.8 million, down from $193.4 million a year earlier
  • A GAAP operating loss (vs. operating income in the prior-year quarter)
  • Cash and cash equivalents of $24.8 million as of Sept. 27, 2025, and notably: the company said it had no sources upon which it can draw for additional capital at that time

That combination — declining revenue, losses, and thin liquidity — is exactly the setup where lenders gain leverage and “strategic alternatives” turn into “creditor-led outcomes.”

The October warning shot: “lowball” buyer interest and explicit bankruptcy risk language

One detail investors are resurfacing today: iRobot had already disclosed that its strategic review process ran into a wall.

In late October 2025, reporting based on an iRobot filing said the last remaining potential counterparty in sale negotiations offered a price significantly lower than recent trading levels, and the company warned that without new funding or capital sources it “may be forced” to curtail or cease operations and would likely seek bankruptcy protection — adding that stockholders would “likely lose all of their investment” in such a scenario. Investing.com

That’s basically the plot summary of what is now happening — just with dates and courtroom captions filled in.

What the deal does: Picea becomes the owner, iRobot goes private

Under the restructuring transaction described by iRobot, Picea will receive 100% of the equity interests in the company, and iRobot will become a private company after court approval and completion of the process.

Retail Dive’s reporting adds additional color from court documents, including that the transaction contemplates cancellation of certain claims and that common shareholders would receive no recovery.

From a business standpoint, there’s a coherent logic here: the supplier/lender that has the most operational visibility (and the most to lose in a disorderly collapse) takes control, stabilizes manufacturing and financing, and tries to rebuild outside the quarterly earnings microscope.

From a public equity standpoint, it’s hard to sugarcoat: going-private restructurings commonly leave existing common shares impaired or canceled — and iRobot has told investors to expect exactly that if the plan is approved.

Forecasts and analyst targets: why the usual numbers can mislead right now

On Dec. 16, you can still find “12-month price targets” floating around financial portals. For example, one widely visible consensus page shows an average target around $11.94 and a “Neutral” stance based on a very small number of analysts. Investing.com

But here’s the problem (and it’s not a small one): a traditional price target assumes the equity continues to exist and that the company remains publicly traded.

iRobot’s own restructuring disclosures point toward:

  • Delisting and trading suspension on Dec. 22, 2025
  • Cancellation of existing equity interests and no recovery for common stock if the plan is approved

So the most honest “forecast” for IRBT shareholders isn’t a DCF model; it’s a probability question:

  1. Does the court approve the plan (or something substantially similar) that cancels common equity?
  2. If yes, what is the practical value of IRBT shares between now and the effective date — especially given the delisting schedule?

That’s why investors should treat conventional targets as stale or structurally incompatible with a bankruptcy-and-delisting setup, unless an analyst has explicitly updated their thesis post-filing.

What investors are watching next (and why the dates matter)

If you’re tracking iRobot stock purely as a news-driven trade, the next checkpoints are more legal/administrative than operational:

  • Dec. 22, 2025: Nasdaq trading suspension scheduled at the open (per iRobot’s SEC filing).
  • Chapter 11 milestones: Court hearings, plan confirmation, and any revisions to the RSA-backed plan structure (iRobot expects a fast timeline, targeting completion by February 2026).
  • Operational continuity signals: whether retailers, suppliers, and customers behave as if iRobot’s “no disruption” pledge is holding. SEC

A key reality: even if IRBT shares remain tradeable for a short window, bankruptcy equity can become a speculative arena where price movements are disconnected from eventual recovery (especially when the company has already flagged “total loss” expectations).

The bottom line on iRobot stock on Dec. 16, 2025

Today’s iRobot stock story is not primarily about Roomba demand or the next smart-home cycle. It’s about capital structure, creditor priority, and a defined delisting timeline.

  • iRobot has entered a pre-packaged Chapter 11 process and expects to exit by February 2026 under Picea ownership.
  • Nasdaq trading suspension is scheduled for Dec. 22, 2025, and the company isn’t appealing the delisting decision.
  • iRobot says common shareholders should expect no recovery and equity cancellation if the plan is approved.
  • The stock’s collapse and wild volatility reflect the market rapidly repricing that reality.

The weird lesson here is one the market teaches repeatedly, with very little mercy: a famous consumer brand can still be a very dangerous stock when the balance sheet breaks.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

Stock Market Today

  • UiPath Shares Rise Amid Russell Index Rebalancing; Short Interest a Key Risk
    June 28, 2026, 12:37 PM EDT. UiPath's stock rose 6.04% to $10.53 on heavy volume amid the Russell U.S. index reconstitution, shifting to a semiannual schedule. Short interest remains high at 32.23% of the float, suggesting potential volatility. The rebalancing, described by analysts as a significant trade event, affected liquidity and trading volumes. UiPath reported fiscal Q1 revenue of $418 million, a 17% increase, and its CEO highlighted growth in agentic products. Despite gains, the absence of near-term investor events and ongoing high short interest could stall momentum. Market-wide, small caps outperformed amid quarter-end rotations.

Latest articles

TeraWulf (NASDAQ:WULF) short interest, volume in focus as AI rally gets tested

TeraWulf (NASDAQ:WULF) short interest, volume in focus as AI rally gets tested

28 June 2026
TeraWulf plunged 10.9% to $25.83 this week—sharply underperforming the Nasdaq—after hitting a 52-week high Monday, as Friday’s Russell index reconstitution drove volume to 66.3 million shares, but failed to clear the heavy 108.65 million share short interest, leaving WULF exposed to further volatility as investors weigh the long-term payoff of its Kentucky data-center expansion.
MSFT rally set for Russell reshuffle as AI spending jitters hang over stock

MSFT rally set for Russell reshuffle as AI spending jitters hang over stock

28 June 2026
Microsoft (MSFT) surged 5.71% to $372.97 on record volume as FTSE Russell index changes moved the stock into both growth and value indexes, driving a “really massive trade” and “key liquidity day”; investors now face uncertainty over real demand versus index flows, with capex and AI spending weighing on future profitability.
National Grid plc Stock (NG.L / NGG): Latest News, Analyst Forecasts, Dividend Outlook and Key Catalysts on 16 December 2025
Previous Story

National Grid plc Stock (NG.L / NGG): Latest News, Analyst Forecasts, Dividend Outlook and Key Catalysts on 16 December 2025

Tesla Stock (TSLA) Surges on Driverless Robotaxi Tests: Latest News, Analyst Forecasts, and Key Risks for December 16, 2025
Next Story

Tesla Stock (TSLA) Surges on Driverless Robotaxi Tests: Latest News, Analyst Forecasts, and Key Risks for December 16, 2025

Go toTop