(Reuters) - Luckin Coffee Inc (O:LK) disclosed on Tuesday that it received a de-listing notice from the Nasdaq Inc (O:NDAQ) last week after it failed to file its annual report, sending the shares of the Chinese coffee chain down about 18%.
This is the second notice from the U.S. stock exchange. The previous one was issued in May, after the company announced a probe saying that a top executive fabricated and overestimated as much as 2.2 billion yuan ($311.5 million) in 2019 sales.
The latest reason cited by the Nasdaq is in addition to the two bases disclosed last month - public concerns raised by the fabricated transactions and the company's failure to disclose material information.
The Chinese company, which competes with U.S. coffeehouse Starbucks (O:SBUX), said the failure to file its annual report was due to delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and as it awaits the result of the internal probe. (https://
The company will hold an extraordinary general meeting next month to vote on whether to oust several directors, including chairman Charles Zhengyao Lu.
Luckin's shares have plunged more than 85% since April since the internal probe was announced and has resulted in the company defaulting on a loan secured by pledging millions of shares.
The shares were down at $2.6 in premarket trading after rising earlier in the day following a Reuters report that it picked investment bank Houlihan Lokey (N:HLI), also appointed by troubled German tech firm Wirecard (DE:WDIG), as an adviser.