Avalanche Treasury Firm AVAX One Reclaims Nasdaq Compliance After Reverse Stock Split

In brief

  • $AVAX One regained compliance with Nasdaq’s $1.00 minimum bid price rule after 10 straight days above threshold.
  • The crypto treasury company rose back above the minimum level thanks to a 1-for-12 reverse stock split in June.
  • Interim CEO Pete Wylie says the company is now focused on growth and profitability.

$AVAX One Technology, a crypto treasury firm that holds Avalanche ($AVAX), announced Thursday that it has regained compliance with Nasdaq’s minimum bid price requirement, closing out a listing issue that had put the company under scrutiny ahead of last month’s reverse stock split.

The West Palm Beach, Florida-based company said Nasdaq confirmed it met Listing Rule 5550(a)(2), which requires a stock’s closing bid price to stay at or above $1.00 per share. Nasdaq found that $AVAX One’s shares closed above that threshold for 10 consecutive trading days, from June 15 through June 29, satisfying the requirement and closing the matter.

$AVAX One conducted a 1-for-12 reverse stock split on June 15 to meet the compliance requirement, cutting its supply from over 92.3 million shares to just under 7.7 million shares.

“We are pleased to have regained compliance with Nasdaq’s minimum bid price requirement and appreciate the trust our shareholders have placed in us throughout this process,” said $AVAX One Interim CEO Pete Wylie, in a statement. “With this matter now closed, we are intently focused on executing on our growth and profitability initiatives. We are moving ahead across all fronts.”

Wylie shifted from chief operating officer into the role of interim CEO last week following the departure of previous CEO Jolie Kahn. The board is searching for a permanent chief executive to take over the role.

$AVAX One said it’s built around three business lines: an Avalanche digital asset treasury, Bitcoin mining, and artificial intelligence infrastructure. $AVAX One holds roughly 14 million $AVAX tokens—valued near $95 million—staked at an approximate 6% net yield, and runs Bitcoin mining operations in Alberta, Canada, and Ohio that generate cash flow.

The company also said it is exploring AI infrastructure projects aimed at a niche it calls the “missing middle”—sites in the 5 to 50 megawatt range meant to serve enterprise inference, edge computing, and regulated industries that larger hyperscale data centers aren’t designed to accommodate.

$AVAX One is among a flood of crypto treasury firms that popped up in 2025, following the example of original Bitcoin treasury firm, Strategy (previously MicroStrategy). However, with declining crypto prices since last fall, many of these firms are now substantially underwater on their investments and/or have market caps valued beneath their crypto holdings.

The Avalanche-focused firm’s market cap sits around $40.5 million, well below the value of its crypto assets. Avax One (AVX) shares finished the day up about 3.6% at a price of $5.43, down 70% since the start of the year.

The Avalanche network’s native $AVAX token was recently trading at $6.71, up more than 4% on the day but down 50% since the start of 2026 and 95% from its 2021 peak price of nearly $145.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *