European Lithium's $24 Million Gap Threatens Greenland Prize as Merger Deadline Arrives
07.05.2026 - 07:31:20 | boerse-global.de
The clock has run out for European Lithium. Thursday marks the expiration of the exclusive negotiating period for its proposed takeover by Nasdaq-listed Critical Metals Corp, putting a roughly $835 million deal on the line. The market has already priced in deep skepticism.
At the heart of the transaction is a complex corporate structure that the merger aims to unwind. European Lithium currently holds a 34% stake in Critical Metals. Under the proposed terms, shareholders of the Australian-listed company would receive direct stakes in the US entity at a ratio of 0.035 Critical Metals shares for each European Lithium share they own. Upon completion, existing European Lithium holders would control approximately 45% of the combined group.
But a single financial hurdle has blocked progress. European Lithium must demonstrate it holds at least A$330 million in liquid cash to close the deal. As of late March, the company had only A$306 million on hand — a shortfall of A$24 million. The exclusivity agreement prohibits the company from raising fresh capital through either new debt or equity issuance, leaving management with no obvious path to bridge the gap.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying European Lithium?
The real prize sits in Greenland. The Tanbreez project is one of the largest known deposits of heavy rare earths — critical metals essential for electric motors and defense applications, a market currently dominated by China. Critical Metals already controls nearly the entire project, and the merger would take its ownership to 100%. Technical progress continues: recent lab tests confirmed high recovery rates for the sought-after metals, and a pilot plant is scheduled to begin operations in the second quarter. That facility will generate the data needed for final plant construction, with first ore production targeted for late 2028.
The pressure on management has intensified following a recent Austrian court ruling that overturned a key environmental permit for the company's Wolfsberg lithium project in Carinthia. Local authorities must now reassess environmental impacts under stricter guidelines, pushing a final investment decision back to at least late 2026. While the mining license has been extended through early 2028 and the offtake agreement with BMW remains intact, the timeline uncertainty is growing. That makes the Greenland deal the most immediate catalyst for the stock.
The market's verdict is clear. European Lithium shares trade at A$0.365, well below the implied offer price of A$0.58. Investors are betting heavily against a timely resolution. If the deadline passes without a signed agreement, the company faces a grim outlook: dwindling cash reserves, a delayed flagship project, and the need to completely rethink its strategy. A preliminary financing commitment of $120 million from the US Export-Import Bank for the Greenland project already exists, but that depends on the merger going through. In June, a 150-tonne sample from the pilot plant is set to leave port for potential buyers — a shipment that could prove crucial if the deal collapses and European Lithium must go it alone.
Ad
European Lithium Stock: New Analysis - 7 May
Fresh European Lithium information released. What's the impact for investors? Our latest independent report examines recent figures and market trends.
So schätzen die Börsenprofis European Aktien ein!
Für. Immer. Kostenlos.
