
Nasdaq just flashed the yellow light
Beyond Air, Inc. said it received a written notice from Nasdaq saying its common stock no longer meets the exchange’s $1.00 minimum bid price requirement. In plain English: the stock has spent too much time below the speed limit, and Nasdaq isn’t amused.
Why you should care
This matters because a delisting threat can turn a stock into a much less convenient ride. If XAIR falls off Nasdaq, liquidity can dry up, volatility can get extra spicy, and some investors who only play on major exchanges may head for the exits.
The appeal buys time, not certainty
Beyond Air has requested a hearing before the Nasdaq Hearings Panel, scheduled for May 14, 2026. That usually puts the brakes on an immediate delisting, but it doesn’t magically solve the problem. The company still has to convince the panel it deserves more time — and likely get the share price back above $1 for long enough to satisfy the rule.
The usual playbook
If you’ve followed these stories before, you know the next moves often look familiar:
- a reverse stock split to lift the share price
- more headlines about compliance deadlines
- investors doing math they did not ask to do before breakfast
Big picture: this is a material overhang for XAIR. The hearing gives Beyond Air a shot at staying listed, but until the company fixes the price issue, the stock will probably trade like it’s wearing ankle weights.
