- CLIK closed Oct 24 at about $6.21 on Nasdaq, then spiked to ~$11.47 (+84.7%) pre-market Oct 27.
- FY2025 revenue jumped 89.3% YoY to HK$83.5M; the nursing and logistics segments each grew >200%. The firm now reports ~23,200 registered professionals.
- Click expanded aggressively: it won a HK$21.6M (US$2.8M) three-year government postal contract (600K HK$/month, ~25% revenue boost) and signed an ESLS labor MOU with Chongqing Rongge Huida to import Mainland senior-care staff. It also became an accredited CCSV (elderly-care voucher) service provider in HK.
- Corporate action: a 1-for-30 share consolidation was approved (effective Oct 10) to meet Nasdaq rules, cutting the float from ~34.36M to ~1.145M shares. Post-split, CLIK’s market cap is only ~$6.6M.
- Stock outlook: Technical signals are mixed. TipRanks flags CLIK as a “Sell” (multiple moving averages bearish), while Investing.com notes 6 buy vs 6 sell signals (overall “Buy” bias). AI-driven forecasts also see weakness – one model labels CLIK a “Strong Sell” candidate given its downtrend.
Click Holdings Limited (NASDAQ: CLIK), a tiny Hong Kong HR and senior-care firm, made headlines with blockbuster results and bold growth initiatives. On Oct. 24 it reported FY2025 results (year to June 30, 2025) with revenue up 89.3% to HK$83.5 million. CEO Jeffrey Chan noted the surge was driven by >200% sales growth in both the nursing and logistics segments. The company’s registered talent base grew to ~23,200 professionals to meet booming demand, helped in part by joining the government’s elderly care voucher (CCSV) scheme. Despite the top-line jump, Click took a HK$7.9M net loss, largely due to a one-off HK$11.1M share-based comp charge and other expansion costs. Management emphasized these costs are “short-term” investments: Chan said the firm remains “optimistic about our business trajectory,” expecting that current expenditures will “lay a strong foundation” for growth and eventually drive “improved margins” and long-term profitability.
Click has been aggressive on M&A and partnerships. In April it completed buying the remaining 75% of a nursing-care competitor (it had taken an initial 25% stake in March). This deal doubled its talent pool to ~19,000 nurses. Chan called the acquisition “a transformative step” that unlocks synergies and cements Click’s leadership in home nursing services. Shortly after, in July Click won its first major public-sector contract: a 3‑year HK$21.6M agreement with a Hong Kong government-linked postal/courier company to staff airport‑area warehouse operations. The contract (≈HK$600K per month) is projected to drive 25% revenue growth for Click and provides a steady cash flow stream. Chan said the deal validates Click’s AI-powered staffing platform and “positions us to meet the evolving demands” of both government and private clients. The company’s AI platform already connects 300+ daily vacancies with freelancers (growing 40% YoY in size), and this contract gives it a reference customer in the public sector.
Other strategic moves include a July partnership with Chongqing Rongge Huida to recruit Mainland Chinese workers under Hong Kong’s Enhanced Supplementary Labour Scheme. This MOU targets 150+ high-demand roles (nursing, logistics, etc.) to ease Hong Kong labor shortages. Chan noted that Chongqing – “one of China’s most aged cities” – “presents immense opportunities for our senior care and HR solutions businesses”. Click also became an accredited CCSV elderly-care provider in mid-October, aiming to capture part of the HK$1.9B market for subsidized senior services. Management estimates the CCSV sector could contribute about 25% of Click’s revenue in two years. Notably, the Oct 14 release highlighted a partnership with an Asian tech firm to offer “24-hour instant device services” for seniors, whose costs will be fully covered by CCSV subsidies – demonstrating Click’s push into tech-enabled senior-care offerings.
Amid these announcements, CLIK’s share structure and price have been extremely volatile. The board approved a 1-for-30 share consolidation on Sept 11 (shareholder-approved April 14), effective Oct 10, to comply with Nasdaq’s $1 minimum bid rule. This cut the total float from ~34.36M shares to just ~1.145M (818,353 Class A and 327,047 Class B). The stock, which once traded above $100 in 2024, has been trading under $10 (pre-split). The recent rally took the post-split price from ~$6 to $11+ overnight. Nonetheless, analysts and models are divided. TipRanks’ latest technical scan shows all major moving averages bearish and rates CLIK a “Sell”. By contrast, Investing.com’s summary (weighted across various indicators) finds an even split of buy/sell signals but an overall neutral-to-positive bias. Quantitative forecasters are pessimistic: for example, Intellectia.ai’s model warns that CLIK has “negative signals” and is a Strong Sell candidate short-term. No Wall Street analysts have issued guidance, so there are no official price targets.
Outlook: Click Holdings is clearly executing an ambitious expansion strategy – from AI-driven senior-care staffing to cross-border recruitment and even a proposed $100M cryptocurrency treasury investment. These moves have driven exceptional revenue growth, and Chan emphasizes that economies of scale from this growth should improve margins over time. He noted that as “the only Nasdaq-listed company focused on senior nursing HR solutions in Hong Kong,” Click is well-positioned to capitalize on the aging population trend. However, the stock’s wild swings underscore the risks: tiny market capitalization (~US$6.6M), thin liquidity, and past Nasdaq compliance issues. Investors have to weigh the promise of Click’s silver-economy platform against its high volatility. For now, the market’s response is mixed – the share spike reflects excitement over the news, but analysts caution that CLIK remains a speculative, high-risk microcap.
Sources: Official company releases on Nasdaq and GlobeNewswire, supplemented by market data and technical summaries from Investing.com and TipRanks.


