New York, June 4, 2026, 08:03 EDT
- Steakholder Foods’ ADSs on Nasdaq finished at $1.31 in the last trade before the regular session, off 8 cents.
- A new SEC filing shows a $1.1 million warrant exercise, and there’s another $2.2 million on the table if fresh warrants get exercised.
- The main commercial test for the company is still its planned U.S. launch of Perfecta plant-based meat, expected in the back half of 2026.
Steakholder Foods Ltd’s American depositary shares, which trade on Nasdaq, moved lower ahead of Thursday’s open. The stock was last seen at $1.31, off 8 cents from the close and sitting just above the new, lower price set in its recent warrant financing. The last trade was posted premarket. ADSs stand for U.S.-traded certificates tied to foreign shares.
Nasdaq’s regular session is set for 9:30 a.m. Eastern, after premarket opens at 4:00 a.m. June 4 isn’t on the 2026 U.S. market holiday schedule, so the market is expected to be open that day.
Steakholder Foods said investors will exercise warrants for 892,854 ADSs after the company cut the exercise price to $1.25 from $5.00 per share. The company told regulators this week. Warrants let the holder buy shares at a preset price. Steakholder expects gross proceeds of about $1.1 million before fees. H.C. Wainwright is handling the placement.
The deal isn’t big, but for Steakholder it matters. The company has been pushing to shift out of research and into commercial work, backing itself with equity-linked financings. That’s a usual path for small public firms, but it can sting when losses run high.
Steakholder announced it has issued Series C and Series D warrants with an exercise price of $1.25. If all are exercised for cash, the company said it could get about $2.2 million. But it cautioned there’s no guarantee investors will exercise the warrants.
Perfecta is Steakholder’s planned premium plant-based meat brand. On May 20, the company said it’s aiming for a U.S. launch in the second half of 2026, with a phased rollout set to start in the Northeast region. Wider retail expansion would come later. CEO Arik Kaufman called the move into the U.S. “a pivotal step” for commercialization and said it shows Steakholder is ready to work in “one of the world’s most important markets.”
Steakholder’s numbers put focus on its financing, not just its food. The company posted no revenue from continuing operations for 2025 and logged an $11.25 million net loss for the year. Cash and cash equivalents stood at about $3.1 million as of Dec. 31. Its annual filing flagged “substantial doubt” about Steakholder’s ability to keep operating, with both management and auditors warning there’s serious risk the company won’t have enough money to run the business without raising more. Securities and Exchange Commission
Another issue is a separate equity line of credit, which is a share-sale facility that allows the company to bring in cash over time. Steakholder detailed in a May prospectus that it registered up to 5,693,950 ADSs for resale under an up-to-$8 million facility. The company warned that given the limited liquidity of the stock, these sales could put significant pressure on the market price.
Competition is moving fast. Beyond Meat, the well-known name in plant-based meat, last traded at $0.7402, giving it a $337 million market cap. Plant-based dairy firm Oatly traded at $8.61, putting its market value above $5 billion. That’s much bigger than Steakholder right now.
But the downside risk is obvious. Any delay in Perfecta’s rollout, weak demand for whole-cut plant-based products, or if the stock keeps trading near warrant and equity-line levels, could push Steakholder into raising more money and diluting shareholders. That would cut existing holders’ ownership after the new shares come in. Right now, the market looks at the cash raise as giving Steakholder more time, not showing the business works.