NEW YORK, June 26, 2026, 08:03 (EDT)
- INLIF showed a pre-market indication at $0.055 after finishing Thursday at $0.030. Google Finance showed volume at 1.06 billion, with shares outstanding at 13.02 million.
- That’s nearly 81 times the listed Class A share count traded.
- The stock is still well under Nasdaq’s $1 minimum, even after the 1-for-16 reverse split less than three months ago.
INLIF Limited (NASDAQ:INLF) surged in pre-market action Friday, with volume topping a billion shares. At Thursday’s close, Google Finance put the company’s value at just $412,120.
The China-based industrial automation group finished Thursday at 3 cents, off 24.62%. In early pre-market, the stock was quoted at 5.5 cents. According to Google Finance, trading hit 1.06 billion shares on the day, with 13.02 million shares outstanding. The 52-week range showed a low at 3 cents and a high at $23.00.
Turnover hit roughly 81 times the listed share count. This isn’t float turnover, and a share can change hands multiple times in a day, but the ratio stands out. It suggests the stock moved fast between traders instead of just reacting to one headline with buy-and-hold trades.
Nasdaq’s regular session wasn’t open when published. Nasdaq says regular hours run 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET, with pre-market trading starting at 4:00 a.m. June 26 is not a Nasdaq holiday for 2026, according to the official list.
INLF traded at $0.0577 before the open, according to MarketWatch, up 92.33% as of 7:14 a.m. EDT. Pre-market volume hit 783.77 million shares. MarketWatch said Thursday’s volume reached 234.42 million, or about 12 times the 65-day average of 18.78 million.
Price action looks off against INLIF’s last capital-structure move. On March 31, INLIF said it approved a 1-for-16 share combo, set for April 6, aiming to keep up with Nasdaq rules. That same release put post-split Class A shares at 13,025,000.
INLIF said on April 29 that Nasdaq told the company it’s back in compliance with the $1 minimum bid price rule after shares closed at or above $1 for 10 days straight, from April 8 to April 21.
Rule risk is in focus again. Nasdaq says that if a stock trades under the minimum bid for 30 business days in a row, it’s a bid-price deficiency. If the stock drops to 10 cents or less for 10 straight business days, Nasdaq can issue a Staff Delisting Determination and skip the usual compliance period.
Market cap is a factor here. INLIF said June 10 it finished delivery confirmation on a battery cell packing-machine order worth almost 30 million yuan, or $4.4 million. That order is about 10.7 times its Google-listed market value as of Thursday.
INLIF CEO Rongjun Xu called the first battery machine orders “an encouraging milestone” for the company’s expansion into new energy equipment, according to a June 10 statement. Xu said INLIF is looking to grow its pipeline and customer base, but this depends on market conditions, how much demand there is from customers, and ongoing technical work. GlobeNewswire
INLIF put out a release on June 18 about getting into the humanoid robotics market. CEO Xu said “humanoid robotics has been incorporated into our long-term strategic roadmap.” The company also cautioned that the effort may not lead to viable products, commercialization or revenue. GlobeNewswire
INLIF’s latest full-year results shed some light on why traders are cautious on the order news. For fiscal 2025, INLIF posted revenue of $18.41 million, up 16.52%, but moved to a net loss of $5.45 million after earning $1.61 million last year. Gross margin came down to 23.33% from 28.83%.