New York, June 10, 2026, 15:02 ET
- Shares of Pop Culture Group on the Nasdaq changed hands at about $1.72 in the afternoon, climbing from a close of $0.36. The stock earlier hit an intraday peak of $2.55.
- Pop Culture Group reported half-year revenue at $68.9 million, a 65% jump from last year. Digital entertainment contributed almost all of it.
- Trading stayed rough, with Cboe’s halt feed logging several Nasdaq volatility pauses during the day.
Pop Culture Group Co., Ltd. shares jumped Wednesday as traders piled in after the company posted unaudited half-year numbers. The stock was recently at $1.72, up around 378% from $0.36 the day before. Volume cleared 244 million shares. The session range ran from about $0.31 to $2.55.
Pop Culture’s filing and earnings out on June 10 got things moving. For the six months ended December 31, 2025, the company put up net revenue of $68.9 million versus $41.8 million a year ago. Operating income jumped to $6.58 million from $2.72 million.
Digital entertainment drove the story. That unit’s revenue jumped 79% to $66.57 million, making up nearly 97% of total revenue. The rise is turning investor attention away from Pop Culture’s live-event past and toward its growing digital services segment.
Live entertainment revenue is dropping out as a main story driver here. Revenue from that segment dropped 63% to $1.68 million. The company’s management blamed the end of the post-pandemic “revenge consumption” trend and said consumers are choosier now, spending more on top-tier intellectual property or well-known branded shows, artists, or characters. SEC
Pop Culture’s top line went up, but costs didn’t stay quiet. Cost of revenue jumped 67% to $67.06 million, moving ahead of sales growth. That drove gross margin down to 3% from 4%. Gross margin is what’s left after direct costs. For Pop Culture, these latest numbers show the digital segment is still running on tight margins.
Profit quality was uneven. Operating profit was higher, but the filing revealed a major negative credit-loss allowance, lifted by collections and reversals on receivables. Net profit to shareholders dropped to $0.20 million from $2.56 million after a rise in other expenses, with losses from invested securities and digital assets.
Bitcoin move stirs Pop Culture’s results. The company put $33 million into Bitcoin, picking up 300 BTC in the half. As Bitcoin dropped, Pop Culture logged an impairment. That crypto piece now ties the stock more to price swings in digital assets, making earnings more exposed to how those markets move.
CPOP was hit with a string of volatility pauses starting at 9:30:58 a.m. ET and running much of the afternoon, according to Cboe’s halt feed. The trading was as wild as the earnings swing. A volatility pause is a temporary halt triggered by a sharp price move in a short period; Nasdaq says the pause threshold is based on price swings over a rolling five-minute stretch.
Cash flow is a concern for investors here. Pop Culture reported $6.45 million in combined cash, term deposits, and short-term investments at December’s end, and working capital of $29.23 million. But it burned $1.32 million of cash from operations, and another $31.79 million went out the door from investing—most of that tied to its Bitcoin buy. The company brought in $34.98 million from financing, mainly via selling shares.
Wednesday’s rally could be outpacing the business. Digital entertainment is expanding fast, but with thin margins. Live events are still struggling. Pop Culture can take a hit on the income statement if Bitcoin drops. Share dilution is a risk with more stock sales possible. Pop Culture has a shelf registration in place that could let it sell up to $500 million in securities later on, subject to float limits under $75 million. In May, shareholders signed off on a 10-for-1 share consolidation and a big bump in authorized capital.
Pop Culture faces another test as investors look past December 31 to see if the digital entertainment boom will last. The stock moved sharply in one day, with traders now waiting on the next filing to see if revenue growth leads to better margins, more cash, and lower reliance on raising capital or swings tied to Bitcoin gains and losses.