Today: 11 June 2026
CCH Holdings (CCHH) jumps with Nasdaq $1 bid rule deadline close
11 June 2026
2 mins read

CCH Holdings (CCHH) jumps with Nasdaq $1 bid rule deadline close

New York, June 11, 2026, 07:02 (EDT)

  • CCH Holdings traded up 136.99% at $0.82 in premarket Thursday, well above its $0.346 finish on Wednesday, after landing on the list of top U.S. premarket gainers.
  • CCHH is still on notice from Nasdaq to maintain a $1.00 closing bid for 10 straight sessions ahead of its August 3 deadline.
  • No new overnight operating update turned up in the company’s latest SEC filing. The most recent Form 6-K detailed a May equity incentive plan — there was nothing on earnings or a business catalyst.

CCH Holdings Ltd. stock soared in early U.S. trade Thursday, making the little-known Malaysian hotpot chain one of the most speculative movers of the morning. CCHH changed hands at $0.82 as of 6:50 a.m. EDT, a jump of 136.99% from its June 10 close at $0.346. The shares had closed the previous regular session almost unchanged but saw volume top 28 million.

Investors are watching because the rebound moves CCHH closer to the $1 mark that Nasdaq flagged as a problem. CCH said back in February it got notice from Nasdaq after its ordinary shares stayed under the $1.00 minimum bid for 30 straight business days. The company said it has until August 3, 2026, to fix that by getting its closing bid up to at least $1.00 for 10 straight trading days. This minimum is about the closing bid, so a quick spike during the day doesn’t count.

CCHH shares took off after hours Wednesday, with StockAnalysis calling it the top after-hours winner at $1.12—up 223.64% from the $0.35 after-hours close reference. The move didn’t follow any new earnings release. On Thursday’s premarket, CCHH held a gain of 145.67% at $0.85, trading 29.25 million shares, making it the second biggest premarket gainer after Galaxy Payroll Group, according to StockAnalysis.

Volume spiked in CCHH. Average daily volume sits around 305,260 shares, but the last session saw about 28.77 million shares, according to Google Finance. The 52-week range for the stock is $0.30 to $15.38.

The most recent SEC filing ahead of the change was a Form 6-K submitted May 20. It said the board gave the green light to a 2026 Equity Incentive Plan, effective May 18. The plan aims to help the company hire and keep staff, while tying employees, directors, consultants and advisers to shareholders with equity-linked awards.

CCH doesn’t count as a big restaurant operator by U.S. standards. The company runs chicken hotpot and fish head hotpot spots in Malaysia, mainly under the Chicken Claypot House and Zi Wei Yuan names. Some are company owned, some are franchised.

Financials are painting a starker backdrop for the rally. CCH posted 2025 revenue of $9.59 million, up from $8.92 million in 2024, but reported a net loss of $2.68 million after net income of $913,401 the year before. Gross margin dropped to 19.3% from 27.0%. General and administrative costs climbed to $3.83 million.

Cash was under pressure. The company ended 2025 with $416,092 on hand, after burning $527,838 from operations and another $3.06 million on investing over the year. Management wrote in the annual report that new equity funding might dilute holders and that getting capital on good terms wasn’t guaranteed.

CCHH’s stock is still trading well under its IPO level. The company priced its Nasdaq debut at $4.00 per share in October 2025, making $5 million in gross proceeds under the CCHH symbol. The shares, after jumping to $0.82 in premarket action Thursday, held at roughly 79% below their IPO level.

Governance and dilution questions are hanging over the company. CCH rolled out a dual-class system in May, with Class B shares getting 50 votes per share and Class A just one. Its annual report showed Goh Kok Foong owning all 9.72 million Class B shares—giving him 94.14% of voting rights.

CCH’s March SEC filing points to more supply risk. The company agreed to sell as many as 18 million units to non-U.S. buyers at $0.20 per unit. Each unit is one ordinary share. CCH said the money would go to working capital and corporate costs. At the time, there were about 21.95 million shares out, so if all units are sold, the share count could jump sharply.

Thursday’s pop might just be a liquidity squeeze, not a shift in the fundamentals. Moves in after-hours often fade fast, and even if CCHH trades above $1 for a moment, it won’t fix the Nasdaq problem unless that price sticks at the close for 10 business days straight. CCHH still has to show it can push enough closing bids over $1 during the regular session before the August 3 compliance clock runs out.

Stock Market Today

  • Nifty and Sensex Drop Amid Oil Prices, AI Concerns, and U.S. Inflation Impact
    June 11, 2026, 7:50 AM EDT. Indian stock markets edged lower on June 11, 2026, as the Nifty 50 fell 0.23% to 23,161.60 and the BSE Sensex dropped 0.2% to 73,832.55. Losses in technology stocks deepened amid concerns over artificial intelligence (AI) disrupting India's traditional labor-based IT outsourcing model. Rising U.S. inflation, with consumer prices up 4.2% year-on-year in May, and surging oil prices due to Middle East tensions pressured investor sentiment. Brent crude fluctuated, hitting $92.57 per barrel, while the Indian rupee weakened to 95.6850 against the dollar. Despite short-term jitters, BlackRock said India remains attractive for long-term investors, citing its strong economic growth prospects around 6%-7%.

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