NEW YORK, June 23, 2026, 15:05 EDT
Focus Universal Inc. (FCUV) shares were up in choppy trading on Nasdaq Tuesday as a 4-for-1 reverse stock split hit the tape, slashing the number of shares and sending volume higher.
The stock last changed hands at $4.39 right before 3 p.m. EDT. Shares opened at $2.18 and hit a high of $6.76, with a low at the open. Market data showed 74.6 million shares traded.
Focus is splitting its stock to meet Nasdaq’s $1 minimum bid rule, not because of new earnings. In a June 18 filing, Focus said the split was to stay listed on Nasdaq, which requires a stock’s bid to remain above one dollar.
A reverse stock split folds shares together, raising the price per share without changing the company’s operating value. Nasdaq Trader said the one-for-four split took effect June 23, changing the stock’s CUSIP to 34417J609.
Focus told investors it will do a 1-for-4 reverse split, combining every four shares into one, with cash paid out for fractions. The company said it had about 2.81 million shares out as of May 13, and that would leave around 702,811 shares after the split, pending minor changes for handling fractions.
QQQ lost 3.3% just before 3 p.m., taking a bigger hit than most as tech stocks slumped. IWM, which tracks the Russell 2000, dropped 1.0%.
Focus is talking up its deterministic AI platform, pitching it as software that always gives the same result for the same input. The company says its system is built for compliance work like SEC filing prep, EDGAR formatting, and XBRL tagging—those are the machine-readable tags seen in public-company filings.
Focus Universal CEO Dr. Desheng Wang called the approach “execution rather than content generation” in a June 19 statement. The company named SEC reporting as one use, but there were no product revenue numbers in the release. Focus Universal Inc.
Focus is moving into a busy space. Workiva sells SEC and EDGAR filing tools for reports like 10-Ks, 10-Qs, and 8-Ks. Broadridge has regulatory reporting software that deals with EDGAR and XBRL.
Financials are still light. Focus posted $47,973 in first-quarter revenue, slipping from $190,255 last year. Net loss hit $1.25 million. Operating expenses were $1.29 million.
Focus Universal Inc. shares got a boost Tuesday, but questions remain if the gains will last. In its latest quarterly filing, Focus flagged recurring net losses, negative cash flow from operations, and an accumulated deficit, saying those issues raise “substantial doubt” about its ability to keep going. At the end of March, the company reported $6.02 million in cash equivalents and short-term investments. Focus Universal Inc.
Traders are watching to see if the split reset lets Focus put up numbers with its SEC-reporting AI effort. Shares tell one story. Operational results remain thin.