v3.26.1
Fair Value Measurements
3 Months Ended 12 Months Ended
Mar. 29, 2026
Dec. 28, 2025
Fair Value Measurements [Abstract]    
Fair Value Measurements

(5) Fair Value Measurements

 

The following table sets forth the Company’s financial assets and liabilities that are measured at fair value on a recurring basis (in thousands):

 

   As of March 29, 2026 
   Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total 
Financial Assets                
Restricted cash  $1,134   $   $   $1,134 
Total  $1,134   $   $   $1,134 
Financial Liabilities                    
July 2024 Notes derivative liability (1)  $   $   $14,042   $14,042 
July 2024 Notes derivative liability – related parties (1)           9,036    9,036 
September 2024 Notes derivative liability (1)           26,351    26,351 
September 2024 Notes derivative liability – related parties (1)           4,286    4,286 
July 2025 Note derivative liability– related party (1)           2,239    2,239 
September 2025 Notes derivative liability (1)           10,825    10,825 
November 2025 Note derivative liability – related party (1)           1,069    1,069 
January 2026 Note derivative liability – related party             1,467    1,467 
$1.9 Million Note             1,530    1,530 
March 2026 Bridge Note             9,500    9,500 
Forward purchase agreement liabilities           5,107    5,107 
SAFE Agreement with related party           579    579 
Private placement warrants           1,504    1,504 
Working capital warrants           172    172 
Public warrants   2,070            2,070 
Deferred Cobalt Consideration Shares           6,331    6,331 
Deferred Ambia Consideration Shares           13,936    13,936 
Total  $2,070   $   $107,974   $110,044 
   As of December 28, 2025 
   Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total 
Financial Assets                
Restricted cash  $3,841   $   $   $3,841 
Total  $3,841   $   $   $3,841 
Financial Liabilities                    
July 2024 Notes derivative liability (1)  $   $   $19,604   $19,604 
July 2024 Notes derivative liability – related parties (1)           12,615    12,615 
September 2024 Notes derivative liability (1)           37,930    37,930 
September 2024 Notes derivative liability – related parties (1)           5,870    5,870 
July 2025 Note derivative liability– related party (1)           3,246    3,246 
September 2025 Notes derivative liability (1)           14,756    14,756 
November 2025 Note derivative liability – related party (1)           1,488    1,488 
Forward purchase agreement liabilities           3,965    3,965 
SAFE Agreement with related party           535    535 
Private placement warrants           1,692    1,692 
Working capital warrants           194    194 
Public warrants   2,475            2,475 
Deferred Sunder Consideration Shares   10,840            10,840 
Deferred Ambia Consideration Shares           16,879    16,879 
Total  $13,315   $   $118,774   $132,089 

 

(1) The derivative liabilities are associated with the Company’s outstanding senior unsecured convertible notes with stated interest rates of 7.0% (the “September 2024 Notes” and “September 2025 Notes”) and 12.0% (the “July 2024 Notes”, “July 2025 Note”, “November 2025 Note” and “January 2026 Note”) all of which are defined in Note 9 – Borrowings and Derivative Liabilities.

The reconciliation of liabilities by class and categorized within Level 3 under the fair value hierarchy is as follows for the thirteen week periods ended March 29, 2026 and March 30, 2025 (in thousands):

 

       Thirteen Weeks Ended March 29, 2026 
   Derivative
liabilities
   Convertible
debt at fair
value
   Forward
purchase
agreements
   SAFE
Agreements
   Warrant
liabilities
   Deferred
Consideration
Shares
   Total 
Balance as of December 28, 2025  $95,509   $   $3,965   $535   $1,886   $16,879   $118,774 
Additions   2,297    10,710                6,331    19,338 
Conversions   (1,883)                       (1,883)
Net (gain) loss recognized within Other non-operating income, net in the consolidated statement of operations   (26,608)   320    1,142    44    (210)   (2,943)   (28,255)
Balance as of March 29, 2026  $69,315   $11,030   $5,107   $579   $1,676   $20,267   $107,974 

 

   Thirteen Weeks Ended March 30, 2025 
   Derivative
liabilities
   Forward
purchase
agreements
   SAFE
Agreements
   Warrant
liabilities
   Total 
Balance as of December 29, 2024  $97,122   $3,494   $384   $699   $101,699 
Additions                    
Conversions                    
Net (gain) loss recognized within Other non-operating income, net in the consolidated statement of operations   (15,127)   (268)   20    488    (14,887)
Balance as of March 30, 2025  $81,995   $3,226   $404   $1,187   $86,812 

 

Subsequent to issuance, changes in the fair value of the derivative liabilities, liability classified warrants, forward purchase agreements and SAFEs are recorded within Other non-operating income, net in the Company’s unaudited condensed consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income.

