Archer Aviation’s stock is having a rough stretch. ACHR dropped to a fresh 52-week low of $4.79 on June 25, and was trading around $4.76 — down more than 54% over the past year.
Archer Aviation Inc., ACHR
The latest leg lower isn’t just the market being moody. Reports surfaced that CEO Adam Goldstein is pushing to relocate the company’s headquarters to Texas, while also publicly going after proxy advisory firms. That’s a combination that tends to make investors nervous about who’s steering the ship.
Corporate governance concerns don’t exist in isolation here. They’re landing on top of already-existing worries about how much cash Archer is burning and what it’s going to cost to hit its 2026 commercialization targets.
The stock’s beta sits at 3.15, meaning it moves roughly three times as much as the broader market. On a bad news day, that amplifies the pain.
The headquarters relocation push and Goldstein’s public criticism of proxy advisors have drawn attention to leadership stability at a time when the company needs investor confidence the most.
Proxy advisory firms hold real sway over institutional votes. Picking a fight with them while also proposing a major operational shift is the kind of move that makes long-term holders second-guess things.
The technical picture isn’t helping either. The stock is flashing a “Sell” signal on technical sentiment, and average daily trading volume sits at over 40 million — suggesting there’s no shortage of people moving in and out of the position.
To Archer’s credit, Q1 2026 results actually came in ahead of expectations. The company posted an EPS of -$0.28 against the forecast of -$0.30, and revenue came in at $1.6 million versus the $1.54 million estimate.
That’s not nothing. Beating estimates at this stage of the company’s development does show some operational discipline.
But the after-hours reaction to those results was still negative, which tells you something. Investors aren’t looking at the earnings beat and feeling reassured — they’re focused on the longer road ahead.
The core issue remains: Archer is still burning cash at a pace that will likely require external financing before the company generates meaningful revenue. That raises the real prospect of shareholder dilution, and any slip in certification timelines or commercial launch schedules only makes that worse.
On the balance sheet side, the company does carry a relatively low debt load and a solid cash position, which gives it runway to keep advancing certification work, production ramp-up, and defense-related projects without being forced into an emergency capital raise.
Market cap currently stands at approximately $3.99 billion. InvestingPro’s Fair Value model suggests the stock may be undervalued at current levels.
ACHR’s year-to-date decline now stands at -32.85%, with the stock sitting just above its 52-week low.
The post Archer Aviation (ACHR) Stock Sinks 5% as CEO Turmoil Rattles Investors appeared first on CoinCentral.


