TLDR
- Nauticus Robotics completed a debt-for-equity swap on December 3, converting loans into Series C preferred shares worth $1,000 each
- The new preferred shares come with 10% annual dividends and can be converted into common stock
- At a November 21 special meeting, shareholders greenlit Series B preferred stock conversion but voted down expanding authorized shares to 5 billion
- Third-quarter financials showed $1.9 million in revenue against a $6.6 million net loss
- Stock jumped over 115% despite analyst Sell rating at $0.71 price target
Nauticus Robotics pulled off a financial makeover this week. The underwater robotics firm traded its debt obligations for a new class of preferred equity.
The exchange happened December 3 when institutional investors agreed to swap their secured convertible term loans and senior secured convertible debentures. They received Series C preferred convertible stock in return.
Each new Series C share carries a face value of $1,000. Holders get a 10% yearly dividend. They can also convert these shares into common stock when they choose.
The deal required changes to the original Securities Purchase Agreement. Future stockholder meetings will address reverse stock splits and boosting authorized shares.
This transaction follows another preferred stock approval from late November. At a special meeting on November 21, shareholders gave the green light to converting Series B Convertible Preferred Stock.
That earlier vote involved an agreement with ATW Special Situations II, LLC from August. The deal needed approval under Nasdaq Rule 5635. Turnout was light with just over 40% of outstanding shares represented.
Authorized Share Expansion Falls Short
While shareholders approved the Series B conversion, they pumped the brakes on another management request. The board wanted to balloon authorized shares from 625 million to 5 billion.
The math didn’t work out. Even though more votes came in for the proposal than against it, the tally missed the bar. The company needed a majority of all outstanding shares, not just those voting.
The numbers show the gap. About 1.5 million shares supported the expansion. Nearly 489,000 opposed it. Another 280,000 abstained.
For the preferred conversion vote, support was stronger proportionally. Roughly 387,000 shares backed it versus 175,000 against.
Company Reports Quarterly Losses
The financial engineering comes as the company wrestles with red ink. Q3 2025 numbers revealed $1.9 million in revenue. Net losses hit $6.6 million for the same three months.
Per-share losses reached -$2.6. Management pointed to strategic revenue deferrals in their explanation. Cash position showed some gains despite the operating losses.
Investors have sent shares on a rollercoaster. The stock rocketed more than 115% higher recently. Yet Wall Street analysts aren’t buying the rally. The latest rating pegs KITT as a Sell with shares worth just $0.71.
Trading happens on Nasdaq where common stock uses ticker KITT. Warrants trade separately under KITTW. The restructuring agreements include language about potential reverse splits down the road.

