Sivers Semiconductors is moving forward with a SEK 600 million capital increase at a moment when the company faces a barrage of headwinds—regulatory investigations, a restated set of financials, and a stock that has dropped nearly 19% in the past seven days. The accelerated bookbuilding, managed by Pareto Securities, was completed before trading opened on the Nasdaq Stockholm on 1 July 2026, with the new shares placed exclusively with institutional investors, both Swedish and international, under an authorization granted at the annual general meeting on 15 June.
The proceeds are earmarked for three specific areas: expanding production capacity for indium phosphide lasers and optical amplifiers, boosting customer support resources, and strengthening internal research activities. The timing reflects a surge in demand from AI data centres and the automotive LiDAR market. Sivers is also collaborating with Jabil on a 1.6T LRO transceiver, a product that validates its laser technology for data centre applications. The company’s opportunity pipeline has swelled 77% since the start of the year to US$799 million, driven by orders in AI networking and satellite communications.
This marks the second major equity placement in 2026. The previous one in April carried a 180-day lock-up on further share issuance, which Pareto Securities has now lifted to allow this transaction. A new 120-day lock-up on additional equity raisings will take effect after this placement closes. Insider lock-ups from the April round remain in place until 16 July 2026, covering board members Bami Bastani, Karin Raj, Todd Thomson, CEO Vickram Vathulya, and CFO Heine Thorsgaard.
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The capital raise comes against a backdrop of serious legal and accounting turmoil. Sweden’s Economic Crime Authority and financial regulator are both investigating a suspected leak of confidential information related to Sivers’ planned Nasdaq listing. Two US law firms are probing potential securities claims, spurred by a critical report from short-seller Ningi Research on 1 June 2026. The company has also restated its 2024 and 2025 annual accounts under US PCAOB standards, with the net loss for 2025 widening from SEK 186.5 million to approximately SEK 222 million. Revenue has been reallocated between periods, inventories revalued, and capitalised development costs written off.
Operational performance has been under pressure. First-quarter 2026 revenue came in at SEK 61.9 million, down 22% year over year, while adjusted EBITDA was negative SEK 13.8 million. Management attributes the weakness to the US government shutdown late last year, delayed defence budgets, and unfavourable exchange rates. Despite this, the company’s order pipeline continues to grow, and the next big test comes on 6 August 2026, when Sivers releases its second-quarter results.
The stock closed at EUR 5.84, roughly 43% below its 52-week high of EUR 10.23 reached in early June. The recent sell-off reflects not only the investigative overhang and accounting revisions but also the dilution effect of yet another equity placement in rapid succession. Whether the new institutional investors are betting on a pipeline that could be worth nearly US$800 million—or bracing for more turbulence—will become clearer once the Q2 report lands.
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