 

Derivative liabilities

 

The Company recognized derivative liabilities arising from the conversion features of its senior unsecured convertible notes issued (refer to Note 9 – Borrowings and Derivative Liabilities). Derivative liabilities are measured at fair value in accordance with ASC 820, Fair Value Measurement. The fair value of each respective derivative liability is measured using a Monte Carlo simulation that incorporates a binomial lattice model. Significant inputs to the binomial lattice model include the terms of the senior unsecured convertible notes (including the interest rate, conversion rate and conversion price), the underlying price of the Company’s common stock, risk-free rate and volatility. Certain of these inputs are unobservable. Thus, these derivative liabilities are classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. The binomial lattice model produces an estimated fair value based on changes in the price of the underlying shares of the Company’s common stock over successive periods of time. As a result of these interrelationships and inherent unobservable assumptions, the fair value of a derivative liability is subject to significant measurement uncertainty, and alternative reasonable assumptions could have produced materially different results as of March 29, 2026 and December 28, 2025.

The assumptions used to value the derivative liabilities as of March 29, 2026 were as follows:

 

     12.0% Senior Unsecured Convertible Notes     7.0% Senior Unsecured
Convertible Notes
 
    July
2024
Notes(1)
    July
2025
Note
     November
2025
Note
    January
2026
Note
    September
2024
Notes(1)
    September
2025
Notes(1)
 
Coupon rate     12.0 %     12.0 %     12.0 %   $ 12.0 %     7.0 %     7.0 %
Initial conversion rate     595.24       558.66       626.96       540.54       467.84       467.84  
Initial conversion price   $ 1.68     $ 1.79     $ 1.60     $ 1.85     $ 2.14     $ 2.14  
Common stock price   $ 1.25     $ 1.25     $ 1.25     $ 1.25     $ 1.25     $ 1.25  
Risk-free interest rate     4.00 %     4.00 %     3.96 %     4.00 %     3.96 %     3.96 %
Volatility     88.1 %     88.8 %     87.5 %     89.2 %     90.7 %     90.7 %
Dividend yield     0.00 %     0.00 %     0.00 %     0.00 %     0.00 %     0.00 %

 

The assumptions used to value the derivative liabilities as of December 28, 2025 were as follows:

 

   12.0% Senior Unsecured Convertible Notes   7.0% Senior Unsecured
Convertible Notes
 
   July
2024
Notes(1)
   July
2025
Note
   November
2025
Note
   September
2024
Notes(1)
   September
2025
Notes(1)
 
Coupon rate   12.0%   12.0%   12.0%   7.0%   7.0%
Initial conversion rate   595.24    558.66    626.96    467.84    467.84 
Initial conversion price  $1.68   $1.79   $1.60   $2.14   $2.14 
Common stock price  $1.62   $1.62   $1.62   $1.62   $1.62 
Risk-free interest rate   3.6%   3.6%   3.6%   3.58%   3.58%
Volatility   82.2%   83.2%   81.3%   85.6%   85.6%
Dividend yield   0.00%   0.00%   0.00%   0.00%   0.00%

 

(1)The conversion option is derived based upon the above assumptions plus a make-whole provision which is based upon changes in the Company’s stock price and the conversion date.

 

$1.9 Million Note and March 2026 Bridge Note

 

The Company elected the fair value option under ASC 825 for the $1.9 Million Note (as defined in Note 9 – Borrowings and Derivative Liabilities) issued on January 27, 2026 in connection with the Standby Equity Purchase Agreement (as defined in Note 9 – Borrowings and Derivative Liabilities) and the March 2026 Bridge Note (as defined in Note 9 – Borrowings and Derivative Liabilities) issued on March 6, 2026. The $1.9 Million Note and March 2026 Bridge Note were measured at fair value on a recurring basis and classified as a Level 3 liability due to the use of significant unobservable inputs.

