When a company lands an $8.2 million production order from a military satellite supplier and sees its equity value triple from a March low in the span of weeks, it might seem like smooth sailing. For Swedish photonics chipmaker Sivers Semiconductors, the reality is far more tangled. Shareholders are set to vote on a Nasdaq dual listing, a dilutive capital increase, and retrospective approval of a convertible loan at the June 15 annual general meeting in Stockholm — all while a criminal probe into possible insider trading swirls and a short seller attacks the company’s accounting.
The ALL.SPACE Order: A Concrete Milestone
The most tangible bright spot came on June 9, when Sivers secured a production contract from ALL.SPACE, a British satellite communications firm that supplies the U.S. military. The deal covers Ka-band beamforming chips and runs through 2027, marking a transition from development to series production. ALL.SPACE itself is being acquired by York Space Systems, a publicly listed company, which could give Sivers’ largest defense customer a larger, more financially stable platform. The order bolsters a pipeline that has grown 77% since the start of the year to reach $799 million.
Q1 Disappointment and Macro Headwinds
Yet the pipeline has yet to translate into revenue growth. First-quarter net sales came in at SEK 61.9 million, down 22% year-on-year, and the company posted a net loss of SEK 42.7 million. Management blamed delayed U.S. defense approvals stemming from a government shutdown in late 2025 and unfavorable currency moves. The broader semiconductor sector took an additional hit on June 10 after U.S. inflation for May printed at 4.2%, a three-year high, triggering a sell-off in mid-cap and specialized chip stocks. Super Micro Computer’s $7 billion capital raise added to concerns about margin compression across the AI hardware supply chain.
A 250% Annualized Volatility Stock
Sivers shares have been nothing short of a roller coaster. After hitting a 52-week high of €10.23 on June 3, the stock retreated to close at €6.92 before rebounding to €7.33 on the Thursday ahead of the AGM — a 5.5% gain from the previous day. At the March trough of €0.27, the stock had collapsed by more than 97% from its peak. The 30-day annualized volatility sits at over 250%, making Sivers one of the most violently swinging names in its sector.
The AGM: Four Decisions That Could Reshape the Company
The June 15 ballot carries four items with far-reaching consequences. A Nasdaq dual listing would require restating the last two fiscal years under U.S. GAAP — an expensive and time-consuming process. The capital increase authorizes up to 53.8 million new shares, diluting existing holders by approximately 15%. A stock option plan for up to 7 million shares is also on the table, along with retrospective approval of a $12 million convertible loan that the company closed on March 3, 2026.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Sivers Semiconductors?
The Shadow of a Criminal Inquiry
Adding to the uncertainty, Sweden’s Economic Crime Authority and financial regulator are investigating whether illegal insider information circulated around the U.S. listing in mid-April. An anonymous social media account with a large following touted the stock roughly 48 hours before the official press release, and prosecutor Jonas Myrdal is examining whether that violated the EU Market Abuse Regulation. No formal charges have been filed.
Meanwhile, short seller Ningi Research has alleged that approximately 31% of Sivers’ reported 2025 revenue is questionable, claiming the company booked research grants as commercial sales. Rosen Law Firm in the U.S. is probing possible securities claims. Again, no formal lawsuits have been filed.
Institutional Vote of Confidence – Or Not?
JPMorgan Chase has built a 5.25% stake in Sivers, including 3.28% in direct voting rights, a first for the U.S. bank. On the other hand, no insider has bought shares in the past three months; all reported transactions have been sales. The short squeeze that propelled the stock higher earlier this year has largely unwound. Short interest peaked at about 17% of free float in March, before Nordea raised margin requirements on short products as high as 228.5% due to a thin securities lending market, forcing shorts to cover. Now that those positions are mostly closed, a key technical support has vanished.
Structural Demand from Index Funds
On the passive side, Sivers joined the OMX Stockholm Benchmark Index on June 1 and the MSCI Sweden Small-Cap Index shortly before that. These inclusions trigger automatic purchases from index funds, creating a buffer of structural demand even as the stock battles headwinds.
What’s Next
Sivers is targeting multiple series production starts from 2027 across AI data centers, LiDAR, satellite communications, and defense, with profitability penciled in for 2028. The next operational checkpoint is the half-year report on August 6. But before that, the AGM on June 15 will reveal whether shareholders are willing to shoulder the dilution and expense of a Nasdaq listing — and whether they see the criminal probe and short-seller allegations as bumps on the road or cracks in the foundation.
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