CSLM Digital Acquisition Holds at $10; What Traders Are Watching on KOYN

CSLM Digital Acquisition Holds at $10; What Traders Are Watching on KOYN

June 1, 2026

New York, June 1, 2026, 17:01 (EDT)

  • KOYN ended the session at $10.125, up roughly 0.05%. Volume was 10,833 shares.
  • The SPAC still has only a non-binding letter of intent for a deal with First Digital.
  • Stablecoin names slipped on Monday, as both Circle and Coinbase fell.

CSLM Digital Asset Acquisition Corp III Class A shares were little changed Monday, staying close to their cash value. Investors are watching for final deal terms on the blank-check firm’s planned merger with First Digital Group.

KOYN ended the session at $10.125, gaining half a cent from its last close. Shares moved in a tight band, changing hands between $10.12 and $10.125. Only 10,833 shares traded. Market remains light on new information for the stock.

Timing is key now that the stock isn’t just a passive SPAC play. SPACs, or special purpose acquisition companies, are listed shells that raise capital to buy private firms. KOYN has disclosed it’s targeting First Digital, a stablecoin and digital-asset infrastructure group, but that deal is only at an early stage.

KOYN and First Digital have a non-binding letter of intent as of Dec. 2, 2025, according to a May 18 SEC filing. The letter of intent is just an outline, not a final agreement. The filing also said that if the two sides agree on definitive terms, a Form S-4 with a proxy statement and prospectus would be filed. There’s no assurance on when or if a deal would happen, the filing added.

The deal lands in a sector drawing increased interest. European Central Bank board member Isabel Schnabel said Monday that wider stablecoin use could make the dollar’s global role even stronger. Stablecoins are crypto tokens meant to keep steady value against assets like the U.S. dollar. “The dollar’s dominance would be reinforced,” she said, pointing to network effects and scale. Reuters

Peers had a soft session. Circle Internet Group, which issues stablecoins, lost 7.1% to close at $104.97. Coinbase Global also slipped, down 3.4% at $182.61. KOYN’s smaller change traded more like a SPAC trust floor, not tracking the crypto equity moves.

First Digital founder and CEO Vincent Chok said in December that the proposed deal would let the company “scale globally.” KOYN Chairman Vik Mittal described the theme as “Custody, integrity and trust,” wording that targets a market still cautious about reserve quality and rules after a series of crypto failures. GlobeNewswire

CSLM brought in $230 million with its August 2025 IPO, selling 23 million units at $10 apiece. Each unit had a Class A share plus half of a redeemable warrant. KOYN and KOYNW were the tickers for the shares and warrants, expected to start trading separately.

KOYN stays around $10 because of its structure, not its crypto ties, the latest quarterly filing shows. On March 31, the trust account held $235.3 million in Treasurys. In the first quarter, net income came in at $1.34 million, almost all from $2.05 million in interest on those funds. KOYN reported no operating revenue.

But KOYN laid out clear risks. The company said it plans to keep burning cash as it hunts for a target, and flagged that these expenses, plus the need for a deal or working-capital loans, cast real doubt on its status as a going concern. If talks with First Digital stall, if the deal terms change a lot, or if too many shareholders opt to redeem, shares could stick close to trust value while the warrants may end up taking the hit.

KOYN is on hold as the trade waits for the definitive agreement, a valuation, redemption terms, and proxy documents. Without those, KOYN isn’t moving much, which tells its own story.

Stock Market Today

  • Rising Costs Force Hospitality Business Closures Across Australia
    June 1, 2026, 5:32 PM EDT. Hospitality businesses in Australia face a crisis as soaring costs of food, power, and labour bite hard. Publican Simone Douglas highlights unprecedented challenges, noting a 10.9% closure rate nationally over the past year. Costs for food and transport have surged by 17% recently, with labour costs rising 21% over three years. Operators report that despite more patrons dining out, customers change habits to manage expenses by sharing meals. The rising expenses threaten small businesses and could stagnate the broader economy, warns Restaurant and Catering Australia executive chair John Hart. The sector struggles to absorb costs it cannot control, leading to a wave of closures and heightened financial stress for operators.