New York, June 4, 2026, 11:12 EDT
Foxx Development Holdings Inc. surged more than 100% in early Nasdaq action Thursday, with shares making one of the morning’s biggest jumps among U.S. names. No fresh company news appeared to drive the move from the small consumer-electronics maker.
The stock last traded at $5.96, up $3.10 from where it settled Wednesday. Shares swung between $3.86 and $7.59 in the session. Volume crossed 58 million shares. The company’s market cap was about $42 million.
Foxx is in focus after several filings about its Nasdaq listing and changes in reported holdings. The stock is micro-cap, so big trades hit the price fast, more so when there aren’t many shareholders.
Quiver Quantitative’s PriceTracker said Thursday it didn’t see a new company-specific driver and called the trading action typical for “low-float” names. The firm pointed to a limited public share count and noted this move follows earlier Nasdaq-compliance news and ownership filing updates. Quiver Quantitative
Tech was mixed to weak, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq both down Thursday after Broadcom fell and hit chip stocks. The Dow was higher, helped by gains in healthcare, according to .
Other hardware and small device stocks stayed pretty muted. Wearable Devices Ltd slipped a bit. Socket Mobile Inc ticked up. The moves point to Foxx’s action being a company play, not a sector move.
Foxx said May 4 that Nasdaq told the company it is back in compliance with Listing Rule 5550(b)(2), which requires listed companies to have at least $35 million in market value. The exchange had notified Foxx in November 2025 that it fell below the rule for 30 straight days. Nasdaq said Foxx met the requirement for 15 days in a row from March 31 to April 21.
Ownership details are in focus too. A Schedule 13D/A filing shows Acri Capital Sponsor LLC, which Foxx Chair and CFO Joy Yi Hua controls, agreed on May 1 to move blocks of Foxx shares and warrants to a group of buyers. The warrants let holders buy shares under agreed terms.
BayRoad Holdings Ltd said it owns 3.18 million Foxx securities, or 33.43%, made up of 677,600 shares and 2.5 million warrants. In a filing, BayRoad said it holds the securities for investment only and considers itself a passive investor, with no present plans to seek control or major changes at the company.
Chief Technology Officer James Liao filed a June 1 Form 144 notice for a planned sale of 1,943 shares, worth $7,752 at market value. According to the filing, the shares were tied to a 2021 stock-award vesting. Liao reported no securities sales in the last three months.
Foxx is still facing pressure. In its May 20 quarterly update, Foxx said March-quarter revenue was $8.67 million, a drop from $11.39 million a year ago. Net loss widened to $36.27 million from $4.09 million for the same period last year.
Revenue dropped 12.3% to $45.61 million for the nine months ended March 31, with most of that coming from mobile-phone sales. The company blamed softer consumer spending and a slowdown in phone upgrades for the lower demand. It also took a $25.86 million impairment on leased warehouse assets after switching to a drop-ship model.
But the risk stands out: a thinly traded micro-cap that jumps can just as quickly fall if buyers disappear, major holders cash out, or the company’s financing pressures return. In its quarterly filing, Foxx flagged “substantial doubt” about staying in business over the next year. The company pointed to a $43.4 million net loss for nine months and a working-capital shortfall of around $24.9 million. Foxx also said it could turn to bank loans, private deals or an equity raise, moves that could dilute current shareholders. Securities and Exchange Commission
Foxx moves phones, tablets and other consumer electronics, and is working on Internet-of-Things devices. For traders Thursday, the stock was about volume, relief on its listing, and a setup where the ownership profile leaves room for sharp swings in a small cap.