New York, April 27, 2026, 14:06 (EDT)
- High-Trend International Group (Nasdaq) soared 233.46% to $37.5147 as of 13:59:15 EDT. Volume exploded: 10.09 million shares traded, eclipsing the three-month daily average of just 186,840.
- The company announced on April 22 plans to broaden its reach in lithium resources transportation, projecting that spodumene-linked shipments will double in 2026 from the previous year.
- Investors are also staring down a May 7 vote, with proposals on the table to overhaul High-Trend’s capital structure and boost Class B voting rights.
High-Trend International Group shares surged over threefold on the Nasdaq Monday, putting the Singaporean ocean shipping firm among the biggest gainers stateside after it announced plans to ramp up lithium-related transport.
This rally isn’t just big—it’s coming with serious volume. HTCO last traded at $37.5147, up $26.2647 according to Investing.com, with shares moving between $12.51 and $38.59 for the session. Volume spiked to 10.09 million shares, blowing past the three-month average of 186,840.
Dry-bulk shipping rates are holding strong. On April 27, the Baltic Dry Index — tracked as a key barometer for sea freight costs on major raw materials — climbed to 2,666 points, up 32.18% in the last month, figures from Trading Economics show. That backdrop gives shipping stocks a straightforward macro narrative, though some thinly traded names can still swing wildly past what the fundamentals suggest.
High-Trend last week flagged lithium resources transportation as a new pillar of its strategy, aiming to boost both its cargo profile and earnings stability. For 2026, the company reported twice as many lithium-related voyages versus 2025, singling out spodumene — a mineral rich in lithium — as a top priority.
No fresh earnings came out Monday. The most recent annual report puts fiscal 2025 revenue at $214.4 million—almost entirely from ocean freight—up sharply from $108.2 million the previous year. For the twelve months ending Oct. 31, 2025, net loss still came in at roughly $20.1 million.
Back in March, Chief Executive Shixuan He called the Baltic Dry Index’s climb “extremely favorable” for the company’s dry-bulk segment, citing routes like Australia-Asia, Indonesia-Southeast Asia, Vietnam, and West Africa. PR Newswire
High-Trend is still tiny compared to the main players in dry-bulk shipping. Star Bulk operates 145 bulk carriers—making it one of the largest dry-bulk outfits on Nasdaq. Genco Shipping & Trading, which runs 43 ships around the globe, bills itself as the top U.S.-headquartered drybulk firm.
High-Trend’s lithium cargo initiative comes off as a niche bet rather than a volume game. Instead of following the bigger players who haul iron ore, coal, grain, bauxite and the rest, the company is hitching its shipping fortunes to battery minerals.
Governance clouds hang over the company. On May 7, Class A shareholders are set to vote on a proposal that would bump Class B voting power to 100 votes per share, up from the current 20. Separately, an extraordinary general meeting will decide whether to boost authorized share capital to $5.28 million, carved into 2 billion Class A shares and 110.1 million Class B shares.
The board wants approval for potential Class A share reverse splits, with the scope reaching as much as a 1000-for-1 ratio within two years. Moves like this can address listing requirements or capital structure headaches. Still, the request highlights just how unsettled the share count and possible dilution remain.
Investors may be getting ahead of themselves—Monday’s rally comes before anything is locked in. In its April 22 statement, High-Trend flagged that longer-term lithium transport deals still hinge on market feasibility, cautioning that real outcomes might diverge sharply from its forward-looking statements.