New York, June 8, 2026, 14:01 (EDT)
- Inno Holdings shares closed at $20.97, rising about twenty times. Volume came in at 268.4 million shares.
- The company said it signed a $3 million deal to build an AI sales agent that targets used mobile phones.
- Investors are still watching the $60 million at-the-market stock program and the going-concern warning in filings as key risks.
Shares of Inno Holdings Inc. jumped in afternoon trading Monday, after it said it signed a $3 million deal with a Hong Kong AI provider to develop a sales-agent platform for its used mobile phones unit. INHD was changing hands at $20.97 just before 1:45 p.m. EDT, up about 20 times its previous close. The stock opened at $1.11.
It’s a significant contract for Inno, which had $931,911 in revenue for the March 31 quarter—all from electronic-products trading. The net loss was $1.08 million in the same period. The contract headline stands out versus Inno’s recent base.
Inno says the project hasn’t launched commercially. The provider is tasked with building systems for converting sales leads, automating customer acquisition, and using AI tools for product recommendations and data, according to the company. Here, AI refers to software sorting leads, suggesting products, and helping with pricing or sales calls.
The used mobile phone market is at a pivotal turning point, Chief Executive Ding Wei said. Inno looks to outside developers to help ramp up sales agent deployment and push improvements in pricing and transaction speed.
Inno calls itself a Texas holding company with most of its business in Hong Kong. The latest quarterly filing lists $31.9 million in cash and equivalents at March 31, boosted by equity financings. Still, the filing points to recurring losses and negative cash flow. Inno said there is substantial doubt about its ability to keep operating as a going concern — accounting language that means it may need new funding or stronger cash flow to stay in business.
The stock hit a low of $1.00 and traded up to $20.97 in the session, market data showed. That action comes after a 1-for-20 reverse split on May 4, which merged every 20 shares into one but kept the ticker at INHD.
Another point is new financing capacity. Inno said in its May SEC filing it may sell up to $60 million in common stock using an at-the-market program through Aegis Capital. That setup allows the company to sell shares in the open market over time, possibly diluting current holders.
The used-device market has players. ATRenew Inc., a bigger rival listed in New York and focused on pre-owned electronics, posted first-quarter net revenue of RMB6.16 billion ($893.0 million), with 10.8 million consumer products sold. CEO Kerry Xuefeng Chen said the company taps AI to “offer better prices.” That lines up with Inno’s strategy and shows where the industry is headed. PR Newswire
Broad risk-on tone lifted markets. Wall Street moved higher Monday as chip names bounced, with the Nasdaq Composite climbing 1.76% at 11:25 a.m. ET. Adam Sarhan, CEO at 50 Park Investments, told Reuters, “AI and technology remain the strongest and fastest-growing segments of the economy.” Reuters
The rally is built on a project that’s still early and hasn’t launched commercially. Inno said timing, scope, and the final effect will depend on tests and reviews. In the March-quarter filing, the company said it had three customers for all of its revenue that quarter. Two suppliers accounted for every purchase.
Traders are waiting for filings that might mention the AI provider or lay out a rollout schedule, or say if Inno has sold shares during the rally. For now, there’s a deal, the stock moved sharply, but not much to show yet that the new system will impact earnings.