 

The Company estimated the fair value of each obligation using a Monte Carlo simulation model, which captures the economic characteristics of the instrument, including its variable conversion price feature that is dependent on future market prices of the Company’s common stock. The Company utilized a “Bond plus Option” approach, where the value of upside plus amortization was determined in a simulation and the value related to principal repayment was calculated as a single payment of principal at maturity. The Company simulated its stock price from the valuation date to maturity date, at a daily step.

 

With respect to the $1.9 Million Note, on each of the simulated paths, the Company (i) tested for an amortization trigger as applicable; and (ii) assumed that the maturity date will not be extended. Once the payoffs for all simulation paths were determined according to above, they were discounted back to the valuation date at the risk-free rate in case the $1.9 Million Note would be converted and at credit risk-adjusted rate otherwise.

With respect to the March 2026 Bridge Note, on each of the simulated paths, the Company determined the maximum payoff on each installment date based on conversion price. Once the payoffs for all simulation paths were determined according to above, they were discounted back to the valuation date at the risk-free rate in case the March 2026 Bridge Note would be converted and at credit risk-adjusted rate otherwise.

 

The fair value of these obligations was each calculated as the average present value across all simulation paths plus present value of debt component. The model was calibrated to transaction proceeds by varying credit risk-adjusted rate in the model. The change in yields between the valuation dates was applied to the credit risk-adjusted rate to account for market changes. Thus, these obligations are classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy as the fair values are based upon unobservable inputs.

 

The key inputs for the simulation include stock price, simulation period and volatility of the Company’s common stock and were as follows as of March 29, 2026:

 

   $1.9 Million
Note
   March 2026
Bridge Note
 
VWAP stock price  $1.24   $1.24 
Simulation period   0.83 years    0.94 years 
Risk-free rate   3.76%   3.77%
Volatility   81.4%   83.3%
Credit risk-adjusted rate   41.4%   73.4%

 

The fair value measurement reflects a probability-weighted assessment of settlement outcomes, including conversion into equity versus cash repayment scenarios, and captures the optionality inherent in the instrument. Changes in these assumptions, particularly stock price volatility, credit spread, and the likelihood of conversion, can result in significant fluctuations in the estimated fair value. Changes in fair value are recognized in operating results within “Other non-operating income, net,” in the Company’s unaudited condensed consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income, and no separate interest expense is recorded, as the fair value measurement incorporates the economic cost of the financing.

 

Public warrants

 

The public warrants are measured at fair value on a recurring basis. The public warrants were valued based on the closing price of the publicly traded instrument and therefore are considered a Level 1 instrument in the fair value hierarchy. 

 

Private placement and working capital warrants

 

The Company valued the private placement and working capital warrants, based on a binomial lattice model, which included the following inputs:

 

   As of 
   March 29,   December 28, 
   2026   2025 
Expected term   2.31 years    2.56 years 
Stock price  $1.25   $1.62 
Exercise price  $11.50   $11.50 
Expected volatility   268.3%   179.0%
Risk-free rate   3.90%   3.50%
Expected dividend yield   0.00%   0.00%

 

The expected term is the time period to the expiration date of the warrants. The risk-free rate is interpolated from the U.S. Constant Maturity Treasury curve for a term matching the corresponding remaining life. Volatility was calibrated based on the public warrants closing price as of the valuation date. As the private and working capital warrants have terms nearly identical to the publicly traded warrants, the volatility was calibrated until the model price equaled the public warrants closing price. These inherent unobservable assumptions are subject to significant measurement uncertainty, and alternative reasonable assumptions could have produced materially different results as of March 29, 2026 and December 28, 2025. Thus, the private placement and working capital warrant liabilities are classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

Forward purchase agreement (“FPA”) liabilities

 

FPAs are measured at fair value on a recurring basis using a Monte Carlo simulation analysis based upon the following inputs:

 

   As of 
   March 29,   December 28, 
   2026   2025 
VWAP stock price  $1.24   $1.66 
Simulation period   0.30 years    0.55 years 
Risk-free rate   3.73%   3.57%
Volatility   58.0%   77.3%

  

