NEW YORK, December 31, 2025, 05:22 ET — Premarket
- Direct Digital Holdings shares were up about 35% in premarket trading.
- The company’s latest SEC filing said its special meeting was adjourned for lack of quorum, then updated the reconvened meeting date.
- Investors are focused on a pending vote that includes a potential reverse stock split and share-issuance proposals tied to Nasdaq rules.
Direct Digital Holdings, Inc. (DRCT) shares rose about 35% in premarket trading on Wednesday, changing hands at roughly $0.082. Google
The move followed the company’s disclosure that its Dec. 26 special stockholder meeting was adjourned after it failed to reach a quorum — enough votes present to conduct business — and that an amended filing corrected the reconvened meeting date to Dec. 30 from Jan. 2 stated in the original report. SEC+1
The timing matters because investors are watching a shareholder vote that would give the board authority to carry out a reverse stock split — a share consolidation intended to lift the stock price — and to approve large potential stock issuances under Nasdaq rules, according to the company’s proxy materials. “You are urged to submit your proxy as soon as possible,” corporate secretary Diana P. Diaz wrote in the notice to stockholders. SEC
In those proxy materials, Direct Digital said it faces a Nasdaq minimum bid-price requirement of $1 and that a Nasdaq hearings panel granted the company until Jan. 30, 2026 to demonstrate compliance. SEC
A reverse stock split does not change a company’s underlying value by itself — it reduces the number of shares outstanding while increasing the per-share price proportionally — but it can help a stock meet exchange listing rules.
Failure to regain compliance can raise delisting risk, which can push a stock onto less liquid markets and make financing more expensive.
The proposals up for vote include authorization for one or more reverse splits at a board-selected ratio and approvals tied to Nasdaq Listing Rule 5635(d), which generally requires shareholder approval when a listed company plans to issue a large block of shares in a non-public deal at a discount.
Share-issuance approvals are closely watched because they can dilute existing shareholders — meaning each share represents a smaller slice of the company — even if they also provide additional funding flexibility.
Direct Digital, which operates in the ad-tech market, has traded at penny-stock levels, where small absolute price moves can translate into big percentage swings.
Traders will look for any follow-up disclosure on whether the reconvened meeting achieved a quorum and whether stockholders approved the proposals outlined in the proxy materials.
Investors will also focus on next steps if the reverse split proposal clears, including the board’s choice of ratio and timing, and whether the company can sustain a post-split price above Nasdaq’s $1 threshold for the required period.


