Aura Renewable Acquisitions (LON:ARA) stock prices in cash-shell risk as AGM vote limits funding leeway

Aura Renewable Acquisitions (LON:ARA) stock prices in cash-shell risk as AGM vote limits funding leeway

July 8, 2026

LONDON, July 8, 2026, 15:01 BST

  • ARA was shown unchanged at 2.50p, with a £262,500 market value and a 1.50p/3.50p sell-buy quote.
  • Last audited cash was £335,367, but a straight-line 2025 cash-burn estimate puts July cash close to the current market value.
  • The June AGM failed to pass authority to disapply pre-emption rights, a funding constraint for any quick deal.

Aura Renewable Acquisitions PLC (LON:ARA) was a market-open stock in name and a cash-shell trade in price action on Wednesday. Hargreaves Lansdown showed the stock unchanged at 2.50p at 14:01 UTC, equal to 15:01 BST, with a market capitalisation of £262,500 and a 1.50p sell quote against a 3.50p buy quote.

The spread is the trade. The 2p gap between bid and offer is 80% of the 2.50p mid-price, so the screen price says less about demand than the cost of getting in or out. MarketWatch recorded 360 shares of volume, 7% of its 65-day average, and a day range of 1.78p to 2.50p.

Market gaugeWednesday dataInvestor read
Mid/last screen price2.50pNo change, but thin prints
Sell-buy quote1.50p / 3.50p80% spread versus mid
Market value£262,500£10,500 for each 0.1p move
Volume shown by MarketWatch360 shares7% of 65-day average
52-week range1.11p-5.98pCurrent price is 58% below high

The balance sheet is the cleaner signal. Aura had no revenue in 2025, made a loss before tax of £147,687, and ended the year with £335,367 in cash and £302,674 in equity. Cash fell by £150,275 during the year.

Audited item20252024Change
Revenue£0£0n/a
Administrative expenses£152,859£187,464-18.5%
Loss before tax£147,687£185,092-20.2%
Year-end cash£335,367£485,642-30.9%
Total equity£302,674£450,361-32.8%

At the 2025 cash decline rate, Aura would burn about £412 a day. From Dec. 31 to July 8, that implies about £78,000 of cash use and cash near £258,000. That is not a reported cash figure. It is a run-rate estimate. It puts the current market cap only about £5,000 above estimated cash.

That makes the stock less a renewable-energy trade than a listed-shell option. The market is giving little value to the listing, the board, or the pipeline unless Aura can name a target before the cash balance keeps falling.

The governance vote is more important than the unchanged price. At the June 18 AGM, all resolutions passed except the special resolution to disapply statutory pre-emption rights. It won 68.89% support, short of the UK special-resolution test of not less than 75%.

AGM itemForAgainstOutcome
Authority to allot shares68.89%31.11%Passed
Disapply pre-emption rights68.89%31.11%Not passed
Votes cast on failed item2,327,21022.16% of shares
Shortfall to 75%About 142,200 votesAbout £3,600 at 2.50p

That vote matters because Aura’s own going-concern note said its cash projections assume current spending, no acquisition and no fundraise. The same note said that if Aura makes an acquisition, directors would expect to raise more capital.

Non-Executive Chairman John Croft said in the annual report the board had widened the target criteria beyond the renewable energy supply chain and was “hopeful of identifying a target” in 2026. Aura also said 2025 talks with Zero Carbon Capital had ended and no further acquisition target had then been identified.

RNS lists showed the latest Aura regulatory item as the June 18 AGM result, with no later company announcement in the list. That leaves the market to price a cash shell with no new deal terms, no revenue, and a failed pre-emption vote.

The warrant stack is not near-term help at the present price. Aura had 12.78 million warrants outstanding at Dec. 31, with a weighted average exercise price of 10.41p, more than four times Wednesday’s 2.50p screen price. At current levels they do not bring in cash; above 10p they would become a dilution issue.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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