The volume-weighted average price (“VWAP”) reflects management’s judgment regarding expected future trading activity and price behavior as an active forward market does not exist for the Company’s common stock. Reasonably possible alternative VWAP outcomes at the reporting date could have resulted in a materially different fair value. The risk-free rate is derived from the applicable tenor of the U.S. Treasury yield curve. Changes in the risk-free rate would alter the present value of the simulated settlement amounts and could significantly impact the fair value estimate. The expected volatility is determined based on the historical equity volatility of comparable companies over a period that matches the simulation period. Because expected volatility drives the dispersion of simulated price paths, reasonably higher or lower volatility assumptions could materially increase or decrease the estimated fair value. These inputs are interrelated, and changes in one may affect the others. As a result of these interrelationships and inherent unobservable assumptions, the fair value of FPAs is subject to significant measurement uncertainty, and alternative reasonable assumptions could have produced materially different results as of March 29, 2026 and December 28, 2025. Thus, FPAs are classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

 

SAFE agreement with related party

  

The Company measured the fair value of its SAFE using a valuation technique that incorporates significant unobservable inputs and is therefore classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. The fair value of the SAFE is subject to estimation uncertainty because it depends on management’s judgments about future events that are not directly observable in active markets. Management assigned a 50% probability that the SAFE will convert into shares of the Company’s stock in connection with a qualifying financing or other specified event. If the SAFE does not convert, management expects cash repayment in fiscal 2026 or fiscal 2027, with a 50% probability assigned to each repayment year.

 

The SAFE valuation also considers assumptions such as discount rates implied by the Company’s convertible notes as of the valuation date, the timing and likelihood of financing or liquidity events, and, for the conversion path, the expected equity valuation and any applicable conversion economics (e.g., discounts or valuation caps). Settlement of the SAFE is contingent on future financing or liquidity events and the Company’s funding plans. Accordingly, the measurement requires judgment about the likelihood and timing of conversion versus repayment and, where relevant, assumptions about the Company’s equity value at conversion. Because these factors are not directly observable, reasonably possible alternative assumptions at the reporting date could produce a materially different fair value. Increasing the probability of conversion would generally increase the fair value if the conversion terms imply a beneficial outcome to the holder relative to repayment; decreasing that probability would place more weight on the repayment scenarios and could increase or decrease the fair value depending on the applicable discount rate and timing of cash flows. Within the non-conversion path, shifting probability weight toward repayment in fiscal year 2026 would generally increase fair value (lower discounting), while shifting weight toward fiscal 2027 would generally decrease fair value (greater discounting), holding other inputs constant. A higher discount rate would decrease the present value of expected cash flows (and thus fair value), while a lower rate would increase fair value. Higher expected equity values or more favorable conversion economics would increase the fair value under the conversion path; lower expected equity values or less favorable terms would decrease it. These inputs are interrelated and unobservable. Because the valuation depends on significant unobservable inputs—including a 50% probability of conversion to equity and an even allocation between fiscal years 2026 and 2027 of repayment if conversion does not occur—there is significant measurement uncertainty, and alternative reasonable assumptions at the reporting date could have resulted in a materially different fair value of the SAFE liability as of March 29, 2026 and December 28, 2025. Thus, the SAFE liability is classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

Deferred Ambia Consideration Shares

 

The Deferred Ambia consideration is classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

 

The Company estimated the fair value of the deferred consideration shares using a Turnbull–Wakeman closed-form approximation for arithmetic average-rate options, with Black-Scholes values used as an upper bound. The valuation as of March 29, 2026, was based on a stock price of $1.25 and key assumptions including expected volatility of approximately 52% to 72%, risk-free rates of approximately 3.74% to 3.76%, zero dividend yield, and defined averaging periods over the contractual terms. The resulting fair values reflect per-unit option values of approximately $0.26 to $0.38 corresponding to total estimated value of $13.9 million. The fair value of the deferred consideration shares as of December 28, 2025 of $16.9 million was estimated using the Company’s closing share price for its common stock of $1.61 at the Ambia Closing.

 

The actual number of Deferred Ambia Consideration Shares issuable by the Company on the six- and 12-month anniversaries of the Ambia Closing was determined based on the 20-day trailing volume-weighted average price of the Company’s common stock after market close on the business day immediately prior to the issuance date of the applicable shares (the “VWAP Value”); provided that the VWAP Value for the calculation of the actual number of Deferred Ambia Consideration Shares issuable by the Company will not be more than $2.8102 per share or less than $1.4988 per share. Additionally, the number of Deferred Ambia Consideration Shares issuable by the Company is subject to adjustment pursuant to customary working capital and balance sheet adjustment terms and subject to offset for certain indemnifiable damages in accordance with the Ambia MIPA.

