European Lithium's Cash Crunch Threatens Greenland Rare Earth Prize
08.05.2026 - 19:21:52 | boerse-global.deThe clock is ticking on European Lithium's proposed merger with Critical Metals Corp., and a A$24 million shortfall in the company's coffers is emerging as the deal's most stubborn obstacle.
Both parties extended their exclusivity agreement on May 7, 2026, pushing ahead with negotiations after completing due diligence. The transaction terms remain unchanged from the indicative offer tabled on April 27, but the path to closing is anything but smooth.
The Mechanics of the Deal
The all-share transaction would see Critical Metals Corp. (Nasdaq: CRML) acquire 100% of European Lithium's shares. EUR shareholders would receive 0.035 new CRML shares for each share held, while holders of ASX-listed options would get CRML stock based on the intrinsic option value. Based on closing prices from April 22, the deal carries a total price tag of roughly US$835 million.
European Lithium already holds a 34% stake in Critical Metals, which in turn controls 92.5% of the Tanbreez project in southern Greenland. The merger would untangle this cross-holding structure, leaving EUR shareholders with approximately 45% of the combined entity. Tanbreez ranks among the world's largest rare earth deposits, a fact that has drawn increasing attention as Western nations scramble to secure critical mineral supply chains independent of China.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying European Lithium?
The A$24 Million Elephant in the Room
Here's where the math gets uncomfortable. One of the closing conditions requires European Lithium to maintain net liquidity of at least A$330 million at the settlement date. The company's balance sheet at the end of March showed just A$306 million — a shortfall of roughly A$24 million.
The exclusivity agreement prevents European Lithium from raising fresh equity or debt during the negotiation period. Making matters worse, a share buyback program launched in mid-April is buying back up to 10% of issued capital for around A$12.6 million. Every share cancelled widens the cash gap further.
Morgan Stanley Exits Stage Left
While management wrestles with the funding puzzle, the shareholder register is shifting. Morgan Stanley fully exited its position as a major shareholder at the end of April. The stock appeared unfazed by the departure, trading at A$0.48 on May 7 — near its 52-week high.
Separately, the company applied to list approximately 154,000 new shares on the ASX, stemming from the exercise of existing convertible instruments. The move marginally increases the stock's liquidity but bears no direct connection to the merger.
European Lithium at a turning point? This analysis reveals what investors need to know now.
What Happens Next
If the parties finalize a Scheme Implementation Deed, shareholder votes are expected in the third quarter of 2026, with a potential closing in the second half of the year — subject to regulatory and court approvals.
How European Lithium plans to bridge that A$24 million gap without breaching the exclusivity terms remains the deal's defining question. Management has pledged to keep the market updated as negotiations progress.
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