New York, June 10, 2026, 11:01 EDT
- DSY surged Wednesday, trading between $6.53 and $19.90 intraday after finishing Tuesday at $1.84.
- June 29 is the main date here, when a Nasdaq deadline on minimum market value hits. There’s no new earnings release or deal at the company this time.
- Big Tree Cloud’s small post-split share count and AI shift have stoked speculation. Still, the company’s latest interim results showed revenue down and a net loss.
Big Tree Cloud Holdings Limited shares surged Wednesday, putting DSY back on the radar for retail traders after finishing at $1.84 on Tuesday. By 10:50:50 a.m. EDT, Nasdaq-listed DSY was trading at $11.76, showing a 539.14% gain, with the session’s range between $6.53 and $19.90, according to Google Finance. Investors are watching closely because the rally comes right before a Nasdaq compliance deadline tied to market value. The day’s closing price has become critical.
Micro-cap action got wild. Google Finance put volume at 73.41 million shares. Normal volume is just 21,480. So, Wednesday ran thousands of times the usual trading. Shares kicked off at $9.58, much higher than Tuesday’s close, then whipsawed all morning.
No clear company news turned up in the latest official releases to justify a move that large. On its investor-relations page, Big Tree Cloud’s most recent press release dated April 8 covered the transfer of its listing from Nasdaq Global Market to Nasdaq Capital Market. The May 7 Form 6-K detailed Xiaoxuan Zhu stepping down as co-CEO and director for personal reasons; the company reported there was no dispute over operations, policy, or financial reporting.
The January Nasdaq notices are back in focus. Big Tree Cloud said Nasdaq found its Market Value of Listed Securities had dropped under the $50 million minimum. Nasdaq also flagged the Market Value of Publicly Held Shares as below the $15 million mark, which measures shares held by public holders instead of insiders. The company has until June 29, 2026 to fix the shortfalls, with both metrics needing to close at or above the cutoffs for 10 business days in a row.
Wednesday’s rally stands out because only consistent closes, not just a one-day jump, matter under the company’s Nasdaq schedule. A higher share price can push market value up, but what counts for compliance are steady closing prices. According to the company, the notices haven’t changed its listing or trading right now. The next set checkpoint is still June 29.
Volatility picked up after Big Tree Cloud went through a 1-for-20 reverse split earlier this year. The company said shareholders approved rolling every 20 ordinary shares into one and set up a dual-class stock structure. After that, 1,251,873 shares were marked as Class A ordinary shares. Ploutos Group Limited’s 3.5 million shares became Class B shares. A smaller float can mean sharper swings if buyers pile in.
Speculators have an AI angle in play, too. In February, Big Tree Cloud said its AI arm landed first B2B technical-service deals totaling about RMB 4.5 million ($620,000), covering platform development for enterprise customers. “We will continue to invest in both enterprise and individual AI businesses,” Chairman Wenquan Zhu said then, linking the company’s older personal care focus with its push into tech. InvestorRoom
Big Tree Cloud’s price action looks out of step with the fundamentals. The company posted net revenue of $504,145 for the six months ended Dec. 31, 2025, according to an April 3 SEC filing, down from $1.04 million a year before. Net loss came in at $2.04 million, flipping from net income of $1.88 million for the same period last year. The company reported $4.50 million in cash and cash equivalents at year end.
The gap between market hype and actual business size is a key risk here. A run-up on deadline stress, a tight float and retail action can swing the other way if buyers pull back, if market cap doesn’t meet Nasdaq’s rules, or if investors think the AI contracts aren’t big enough for the stock’s new price. The company has flagged that forward-looking statements carry risk, pointing to its need to keep Nasdaq listing and grow in AI.
Big Tree Cloud isn’t just about AI. The company still shows its main focus as China’s personal-care industry, though recent statements talk up a push into AI, looking to tap demand for AI skills. That mix is front and center: Wednesday’s action trades on hopes for a turnaround, layered over a business that just posted a drop in interim revenue.
DSY’s next hurdle isn’t taking out Wednesday’s intraday high. The question is whether the stock can hang on to enough value at the close each day to meet Nasdaq rules before June 29. So far, DSY has made its compliance battle into one of the louder micro-cap stories on the market.