 

Financial liabilities not measured at fair value on a recurring basis:

 

The Company’s senior unsecured convertible notes were fair valued using a binomial lattice model, which includes Level 3, unobservable inputs. The key inputs used are consistent with those used to fair value the derivative liabilities as discussed under Derivative Liabilities above. The following tables set forth the Company’s financial liabilities that are not measured at fair value and are considered a Level 3 instrument in the fair value hierarchy (in thousands):

 

   As of March 29, 2026 
   Principal
amount (1)
   Unamortized
debt
discount
and debt
issuance
costs
   Net
carrying
amount
excluding
capitalized
interest (1)
   Fair value 
12.0% senior unsecured convertible notes                
July 2024 Notes  $27,973   $(5,655)  $22,318   $26,724 
July 2024 Notes – related parties   18,000    (10,054)   7,946    17,086 
Subtotal July 2024 Notes   45,973    (15,709)   30,264    43,810 
July 2025 Note – related party   5,000    (3,481)   1,519    4,494 
November 2025 Note – related party   2,000    (1,483)   517    1,971 
January 2026 Note – related party   3,300    (2,262)   1,038    2,955 
                     
7.0% senior unsecured convertible notes                    
September 2024 Notes   53,793    (37,851)   15,942    45,830 
September 2024 Notes – related parties   8,750    (5,946)   2,804    7,461 
Subtotal September 2024 Notes   62,543    (43,797)   18,746    53,291 
September 2025 Notes   22,000    (18,425)   3,575    18,793 
Total  $140,816   $(85,157)  $55,659   $125,314 
   As of December 28, 2025 
   Principal
amount (1)
   Unamortized
debt
discount
and debt
issuance
costs
   Net
carrying
amount
excluding
capitalized
interest (1)
   Fair value 
12.0% senior unsecured convertible notes                
July 2024 Notes  $27,973   $(5,832)  $22,141   $33,165 
July 2024 Notes – related parties   18,000    (10,369)   7,631    21,204 
Subtotal July 2024 Notes   45,973    (16,201)   29,772    54,369 
July 2025 Note – related party   5,000    (3,557)   1,443    5,641 
November 2025 Note – related party   2,000    (1,509)   491    2,360 
                     
7.0% senior unsecured convertible notes                    
September 2024 Notes   56,543    (42,211)   14,332    59,425 
September 2024 Notes – related parties   8,750    (6,404)   2,346    8,880 
Subtotal September 2024 Notes   65,293    (48,615)   16,678    68,305 
September 2025 Notes   22,000    (18,646)   3,354    24,227 
Total  $140,266   $(88,528)  $51,738   $154,902 

 

(1) Excludes capitalized interest (coupon interest, default interest and failure to file interest) of $9.6 million and $10.8 million as of March 29, 2026, and December 28, 2025, respectively, included in the July 2024 Notes.

(5) Fair Value Measurements

 

The following tables set forth the Company’s financial assets and liabilities that are measured at fair value, on a recurring basis (in thousands):

 

   As of December 28, 2025 
   Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total 
Financial Assets                
Restricted cash  $3,841   $
   $
   $3,841 
Total  $3,841   $
   $
   $3,841 
Financial Liabilities                    
July 2024 Notes derivative liability (1)  $
   $
   $19,604   $19,604 
July 2024 Notes derivative liability – related parties (1)   
    
    12,615    12,615 
September 2024 Notes derivative liability (1)   
    
    37,930    37,930 
September 2024 Notes derivative liability – related parties (1)   
    
    5,870    5,870 
July 2025 Note derivative liability– related party (1)   
    
    3,246    3,246 
September 2025 Notes derivative liability (1)   
    
    14,756    14,756 
November 2025 Note derivative liability – related party (1)   
    
    1,488    1,488 
Forward purchase agreement liabilities   
    
    3,965    3,965 
SAFE Agreement with related party   
    
    535    535 
Private placement warrants   
    
    1,692    1,692 
Working capital warrants   
    
    194    194 
Public warrants   2,475    
    
    2,475 
Deferred Sunder Consideration Shares   10,840    
    
    10,840 
Deferred Ambia Consideration Shares       
    16,879    16,879 
Total  $13,315   $
   $118,774   $132,089 

