This ASX stock is halted after plunging nearly 18% in 2 sessions

A trading halt and planned raising have put Dateline shares back in focus.

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After a brutal two-day sell-off last week, shares in Dateline Resources Ltd (ASX: DTR) are frozen on Monday.

This comes as the market waits for details of a fresh capital raising.

The ASX granted the trading halt following the company's request for time to finalise the proposed funding announcement.

Dateline shares last traded at 45.5 cents, down 10.78% on Friday after already falling 8.11% in the prior session. That rapid pullback interrupted what has otherwise been a huge run in 2026, with the stock still sitting up more than 100% since the start of the year.

Trading is expected to resume by Wednesday morning unless the company releases the raising details sooner.

Here's what has triggered the halt.

A dollar sign embedded in ice, indicating a share price freeze or trading halt

Image source: Getty Images

Funding details now become the key focus

Today's ASX release confirms the halt is tied to a proposed material capital raising, with management using the pause to finalise terms.

At this stage, the company has not disclosed the size of the raising, the issue price, or whether existing shareholders will be able to participate.

Those details are now likely to determine the direction of the share price when trading resumes.

The biggest question for the market is how aggressively the new shares are priced relative to Friday's close of 45.5 cents.

A steep discount would raise the risk of short-term selling pressure, particularly after last week's significant decline.

That backdrop may also explain why the stock was already weakening into the halt, with some traders potentially anticipating a funding update.

The bigger picture behind the 2026 rally

Even with the latest sell-off, Dateline remains one of the ASX's strongest performers this year.

The stock is still up more than 100% in 2026, supported by growing market interest in its 100%-owned Colosseum Gold and Rare Earths Project in California.

That asset has become the central driver of the company's re-rating, particularly as investors look for exposure to US-based gold and strategic minerals projects.

Because of that, the market's reaction to the raising is likely to depend heavily on where the funds are going.

If the capital is directed toward drilling, resource upgrades, permitting, or development work at Colosseum, shareholders may be more willing to absorb the dilution.

The market has already shown it is willing to support the stock when there's clear progress at the project.

Foolish Takeaway

The trading halt has shifted the focus from last week's heavy selling to what Dateline announces next.

After falling nearly 18% across two sessions, attention now turns to the pricing and purpose of the raising. This will likely determine whether the recent weakness is temporary or the start of a broader downtrend.

Nonetheless, the stock is still holding onto triple-digit gains for 2026. That could help support sentiment if the new funds are directed towards further developing its flagship California project.

Motley Fool contributor Aaron Teboneras has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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