New York, June 2, 2026, 05:09 (EDT)
Cloudastructure Inc. shares remained under 50 cents before Tuesday’s regular U.S. open after the AI video-surveillance company said it got a Nasdaq noncompliance notice for a delayed quarterly filing. CSAI last traded at $0.478, down around 0.4% from its previous close, putting its market value near $9.4 million, according to market data.
Filing delays have shifted from an accounting footnote to a Nasdaq listing-compliance problem. June 2 isn’t a Nasdaq market holiday, so focus turns to the company’s shares and what it does next on the regulatory side.
Cloudastructure said in a May 29 filing that it got a notice from Nasdaq on May 26 saying it’s out of compliance with Listing Rule 5250(c)(1), which deals with filing SEC reports on time. The company has a deadline of July 25 to send in a compliance plan. If Nasdaq signs off, Cloudastructure could have until Nov. 16 to get back in line. The filing said this notice doesn’t affect trading right now.
Cloudastructure hasn’t filed its Form 10-Q, the quarterly report U.S. public companies give the SEC. The company said it needs extra time to look at how it treats its Series 2 Convertible Preferred Stock in its accounting. That’s a type of preferred shares that can turn into common stock. The final review, Cloudastructure said, could lead it to change the way it records those securities.
Cloudastructure said in its 2025 annual report it got a separate Nasdaq minimum bid price notice on Feb. 17 and has until Aug. 17 to get back in compliance. The company needs to keep its closing bid at or above $1 for at least 10 straight business days.
Cloudastructure had been talking up growth but then the filing delay grabbed attention. On May 20, it pushed back its Q1 results call while sticking with its early numbers: about $1.3 million in revenue, a jump of roughly 78% year over year, and gross profit up about 115%.
Cloudastructure said last week it signed a master services deal with a national retail REIT. The company did not name the client. The agreement covers its platform at three open-air shopping centers in California, with a path to expand to as many as 36 locations on the West Coast. Chief Revenue Officer Lauren OBrien called it a “scalable framework for broader portfolio adoption.” GlobeNewswire
Management wants investors to see the company as a recurring-revenue play. On the April earnings call, Chief Financial Officer Greg Smitherman said annual recurring revenue, or ARR, was “over $2 million” at the end of 2025. Investing
The competition is stiff despite headline growth. Cloudastructure is up against much bigger companies, with Alarm.com and Motorola Solutions’ Avigilon division both selling to the same security-modernization buyers. Alarm.com, which does security, video and property tech, has a market cap near $2.6 billion. Motorola Solutions is far larger at about $69.1 billion. That’s a wide gap from Cloudastructure, which sits at around $9.4 million.
The risk is the accounting review drags out, revises reported numbers or doesn’t meet Nasdaq’s deadline. A delisting would probably hit liquidity, raise financing costs, and push the stock down. Cloudastructure flagged in its annual report that losing its Nasdaq listing might trigger defaults or penalties on some agreements.
Right now, what’s next for the stock comes down to the delayed 10-Q, a possible new earnings call date, the July 25 plan deadline, and the Aug. 17 minimum-bid-price deadline. That gives the company little room to make its case for fast revenue growth as its shares sit well below Nasdaq’s $1 minimum.