This Week's Risk Radar: What RaymondsIndex Is Watching
The week opens with a textbook red-zone case. On June 25, Nasdaq suspended trading in Aditxt (ADTX) after its Hearings Panel, two days earlier, denied the company's request to remain listed. The cited reasons read like a checklist of late-stage distress: a stockholders' equity deficit of −$35.17 million against a $2.5 million minimum, a bid price under $1.00 for 30 straight business days, and — most tellingly — seven reverse stock splits with a cumulative ratio above 250-to-1 that still failed to restore compliance. The company was burning roughly $5 million a quarter. What makes this a Weekly Risk Radar story is not the failure itself. It is the shape of the failure. Aditxt did not collapse in a single event. It drained, quarter after quarter, while corporate machinery — repeated reverse splits, dilutive financings, a proposed $150 million SPAC deal — kept the listing technically alive long after the economics had hollowed out. And the people structurally positioned to absor...