Xanadu Quantum Technologies (XNDU) dropped 55% Monday morning after filing a prospectus to register up to 293.6 million Class B Subordinate Voting Shares for resale by existing securityholders.
Xanadu Quantum Technologies Limited Class B Subordinate Voting Shares, XNDU
The stock closed at $29.10 on Nasdaq on April 30, 2026, before the filing triggered Monday’s steep selloff.
The sheer volume of registered shares rattled investors. At over 293 million, the filing represents a massive potential increase in available supply — and markets reacted accordingly.
The biggest chunk of the registration — 254.7 million shares — comes from the conversion of Class A Multiple Voting Shares that were issued as part of Xanadu’s business combination with Crane Harbor Acquisition Corp., a SPAC.
That merger is what brought XNDU to public markets on both the Nasdaq and the Toronto Stock Exchange under the ticker “XNDU.”
The filing also covers 27.5 million shares issued through private placements completed on November 3, 2025, and 7.33 million Founder Shares originally issued to Crane Harbor Sponsor LLC.
Another smaller piece involves 2.97 million shares distributed to legacy shareholders of Old Xanadu in connection with the business combination.
The registration also includes up to 157,960 shares issuable upon exercise of warrants issued to Royal Bank of Canada. Xanadu would receive proceeds from any cash exercises of those warrants.
Importantly, Xanadu itself will not receive any money from the resale of shares by existing holders. The company is essentially opening the door for early investors and insiders to exit.
Xanadu will cover registration costs, while selling shareholders are responsible for paying their own sales commissions and transaction fees.
The selling securityholders may offer, sell, or distribute the securities through public or private transactions at market prices or negotiated prices.
This is a fairly standard structure for post-merger share registrations, but the scale here is what caught the market’s attention.
Xanadu operates as a foreign private issuer under U.S. securities laws. That status exempts it from certain disclosure requirements and procedural rules that apply to domestic companies.
The company also qualifies as an emerging growth company under U.S. federal securities law, which allows it to follow reduced reporting requirements.
These exemptions mean Xanadu can follow home country governance practices in place of some Nasdaq corporate governance rules.
The Class B Subordinate Voting Shares were priced at $29.10 on Nasdaq and C$39.45 on the TSX as of April 30, 2026, just before the filing sent the stock sharply lower.
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