Shares in Moa Group, which raised $16 million when it went public in 2012, plunged to almost a third of its listing price after the boutique beer maker posted a wider full-year loss and said major shareholders Pioneer Capital and the Business Bakery have committed to providing enough financial support to allow the company to keep operating for at least the year ahead.
The NZX-listed stock touched a record low of 40 cents, well below its $1.25 listing price.
It has since bounced back to 42c.
The stock is the worst performer on the NZX All Ordinaries Index today, recently dropping 12 per cent to 46 cents, valuing the company at $15.8 million. The stock has declined 56 per cent over the last 12 months.
Earlier this week the Auckland-based company reported an annual net loss of $5.8 million, or 19.2 cents a share, for the year ended March 31, wider than the year earlier loss of $1.9 million, or 7.3 cents. Sales had jumped 88 per cent to $4.6 million but were outpaced by a 137 per cent jump in cost of sales, trimming gross profit to $792,000 from $848,000.
Expenses soared 135 percent to $6.5 million, as costs of distribution, administration and sales and marketing all rose.