The ability of shareholders to find buyers; or buyers to sellers; such as with a public exchange is independent of whether a business is a going concern and can pay its bills.
Some businesses volunteer to delist when their shareholders are not actively using the public listing; and the company doesn’t want the expense anymore.
They are still public companies, still having ASIC requirements of a public company, but are a non-listed public company.
ASIC provides a mechanism for non-listed public companies with “low volume market” regulations.
If a company is disqualified from LVM rules, then I guess they need to list again. If not the ASX, then there is the smaller NSX.
Or perhaps it relists in a diff country.
Through all these permutations a share is a share of a running business that might be marking internal profits and/or distributing dividends to shareholders.
This is my understanding of the universe on this topic.
XPD Price at posting:
3.3¢ Sentiment: Buy Disclosure: Held