 

   As of December 29, 2024 
   Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total 
Financial Assets                
Restricted cash  $3,841   $   $   $3,841 
Total  $3,841   $   $   $3,841 
Financial Liabilities                    
July 2024 Notes derivative liability (1)  $   $   $13,563   $13,563 
July 2024 Notes derivative liability – related parties (1)           21,127    21,127 
September 2024 Notes derivative liability (1)           55,474    55,474 
September 2024 Notes derivative liability – related parties (1)           6,958    6,958 
Forward purchase agreement liabilities (2)           3,494    3,494 
SAFE Agreement with related party           384    384 
Private placement warrants           627    627 
Working capital warrants           72    72 
Public warrants   862            862 
Total  $862   $   $101,699   $102,561 

 

(1) The derivative liabilities are associated with the Company’s outstanding senior unsecured convertible notes with stated interest rates of 7.0% (the “September 2024 Notes” and “September 2025 Notes”) and 12.0% (the “July 2024 Notes”, “July 2025 Note”, and “November 2025 Note”) all of which are defined in Note 10 – Borrowings and Derivative Liabilities.
   
(2) Includes $1.3 million due to related parties as of and December 29, 2024.

The reconciliation of liabilities by class and categorized within Level 3 under the fair value hierarchy is as follows for the fiscal years ended December 28, 2025 and December 29, 2024 (in thousands):

 

   Fiscal Year Ended December 28, 2025 
   Derivative liabilities   Forward Purchase Agreements   SAFE Agreements   Warrant liabilities   Deferred Ambia Consideration Shares   Total 
Balance as of December 29, 2024  $97,122   $3,494   $384   $699   $
   $101,699 
Additions   20,808    
    
    
    16,879    37,687 
Conversions   (10,931)   
    
    
    
    (10,931)
Net (gain)/loss recognized within Other non-operating income, net in the consolidated statement of operations   (11,490)   471    151    1,187    
    (9,681)
Balance as of December 28, 2025  $95,509   $3,965   $535   $1,886   $16,879   $118,774 

 

 

   Fiscal Year Ended December 29, 2024 
   Derivative liabilities   Forward Purchase Agreements   SAFE Agreements   Warrant liabilities   Total 
Balance as of December 31, 2023  $   $3,831   $   $10,960   $14,791 
Additions   131,108        6,000        137,108 
Conversions           (6,250)   (7,306)   (13,556)
Net (gain)/loss recognized within Other non-operating income, net in the consolidated statement of operations   (33,986)   (337)   634    (2,955)   (36,644)
Balance as of December 29, 2024  $97,122   $3,494   $384   $699   $101,699 

 

Subsequent to issuance, changes in the fair value of derivative liabilities, FPAs, SAFEs and liability classified warrants, are recorded within Other non-operating income, net on the Company’s consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive loss. Refer to Note 11 Other Non-Operating Income, Net for details.

 

Derivative liabilities

 

The Company recognized derivative liabilities arising from the conversion features of its senior unsecured convertible notes issued in the years ended December 28, 2025 and December 29, 2024 (refer to Note 10 – Borrowings and Derivative Liabilities). Derivative liabilities are measured at fair value in accordance with ASC 820, Fair Value Measurement. The fair value of each respective derivative liability is measured using a Monte Carlo simulation that incorporates a binomial lattice model. Significant inputs to the binomial lattice model include the terms of the senior unsecured convertible notes (including the interest rate, conversion rate and conversion price), the underlying price of the Company’s common stock, risk-free rate and volatility. Certain of these inputs are unobservable. Thus, these derivative liabilities are classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. The binomial lattice model produces an estimated fair value based on changes in the price of the underlying shares of the Company’s common stock over successive periods of time. As a result of these interrelationships and inherent unobservable assumptions, the fair value of a derivative liability is subject to significant measurement uncertainty, and alternative reasonable assumptions could have produced materially different results as of December 28, 2025 and December 29, 2024.

