New York, May 26, 2026, 11:04 (EDT)
- Charlton Aria Class A shares last traded near $10.73 in light action on Nasdaq.
- The blank-check company has a Nasdaq filing compliance date set for June 15, with a business combination deadline coming up on July 25.
- U.S. stocks traded higher. Charlton’s gain seemed tied to liquidity shifts and filing overhang, not anything new from the company.
Charlton Aria Acquisition Corp Class A shares traded at about $10.73 on light volume Tuesday morning. Fewer than 3,000 shares had changed hands, with market focus still on the blank-check firm’s late filings and its deal deadline, not general market gains.
Timing is in focus. U.S. stocks started trading again after closing on Monday for Memorial Day, and Charlton faces a Nasdaq compliance deadline in under three weeks for its overdue annual report. The 2026 Nasdaq holiday schedule puts May 25 down as a full market holiday.
The company is a SPAC, a shell that raises money and looks for a merger. There’s no business combination announced. The stock mostly sticks close to trust value; bigger swings would likely need news of a deal, a new filing, or different redemption numbers.
Charlton said in a May 15 SEC filing it couldn’t submit its Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31 by the deadline, citing extra time needed to collect information. The Form 10-Q is a quarterly financial statement. The notice was signed by CEO Jung Min Lee, who also disclosed that Charlton hasn’t filed its annual Form 10-K for the year ended Dec. 31, 2025.
Annual report delays are at the center of the listing problem. In April, the company said it got a notice from Nasdaq about not meeting Listing Rule 5250(c)(1), which calls for on-time periodic reports. Nasdaq gave the company until June 15 to either file its Form 10-K or send in a compliance plan. Trading was not affected by the notice, the company said.
Charlton is working on a deal deadline. The company said its sponsor put $850,000 into its trust account, letting it push back the deadline for a business combination to July 25. That trust account holds most of the SPAC’s IPO proceeds until it either does a deal or sends back the cash.
Stocks traded up on Tuesday as Wall Street’s main averages moved higher. The Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite all showed gains at 10:02 a.m. ET, according to Reuters. Art Hogan from B Riley Wealth described the market mood as “cautious optimism,” citing hope for less geopolitical risk and support from tech names. Reuters
Charlton didn’t see the same kind of catalyst. According to Reuters/LSEG, the company is a blank-check firm that has no operations or revenue. It was set up to look for a merger, share swap, asset buy or another type of business deal.
But the risk is clear. Charlton still hasn’t filed the late annual report or gotten a compliance plan okayed, so Nasdaq could shift from just a warning to a bigger listing issue. And if the merger isn’t done by the pushed July deadline, investors may start thinking about redemption value and how long it takes to liquidate, not the deal’s upside.