Nasdaq Delists American Rebel Over $1 Bid Rule, Halting Trading May 13
Updated
Updated · StockTitan · May 12
Nasdaq Delists American Rebel Over $1 Bid Rule, Halting Trading May 13
6 articles · Updated · StockTitan · May 12
Trading in American Rebel securities is expected to be suspended on May 13 after a Nasdaq Hearings Panel ordered delisting for continued failure to meet the $1.00 minimum bid-price requirement.
American Rebel said it plans to stay a fully reporting SEC registrant and seek quotation first on OTCID and then OTCQB to preserve liquidity for roughly 34,000 shareholder accounts.
The company highlighted 2025 revenue of $9.52 million, Q1 2026 revenue of $1.99 million, and stockholders' equity of $7.19 million, up from $4.38 million at 2025 year-end.
American Rebel also said only 12.25 million common shares are outstanding—2.04% of its 600 million authorized shares—leaving room for future capital raising and a possible relisting on a national exchange.
The delisting follows repeated efforts to regain compliance, including a 1-for-100 reverse split, after which the stock resumed trading with a roughly 76.8% gap down.
After a 77% stock collapse, is the CEO's claim of 'predatory trading' a valid warning or a convenient excuse?
Does Nasdaq's new 'instant delisting' rule protect investors or just accelerate the demise of struggling small companies?
Could the new Texas Stock Exchange become a haven for companies unable to meet Nasdaq's strict listing requirements?