The assumptions used to value the derivative liabilities as of December 28, 2025 were as follows:

 

   12.0% Senior Unsecured Convertible
Notes
   7.0% Senior Unsecured Convertible Notes 
   July 2024
Notes
   July 2025
Note
   November 2025 Note   September 2024 Notes   September 2025 Notes 
Coupon rate   12.0%   12.0%   12.0%   7.0%   7.0%
Conversion rate   595.24    558.66    626.96    467.84    467.84 
Conversion price  $1.68   $1.79   $1.60   $2.14   $2.14 
Common stock price  $1.62   $1.62   $1.62   $1.62   $1.62 
Risk-free interest rate   3.6%   3.6%   3.6%   3.58%   3.58%
Volatility   82.2%   83.2%   81.3%   85.6%   85.6%
Dividend yield   0.00%   0.00%   0.00%   0.00%   0.00%

 

The assumptions used to value the derivative liabilities as of December 29, 2024 were as follows:

 

   Senior Unsecured Convertible Notes 
   12.0% Notes   7.0% Notes 
   July 2024
Notes
   September 2024 Notes 
Coupon rate   12.0%   7.0%
Conversion rate   595.24    467.84 
Conversion price  $1.68   $2.14 
Common stock price  $1.81   $1.81 
Risk-free interest rate   4.43%   4.43%
Volatility   62.0%   66.6%
Dividend yield   0.00%   0.00%

 

Forward purchase agreement liabilities

 

FPAs are measured at fair value on a recurring basis using a Monte Carlo simulation analysis based upon the following inputs:

 

   As of 
   December 28,   December 29, 
   2025   2024 
VWAP stock price  $1.66   $1.78 
Simulation period   0.55 years    0.55 years 
Risk-free rate   3.57%   4.28%
Volatility   77.3%   117.0%

The volume-weighted average price (“VWAP”) reflects management’s judgment regarding expected future trading activity and price behavior as an active forward market does not exist for the Company’s common stock. Reasonably possible alternative VWAP outcomes at the reporting date could have resulted in a materially different fair value. The risk-free rate is derived from the applicable tenor of the U.S. Treasury yield curve. Changes in the risk-free rate would alter the present value of the simulated settlement amounts and could significantly impact the fair value estimate. The expected volatility is determined based on the historical equity volatility of comparable companies over a period that matches the simulation period. Because expected volatility drives the dispersion of simulated price paths, reasonably higher or lower volatility assumptions could materially increase or decrease the estimated fair value. These inputs are interrelated, and changes in one may affect the others. As a result of these interrelationships and inherent unobservable assumptions, the fair value of FPAs is subject to significant measurement uncertainty, and alternative reasonable assumptions could have produced materially different results as of December 28, 2025 and December 29, 2024. Thus, FPAs are classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

 

Private placement and working capital warrants

 

The Company valued the private placement and working capital warrants, based on a binomial lattice model, which included the following inputs:

 

   As of 
   December 28,   December 29, 
   2025   2024 
Expected term   2.56 years    3.56 years 
Stock price  $1.62   $1.81 
Exercise price  $11.50   $11.50 
Expected volatility   179.0%   68.1%
Risk-free rate   3.50%   4.39%
Expected dividend yield   0.00%   0.00%

 

The expected term is the time period to the expiration date of the warrants. The risk-free rate is interpolated from the U.S. Constant Maturity Treasury curve for a term matching the corresponding remaining life. Volatility was calibrated based on the public warrants closing price as of the valuation date. As the private and working capital warrants have terms nearly identical to the publicly traded warrants, the volatility was calibrated until the model price equaled the public warrants closing price. These inherent unobservable assumptions are subject to significant measurement uncertainty, and alternative reasonable assumptions could have produced materially different results as of December 28, 2025 and December 29, 2024. Thus, the private placement and working capital warrant liabilities are classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

 

Public warrants

 

The public warrants are measured at fair value on a recurring basis. The public warrants were valued based on the closing price of the publicly traded instrument and therefore are considered a Level 1 instrument in the fair value hierarchy.

 

SAFE agreement with related party

 

The Company measured the fair value of its SAFE using a valuation technique that incorporates significant unobservable inputs and is therefore classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. The fair value of the SAFE is subject to estimation uncertainty because it depends on management’s judgments about future events that are not directly observable in active markets. Management assigned a 50% probability that the SAFE will convert into shares of the Company’s stock in connection with a qualifying financing or other specified event. If the SAFE does not convert, management expects cash repayment in fiscal 2026 or fiscal 2027, with a 50% probability assigned to each repayment year.

