Ion Video Converts $2.65M in Notes to Become Completely Debt Free

By Josua Ferreira -

ION Video eliminates all debt with $2.65 million convertible note conversion

ION Video Limited (ASX: IOV) has exercised its right to convert $2.65 million in convertible notes into fully paid shares, rendering the company completely debt free. The conversion was triggered on the first available conversion date under the notes’ terms, which were originally issued on 12 June 2025 and carried an interest rate of 20% per annum over a two-year maturity period. By converting at this point, ION eliminates a further 12 months of interest obligations that would otherwise have compounded against the business.

What the conversion means for ION’s balance sheet

Interest savings and dilution avoided

The conversion eliminates $708,883 in future interest obligations. Under the original terms of the convertible notes, that interest would have been capitalised into an additional 7.09 million shares issued to noteholders — a dilution outcome the early conversion now prevents.

Key transaction details are summarised below:

  • Convertible notes issued: 12 June 2025
  • Principal converted: $2.65 million
  • Interest rate: 20% per annum
  • Interest saving: $708,883
  • Additional shares avoided: 7.09 million
Metric Detail
Notes issuance date 12 June 2025
Principal converted $2.65 million
Interest rate 20% per annum
Interest saving achieved $708,883
Funded to (at current expenditure rates) April–June 2027

The conversion simplifies ION’s capital structure and strengthens the balance sheet by removing all outstanding debt obligations.

Runway and strategic focus

ION is now funded until at least April–June 2027 based on current expenditure rates. With no debt servicing costs to absorb, the company is positioned to concentrate fully on its commercialisation strategy.

The noteholders, Brent Jones and Anthony Baker, originally subscribed for the convertible notes as investors prior to any operational involvement with the company. Both have since assumed executive director roles, aligning their interests directly with ongoing business performance.

Understanding convertible notes and why debt-free status matters

Convertible notes are a hybrid financing instrument, sitting between debt and equity. Rather than being repaid in cash, the principal (and in some cases, accrued interest) converts into shares under agreed conditions. Companies often use them to access funding without immediately issuing new equity, deferring dilution until a conversion event is triggered.

For retail investors, the interest rate on a convertible note signals its cost to the issuing company. At 20% per annum, ION’s notes represented high-cost debt. Left to run their full term, that cost would have compounded through interest capitalisation, resulting in additional shares being issued beyond the original principal conversion — the 7.09 million shares that have now been avoided.

Debt-free status matters because it removes mandatory cash outflows, reduces financial drag on operations, and gives a company greater flexibility in how it allocates its resources. A cleaner balance sheet also tends to simplify investor assessment of a company’s financial health.

What comes next for ION Video

ION Video is an infrastructure company that has developed patented technology to virtualise video at the file architecture level, transforming static files into programmable data. The technology is protected by four foundational patents and enables intelligent systems to access and compose with existing video content as programmable data, without transcoding.

The debt elimination marks a meaningful structural milestone as the company turns its attention to commercialisation. ION enters this next phase with no outstanding obligations, a simplified capital structure, and a funded runway extending into mid-2027.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is a convertible note conversion in the context of ASX companies?

A convertible note conversion is when a company converts outstanding debt — including principal and sometimes accrued interest — into shares rather than repaying it in cash, eliminating the debt from the balance sheet and avoiding future interest obligations.

How much debt has ION Video eliminated through the convertible note conversion?

ION Video (ASX: IOV) has eliminated $2.65 million in principal debt by converting its convertible notes into fully paid shares, also saving $708,883 in future interest that would have otherwise been capitalised into an additional 7.09 million shares.

How long is ION Video funded for after becoming debt free?

Following the convertible note conversion, ION Video is funded until at least April–June 2027 based on its current expenditure rates, giving the company a runway of approximately two years to advance its commercialisation strategy.

Why does being debt free matter for a small ASX technology company like ION Video?

Debt-free status removes mandatory cash outflows, reduces financial drag on operations, and gives ION Video greater flexibility to allocate resources toward commercialisation rather than servicing a 20% per annum interest obligation.

Who were the noteholders in ION Video's convertible note arrangement?

The convertible notes were originally subscribed to by Brent Jones and Anthony Baker as investors before they assumed any operational role; both have since become executive directors of ION Video, directly aligning their financial interests with the company's ongoing performance.

Josua Ferreira
By Josua Ferreira
Partnership Director
Josua Ferreira holds a Bachelor of Commerce in Marketing and Advertising and brings a background in publication, business development, and ASX market storytelling. He has worked with listed companies across the resource sector and broader market, combining sharp commercial instincts with a genuine commitment to keeping investors informed.
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