New York, May 18, 2026, 04:04 EDT
- GCTS traded at $2.09 before the bell, gaining 14.21% after jumping 27.08% at the close on Friday.
- The company reported first-quarter revenue jumped 287.1%, with 5G chipset shipments rising 58% from the previous quarter.
- Financing is still a risk. GCT says it needs more capital and still carries heavy short-term debt.
GCT Semiconductor Holding shares climbed in early premarket trade Monday, adding to strong gains from Friday. Investors moved back into the small-cap 5G chipmaker after the company said commercial shipments are picking up.
NYSE-listed shares traded at $2.09 at 04:02 EDT, up 14.21% in premarket after finishing Friday at $1.83 for a 27.08% gain. Volume was 10.8 million shares. U.S. 500 futures were lower on Investing.com’s tape. Premarket covers trading before the main New York open at 9:30 a.m., and moves can happen on low volume.
Timing is key for GCT as it works to show that long-running 5G development work is finally leading to production revenue. GCT is a fabless semiconductor designer, relying on third parties to make its chips. Its market cap is still small, so any signs of customer orders can send the stock moving sharply.
Stocks hadn’t started trading on the NYSE at the time. May 18 does not appear as a holiday on the exchange’s 2026 schedule. The next full closure is set for Memorial Day, May 25, with normal hours from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET.
Last week’s update is still moving the stock. GCT posted first-quarter revenue up 287.1% at $1.9 million. Shipments of 5G chipsets jumped about 58% over the previous quarter to 3,000 units. CEO John Schlaefer said GCT is now in a “new phase defined by increasing customer shipments.” CFO Edmond Cheng called it a “meaningful step from last quarter.” Business Wire
The company’s numbers are still small. It reported a net loss of $9.9 million, or 15 cents per share, with operating loss at $6.1 million for the quarter. Revenue is rising, but it’s coming off a low base. That’s the awkward truth here.
Satellite is the other side of the deal. GCT said on May 7 it has signed a reference platform agreement with a major satellite communications provider, following its earlier 5G/4G chipset licensing deal. Schlaefer said the contract showed the partner trusts GCT’s “ability to deliver.” Business Wire
The environment remains competitive. Lisa Thompson at Zacks Small-Cap Research said in a May 14 note that Qualcomm “dominates the market” and called GCT “one of the few” alternate providers in some segments of telecom and IoT devices. Her note pointed to a peer table with bigger chip players like Qualcomm and MediaTek, showing the scale difference GCT faces.
Thompson says she sees GCT stock as “worth $4.40 per share” based on a model using expected 2027 revenue. The Zacks disclosure notes the report is sponsored and that Zacks SCR was paid by the company for services outside investment banking—something for investors to consider when looking at the note.
But the rally still runs into GCT’s balance sheet. The 10-Q showed $7.2 million cash and cash equivalents as of March 31, with $52.1 million in borrowings due in the next 12 months. GCT said it needs to generate positive cash flow, renegotiate its debt, or raise more money, and warned there’s no guarantee it can secure financing on acceptable terms.
Dilution is a risk here. Existing shareholders could end up with a smaller stake if GCT sells more shares. Between April 1 and May 11, GCT sold roughly 11.4 million shares through its at-the-market program, raising $17.8 million gross. The company still had about 27.2 million shares left it could sell with this program.
Monday’s focus is on whether the premarket gain sticks when the NYSE opens. The rest of the week, traders want to see 5G shipments climbing, satellite demand turning into real orders, and financing not killing the fresh momentum in the stock.