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Antelope Enterprise Stock Jumps Again as Bitcoin Gain and Buyback Put AEHL in Focus
13 May 2026
2 mins read

Antelope Enterprise Stock Jumps Again as Bitcoin Gain and Buyback Put AEHL in Focus

New York, May 13, 2026, 08:02 ET

• Shares of Antelope Enterprise Holdings (Nasdaq: AEHL) ended Tuesday at $2.11, climbing 47.55% after soaring 135.34% last Friday. Investing.com
• The company booked $190,000 in gains through its Bitcoin-centric “Genius Plan” and signed off on a $95,000 buyback program. GlobeNewswire
• In a filing dated May 11, Streeterville Capital LLC, Streeterville Management LLC, and John M. Fife disclosed holding zero AEHL Class A ordinary shares. Securities and Exchange Commission

Antelope Enterprise Holdings Limited shares drew attention again this day, rebounding with a brisk three-day surge. Traders sized up a modest Bitcoin trading profit, a new buyback plan, and the latest ownership disclosure tied to Streeterville Capital.

Shares finished Tuesday at $2.11, marking a 47.55% jump after Monday’s 19.17% rise and Friday’s massive 135.34% surge. Volume hit nearly 49.8 million shares, a striking spike in activity for a micro-cap name.

This move is notable for Antelope, which is shifting focus to digital assets and energy infrastructure—yet it still runs livestream e-commerce and consulting out of China. At the last available quote, the company’s market cap hovered near $14.5 million. With a number that small, even minor capital allocation news can jolt the stock.

On May 8, Antelope reported $190,000 in realized gains tied to its “Genius Plan” Bitcoin treasury effort, which rolled out earlier this year. The board signed off on using $95,000—half of those profits—to buy back ordinary shares in the open market, starting June 6. GlobeNewswire

Chief Executive Tingting Zhang called the “Genius Plan” a success in the company’s release. Zhang also said 90% of the proceeds from the just-approved $200 million shelf registration will go toward additional investment in the plan. GlobeNewswire

A shelf registration gives a company room to file securities with regulators now and sell them down the line, often via follow-on offerings if the market’s right. The SEC signed off on Antelope’s F-3 registration on May 5, clearing the way for up to $200 million in Class A shares, preferred stock, debt, warrants, rights, or units.

Streeterville has resurfaced in the filings. According to a Schedule 13G/A — that’s an amended passive ownership disclosure — Streeterville Capital LLC, Streeterville Management LLC, and John M. Fife all listed zero shares and no ownership in Antelope’s Class A ordinary shares as of May 11.

It’s a notable detail: Antelope’s F-3 filing shows a securities purchase pact with Streeterville Capital, inked July 2025, putting $50 million on the table over two years. Proceeds? Solely for Bitcoin. The same document also confirms Antelope grabbed $1 million worth of Bitcoin at $68,300 per coin on Feb. 25.

Antelope barely registers next to Strategy Inc—the company once known as MicroStrategy—which reported 818,334 Bitcoin on its books as of May 3. Strategy’s $11.68 billion in year-to-date fundraising highlights just how far smaller players like Antelope lag behind the sector’s giants.

The risks are clear enough. Antelope’s F-3 filing flagged the possibility of selling securities periodically, cautioning investors that issuing more shares, equity, or debt might dilute their holdings. It also put the total market value of non-affiliate Class A shares at roughly $2.5 million, using the April 9 close of $1.16 as its reference.

Pressure continues to weigh on the operating business. Antelope’s transition report put livestream e-commerce revenue at $60.6 million for the nine months through Sept. 30, 2025—a 14.5% drop. Net loss attributable to equity holders from continuing operations increased, coming in at $10.8 million, up from $8.5 million a year ago.

Antelope, which runs its China operations via its 51%-owned Hainan Kylin subsidiary, says it offers business management and information systems consulting. The company is eyeing a third-quarter 2026 launch for an energy supply venture under AEHL US—part of that plan is supplying power to a Midland, Texas data center.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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