Li-Cycle Receives Cease Trade Order from Ontario Securities Commission

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TORONTO, June 06, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Li-Cycle Holdings Corp. (OTC Pink Markets: LICYQ) ("Li-Cycle" or the "Company"), a leading global lithium-ion battery resource recovery company, announced that, after close of markets on June 5, 2025, the Company received a cease trade order ("CTO") issued by the Ontario Securities Commission ("OSC") as a result of the Company’s failure to file periodic disclosures required by Ontario securities legislation.

These disclosures include the interim financial statements, and management’s discussion and analysis relating to such interim financial statements, for the period ended March 31, 2025, and certification of the foregoing filings as required by National Instrument 52-109 Certification of Disclosure in Issuers' Annual and Interim Filings.

The CTO prohibits any person or company from trading, directly or indirectly, in any security of the Company in Ontario and each other jurisdiction of Canada that has a statutory reciprocal order provision, except in accordance with the conditions that are contained in the CTO, for as long as the CTO remains in effect.

A beneficial security holder of Li-Cycle who is not, and was not an insider or control person of the Company at the date of the CTO may sell securities of Li-Cycle acquired before the date of the CTO, if both of the following apply:

  • the sale is made through a "foreign organized regulated market" (or "FORM"), as defined in section 1.1 of the Universal Market Integrity Rules of the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization; and

  • the sale is made through an investment dealer registered in a jurisdiction of Canada in accordance with applicable securities legislation.

Li-Cycle’s common shares are currently quoted on the OTC Pink Markets, which generally does not meet the FORM criteria.

As previously disclosed, on May 14, 2025, Li-Cycle and its subsidiaries in North America sought and obtained from the Ontario Superior Court of Justice (the "Court") an order (the "Initial Order") providing them with creditor protection pursuant to Canada’s Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (the "CCAA"). On May 15, 2025, the CCAA proceedings were recognized, and immediate stays of proceedings entered, by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York pursuant to Chapter 15 of the United States Bankruptcy Code.

Given the ongoing CCAA proceedings and the Initial Order, as amended and restated on May 22, 2025, Li-Cycle has determined that it does not currently intend to devote additional time or financial resources towards its public disclosure obligations in Canada and the United States.