NEW YORK, June 5, 2026, 08:01 (EDT)
- SmartKem finished Thursday at $0.3200, gaining 11.5%. The stock was last quoted at $0.5753 before the open early Friday.
- The move happened without any new company release in the past two trading sessions. The most recent post on SmartKem’s press-release page was from Feb. 6.
- Nasdaq’s listing rules stay in play as the share price holds under $1, raising talk of a reverse split.
SmartKem shares rose in U.S. premarket trading Friday, pushing higher after a strong run. The Nasdaq-listed advanced-materials stock had seen heavy turnover in the previous session, with traders still piling in.
The stock finished Thursday at $0.3200, up 11.5%. About 34.6 million shares changed hands. Early Friday, it was quoted at $0.5753 before the bell, almost 80% above where it closed Thursday, according to market data.
This is important because the main Nasdaq session was still closed. Nasdaq’s website says the main market hours run 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern, with premarket trading from 4 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. It also cautions that extended-hours trading often comes with higher volatility and lower liquidity, which can push prices around more.
No clear new catalyst for SmartKem. The company’s IR page still showed its most recent press release as the Feb. 6 debt-conversion deal. SEC filings included a quarterly report from May 20, an April 29 current report and a proxy from May 18.
SmartKem’s stock is trading under $1, and that’s more than just an optics issue. In a March prospectus supplement, the company said Nasdaq told it that it was out of compliance with the $1 minimum bid price rule. SmartKem has until Sept. 1, 2026 to fix this. To get back in line, shares have to close at or above $1 for at least 10 business days in a row.
Investors are set to vote at the virtual annual meeting on June 23 on proposals to boost authorized common shares to 5 billion, approve up to two reverse stock splits, and allow issuance of shares below the Nasdaq minimum price. A reverse split cuts the number of shares outstanding and pushes the share price higher, but the company’s overall value stays the same.
SmartKem calls itself an advanced-materials company and says its TRUFLEX semiconductor polymers are meant for low-temperature printing in displays, sensors, logic, and packaging for advanced computer and AI chips. The company reports 141 granted patents, 15 more pending, and 40 codified trade secrets.
SmartKem is still in early days financially. The March-quarter numbers showed revenue at $20,000 and a net loss of $19.4 million. The company held $7.6 million in cash at the quarter’s end and used $1.6 million in operating cash. SmartKem said that’s not enough to cover spending and expenses for the next 12 months from when the financial statement was issued.
SmartKem is looking to move past display materials. In February, it signed a non-binding letter of intent to buy Carbonium Core, a U.S. company focused on nuclear-grade graphite. CEO Ian Jenks called nuclear-grade graphite “a strategically critical market.” Carbonium Core CEO Suren Ajjarapu said the materials “can be engineered domestically.” Smartkem, Inc.
Short interest at SmartKem didn’t match the jump in the share price Thursday. According to MarketBeat, 2.36% of SmartKem’s float was sold short as of May 15. That compared with 0.25% for SemiLEDS and 8.07% for Peraso in the same sector group.
But the risks are clear. A low-priced, thinly traded stock like this can drop quickly, especially in premarket hours. SmartKem has already said it might need more funding, and more equity could dilute shareholders. Its proxy adds there’s no guarantee a reverse split would boost the stock high enough, or for long enough, to hit Nasdaq rules.
Traders are watching to see if the premarket bid holds up when the market opens at 9:30 a.m. and if volume stays heavy once regular trading gets going. For long-term holders, the key issues are still funding, Nasdaq compliance and whether SmartKem can make its materials platform into a real business, not just what happens on the tape this morning.