
Nasdaq just hit the warning siren
VerifyMe, Inc. got a formal notice from Nasdaq after its stock spent 30 straight business days under the $1 minimum bid price rule. That’s not a delisting yet — but it is the corporate version of a bright yellow “fix this soon” dashboard light.
The clock is now ticking
The company has 180 calendar days, until October 14, 2026, to get back in compliance. Translation: VRME needs to close at or above $1 for at least 10 consecutive business days, and then Nasdaq will let it off the naughty list.
Why investors care
For a tiny name like this, a delisting notice can become a self-fulfilling headache. If the stock stays weak, management may have to choose between a reverse split, more financing, or simply hoping the market decides to be generous for a week and a half.
- Best-case scenario: the shares climb back above $1 and the company stays listed
- Messier scenario: dilution, a reverse split, or continued pressure on sentiment
- Worst-case scenario: the compliance fix doesn’t stick and the listing fight gets uglier
Big picture
This isn’t the end of the road, but it’s a very visible crack in the windshield. For investors, the key question is whether VerifyMe can repair the share price without making the capital structure even more awkward.
