The gap between European Lithium’s latest trading level and the implied value of the proposed takeover has widened to roughly 28%, setting the stage for a week where technical momentum and deal mechanics collide. After climbing to A$0.485 on Friday, 29 May, the stock sits A$0.083 below the A$0.568 per share that the all-scrip offer from Critical Metals theoretically represents, based on the US$11.61 closing price of Critical Metals shares on 28 May and a AUD/USD rate of 0.715.
That A$0.50 mark is more than a round number. Under the binding agreement signed on 18 May, European Lithium must achieve a volume-weighted average share price above A$0.50 for 20 consecutive trading days to trigger the first of two tranches of 45 million zero-strike options. A second tranche requires a average above A$0.60. Failure to satisfy those conditions could strip significant value from the deal structure, giving the market an immediate reason to push the stock higher.
The recent rally has already narrowed the gap from last week’s levels. After closing at A$0.435 on 25 and 26 May, the stock climbed to A$0.460 on 27 and 28 May, then jumped to A$0.485 on Friday with 20.7 million shares changing hands — volume that backs the move’s credibility. The five-day gain stands at 11.49%, and the single-day advance was 5.43%. Short-term momentum indicators remain well below overbought territory: the 14-day RSI at 55.53 and the nine-day at 56.48, leaving room for further upside.
Technical support has firmed up. The stock now trades above its five-day moving average of A$0.455, the 20-day at A$0.4153, and well above the longer-term 50-day (A$0.311) and 100-day (A$0.2889) averages. The immediate test is whether buyers will defend the A$0.485 high and drive the price into the A$0.50 zone where the option trigger lies. A pullback toward A$0.455 would signal that the market is pricing in more of the deal’s outstanding risks.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying European Lithium?
Those risks are substantial. The completion requires a shareholder vote in the third quarter of 2026, court approval, regulatory clearances, and a condition that European Lithium holds net cash and liquid assets of at least A$330 million. As of 31 March, the company had A$306 million in cash — close but still short of the threshold, and the balance sheet will need to stay intact until closing, which is expected in the second half of 2026. Any material adverse change could also derail the scheme.
Meanwhile, the macro calendar adds a layer of volatility. In the US, a packed week includes ISM manufacturing on 1 June, JOLTS on 2 June, ADP employment and ISM services on 3 June, weekly jobless claims on 4 June, and the official May jobs report on 5 June. Because Critical Metals trades on the Nasdaq, swings in US equity sentiment directly affect the AUD value of the scrip consideration. In Australia, first-quarter GDP due this week is expected to show 0.5% quarter-on-quarter growth and 2.6% year-on-year. Lithium hydroxide cash prices on the LME remain a sentiment barometer for the battery metals sector, currently sitting at US$22,650 per tonne.
For European Lithium holders, the week ahead is less about new company news and more about whether the market will close the discount before the deal mechanics force the issue. The A$0.485 level is the immediate pivot: a sustained hold above it would strengthen the case that the stock is repricing toward the implied takeover value, while a retreat would suggest that the open conditions — particularly the cash hurdle and regulatory timeline — are still weighing on the price. Either way, the A$0.50 threshold is now the clearest catalyst on the horizon.
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