American Bitcoin has enacted a 1-for-15 reverse stock split to lift its per-share price and maintain its Nasdaq listing, with split-adjusted trading beginning on July 6, 2026.
The Bitcoin mining and holding company said the reverse stock split became effective at 5:00 p.m. on July 2, 2026, according to its official announcement. The move consolidates every 15 existing shares into one new share, mechanically increasing the stock price while leaving total market value unchanged. For related coverage, see American CryptoFed Presses SEC as Locke Token Deadline Nears.
A reverse stock split is the opposite of a conventional stock split. Instead of receiving more shares at a lower price, shareholders receive fewer shares at a proportionally higher price. The total value of their holdings stays the same on the day of the split. For related coverage, see Kraken Eyes CFTC-Regulated Bitcoin Perpetuals After Kalshi Ruling.
ABTC Class A shares began trading on a split-adjusted basis on Nasdaq on July 6, 2026 under the same ticker symbol but with a new CUSIP number (02462A 203). The company had previously approved the 1-for-15 reverse stock split after its board selected the ratio from a broader authorization range.
Why This Helps American Bitcoin Stay on Nasdaq
Nasdaq requires listed companies to maintain a minimum bid price of $1.00 per share. When a stock trades below that threshold for an extended period, the exchange issues a compliance warning and can ultimately delist the company.
American Bitcoin said the split was primarily intended to maintain compliance with that minimum bid price requirement. By consolidating shares 15-to-1, the per-share price increases by a factor of 15, pushing ABTC well above the $1.00 floor.
Shareholders approved the action at the company's June 22, 2026 annual meeting, where 93.56% of the voting power of outstanding shares was represented. The vote authorized the board to select a reverse-split ratio anywhere from 1-for-5 to 1-for-40, giving management flexibility to choose the ratio that best addressed listing requirements, trading volume, and volatility.
The board ultimately chose 1-for-15, a middle-of-the-range option. The ticker symbol remains unchanged, so existing watchlists and brokerage accounts will reflect the new share count automatically.
What Changes for Shareholders and Crypto Readers
The split reduces total issued shares from 1,092,295,800 to approximately 73 million, broken down into roughly 24 million Class A shares and 49 million Class B shares. Fractional shares resulting from the consolidation will be rounded to the nearest whole share.
A reverse stock split does not change a company's underlying business, revenue, or Bitcoin holdings. American Bitcoin's BTC treasury remains the same size regardless of how many shares represent ownership of that treasury.
For readers following Bitcoin-linked public companies, the move signals that ABTC's share price had fallen far enough to trigger Nasdaq compliance concerns. That context matters alongside broader market sentiment; the crypto Fear & Greed Index currently reads 26, firmly in "Fear" territory, with Bitcoin itself trading near $63,971.
The practical takeaway: existing ABTC shareholders will see fewer shares in their accounts at a higher price per share. No action is required from holders, and the stock continues trading on Nasdaq under its existing ticker.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.