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.