New York, June 10, 2026, 06:07 EDT
- HKIT slumped 13.25% to finish Tuesday at $0.273. The stock was indicated near $0.428 in premarket action Wednesday.
- Trading picked up Tuesday as 62.83 million shares changed hands, way over Google Finance’s average volume reading of 10.47 million shares.
- The key problem for the stock is its capital structure. The company just did an $8 million registered direct offering, which comes with warrants that risk major dilution.
Hitek Global Inc. shares jumped in premarket action Wednesday after falling on Tuesday, with HKIT showing a strong early gain after closing at $0.273, down 13.25%. The stock was quoted around $0.428 as of 5:51 a.m. EDT. Traders weren’t reacting to earnings, but are moving on the Nasdaq microcap after last week’s financing deal, two recent reverse splits and big volume.
Tuesday’s trading in HKIT stood out. Google Finance showed the stock finished at $0.27 on June 9 after moving between $0.26 and $0.33 for the day. Volume was 62.83 million shares, much heavier than the 10.47 million average. That much trading can move prices fast in smaller names, particularly when new financing changes the float.
Hitek’s shares drew attention today after the company said it closed an $8 million registered direct offering on June 3. In a registered direct offering, a company sells securities straight to chosen investors under an existing registration statement. Hitek said its sale was under a June 3 prospectus supplement related to its Form F-3 shelf registration.
Stock moves react to the terms. Hitek’s prospectus supplement lists 170,000 Class A ordinary shares, plus 3.83 million Class A shares linked to pre-funded warrants, and up to 15.15 million more shares that may come from 4 million ordinary warrants. Warrants are contracts that could allow holders to get or buy shares later, depending on the terms.
The company set the price for Class A ordinary shares at $2.00 apiece. Pre-funded warrants went at $1.985, which is the share price less a $0.015 exercise fee. Buyers picked up one ordinary warrant for every share or pre-funded warrant, with no extra cost for the warrant.
The dilution question would usually come up here. Hitek went further. Its ordinary warrants have a “zero price exercise” feature. That lets holders possibly get shares without paying the usual cash exercise price, if the stock hits certain prices. The company said it doesn’t expect to get cash from those exercises, since holders will probably use the zero-price route if the conditions are right.
Hitek said issuing these securities, with shares that might be issued at zero price due to the warrant feature, could heavily dilute current holders. The company also flagged that a big sale of its Class A ordinary shares—or even just the idea that such a sale could happen—might drag down the share price and make it harder to raise funds going forward.
The early move higher in premarket trading doesn’t signal real confidence in the business. More likely, it’s traders reacting to swings in a stock that dropped well below the $2.00 offering price and still faces possible changes to its capital structure. That kind of price gap attracts short-term action. Still, longer-term holders are left watching to see how many new shares end up getting issued.
Reverse splits are piling up for Hitek. The company revealed in a May 26 SEC filing that it finished a 1-for-50 reverse split on April 6. It then signed off on another reverse split, this one at 1-for-3, set for May 29. In a reverse split, shares are bundled into fewer units, often pushing up the trading price but leaving the company’s actual value the same.
Nasdaq has confirmed that the 1-for-3 reverse split and the par value shift to $0.015 took effect May 29, with a new CUSIP assigned. The company had earlier rolled out a 50-for-1 share consolidation to stay above Nasdaq’s minimum bid.
Hitek is a small operator. The company posted 2025 fiscal year revenue of about $6.5 million in April, more than double the $2.9 million reported for 2024. Sales to petrochemical firms for select safety monitoring gear fueled the gain. Net income came in at $180,142. Last year, Hitek reported a net loss of $896,690. Cash on hand dropped to $3.6 million from $7.2 million.
Premarket gains could be short-lived if traders go back to looking at dilution risks, warrant exercises or Nasdaq rules. Hitek said the Nasdaq Capital Market wants its listed Class A ordinary shares to keep an average close over $1.00 for 30 straight business days, warning that missing the standard could trigger delisting. On the other hand, the $8 million raise brings in fresh gross proceeds, but adds the risk of a bigger share count.
All eyes now on the regular-session open. The question is whether HKIT’s premarket bounce lasts and the stock returns toward the $1 Nasdaq level, or if traders stay focused on the warrant structure instead.