New York, Feb 1, 2026, 07:16 EST — Market closed
- Shares of Phoenix Asia Holdings Limited ended Friday at $133.12, surging nearly 997% from their previous close.
- Trading hit the brakes multiple times as Nasdaq’s limit up-limit down rules kicked in to curb volatility.
- Markets are closed for the weekend, leaving traders to monitor any company disclosures and see if Monday triggers follow-through or a quick reversal.
Phoenix Asia Holdings Limited (PHOE) closed Friday at $133.12, jumping $120.99 for the day and ranking among the top percentage gainers on U.S. exchanges. (Morningstar)
The stock kicked off the session at $12.35 and surged to a peak of $133.12, based on historical pricing data. Trading volume hit 55,580 shares, far exceeding the stock’s typical levels. (Yahoo Finance)
This matters now because the jump thrusts a thinly traded stock back into focus just ahead of February’s first session. Such a big move can attract momentum traders, push market makers to widen spreads, and increase the chances of trading halts once liquidity picks up.
The jump pushed the company’s market cap to roughly $2.9 billion by Friday’s close, despite average daily trading volumes lingering in the low thousands of shares. (Yahoo Finance)
Exchange data revealed that PHOE was halted at least once on Friday due to a “limit up-limit down” pause—an automatic measure triggered when a stock’s price swings too wildly, too quickly, to allow trading to stabilize and quotes to reset. Later in the session, a Refinitiv alert flagged another volatility pause. (NASDAQ Trader)
On Friday, the company didn’t offer any immediate explanation for the surge. The sharp move in the stock seemed driven by trading activity, with no new earnings report or deal news behind it.
Phoenix Asia, a Hong Kong contractor specializing in substructure tasks like site formation, ground investigation, and foundation work, went public on Nasdaq in 2025. The company priced its IPO shares at $4 each, according to company details. (Reuters)
The session saw sharp swings in several small-cap stocks, with Elong Power Holding and TechCreate Group standing out as top gainers, according to market data on Friday. (Investing.com Australia)
U.S. stocks closed lower on Friday, dragging broader markets down and leaving Phoenix Asia’s surge standing out as a mostly isolated move. The Nasdaq Composite dropped roughly 0.9%. (Investopedia)
The setup works both ways. A stock that can jump tenfold in a single day on light volume can just as easily plummet once buyers pull back, especially if trading halts disrupt attempts to sell and jump back in.
Monday’s U.S. open on Feb. 2 is next. Traders will be on the lookout for any company disclosures, follow-on exchange moves, and whether the stock can maintain its gains after the weekend pause and the order book refills.