The SAFE valuation also considers assumptions such as discount rates implied by the Company’s convertible notes as of the valuation date, the timing and likelihood of financing or liquidity events, and, for the conversion path, the expected equity valuation and any applicable conversion economics (e.g., discounts or valuation caps). Settlement of the SAFE is contingent on future financing or liquidity events and the Company’s funding plans. Accordingly, the measurement requires judgment about the likelihood and timing of conversion versus repayment and, where relevant, assumptions about the Company’s equity value at conversion. Because these factors are not directly observable, reasonably possible alternative assumptions at the reporting date could produce a materially different fair value. Increasing the probability of conversion would generally increase the fair value if the conversion terms imply a beneficial outcome to the holder relative to repayment; decreasing that probability would place more weight on the repayment scenarios and could increase or decrease the fair value depending on the applicable discount rate and timing of cash flows. Within the non-conversion path, shifting probability weight toward repayment in fiscal year 2026 would generally increase fair value (lower discounting), while shifting weight toward fiscal 2027 would generally decrease fair value (greater discounting), holding other inputs constant. A higher discount rate would decrease the present value of expected cash flows (and thus fair value), while a lower rate would increase fair value. Higher expected equity values or more favorable conversion economics would increase the fair value under the conversion path; lower expected equity values or less favorable terms would decrease it. These inputs are interrelated and unobservable. Because the valuation depends on significant unobservable inputs—including a 50% probability of conversion to equity and an even allocation between fiscal years 2026 and 2027 of repayment if conversion does not occur—there is significant measurement uncertainty, and alternative reasonable assumptions at the reporting date could have resulted in a materially different fair value of the SAFE liability as of December 28, 2025 and December 29, 2024. Thus, the SAFE liability is classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

 

Financial liabilities not measured at fair value

 

The Company’s senior unsecured convertible notes were fair valued using a binomial lattice model, which includes Level 3, unobservable inputs. The key inputs used are consistent with those used to fair value the derivative liabilities as discussed under Derivative Liabilities above. The following table sets forth the Company’s financial liabilities that were not measured at fair value and are considered a Level 3 instrument in the fair value hierarchy (in thousands):

 

   As of December 28, 2025 
   Principal
amount (1)
   Unamortized
debt
discount
and debt
issuance
costs
   Net
carrying
amount
excluding
capitalized
interest (1)
   Fair value 
12.0% senior unsecured convertible notes                
July 2024 Notes  $27,973   $(5,832)  $22,141   $33,165 
July 2024 Notes – related parties   18,000    (10,369)   7,631    21,204 
Subtotal July 2024 Notes   45,973    (16,201)   29,772    54,369 
July 2025 Note – related party   5,000    (3,557)   1,443    5,641 
November 2025 Note – related party   2,000    (1,509)   491    2,360 
                     
7.0% senior unsecured convertible notes                    
September 2024 Notes   56,543    (42,211)   14,332    59,425 
September 2024 Notes – related parties   8,750    (6,404)   2,346    8,880 
Subtotal September 2024 Notes   65,293    (48,615)   16,678    68,305 
September 2025 Notes   22,000    (18,646)   3,354    24,227 
Total  $140,266   $(88,528)  $51,738   $154,902 
   As of December 29, 2024 
   Principal
amount (1)
   Unamortized
debt
discount
and debt
issuance
costs
   Net
carrying
amount
excluding
capitalized
interest (1)
   Fair value 
12.0% senior unsecured convertible notes                
July 2024 Notes  $17,973   $(6,205)  $11,768   $21,390 
July 2024 Notes – related parties   28,000    (10,785)   17,215    33,323 
Subtotal July 2024 Notes   45,973    (16,990)   28,983    54,713 
                     
7.0% senior unsecured convertible notes                    
September 2024 Notes   71,800    (66,164)   5,636    77,245 
September 2024 Notes – related parties   8,000    (7,524)   476    8,583 
Subtotal September 2024 Notes   79,800    (73,688)   6,112    85,828 
Total  $125,773   $(90,678)  $35,095   $140,541 

 

(1) Excludes capitalized interest (coupon interest, default interest and failure to file interest) of $10.8 million and $13.6 million as of December 28, 2025 and December 29, 2024, respectively, included in the July 2024 Notes.