New York, June 10, 2026, 10:45 a.m. EDT
- Ming Shing Group Holdings shares listed on Nasdaq climbed after the company wrapped up its $110 million deal to buy PMA Nano Carbon Tech.
- MSW dropped back to $1.74 by late morning after jumping to a session high of $5.54.
- The deal used convertible promissory notes—IOUs that could become stock. That raises dilution questions for current holders.
Ming Shing Group Holdings Limited traded among the choppier Nasdaq microcaps Wednesday. The Hong Kong construction-services player told investors it wrapped up a $110 million buy that puts it into graphene-based thermal management, which deals with heat controls for electronics and products. Ming Shing said the deal went from pitch to closed after Tuesday’s close, and investors took note since Ming Shing’s payment structure could later mean a large batch of new shares come into play.
MSW traded at $1.74 just before 10:45 a.m. EDT, up 42 cents from where it closed Tuesday. The stock opened higher at $2.03 and touched $5.54 before dropping back to a low of $1.56. About 23.9 million shares changed hands. The price by late morning was well off the session high, with early buyers already pulling back.
Ming Shing shares jumped 203.62% to $4.01 in after-hours on Tuesday after the company said it finished its acquisition, Benzinga reported. By early premarket Wednesday, MSW was still up, trading 130.3% higher at $3.04, according to Benzinga’s movers list.
Ming Shing agreed to buy all shares of PMA Nano Carbon Tech Limited, a company registered in the British Virgin Islands, according to its Form 6-K. The sellers were PMA Technology Holdings Limited, Legend Master Development Limited, and F.F.Formation Holding Co. Ltd. Ming Shing paid with three unsecured convertible promissory notes worth $110 million, not cash. The notes don’t have collateral behind them.
The deal size is the story here, driving more stock action than a standard M&A pop. Ming Shing said its latest half-year revenue came in at $8.43 million, off 51.6% from the prior year. Net loss was $3.60 million for the six months to September 30, 2025. At that point, balance sheet assets totaled $7.78 million, with shareholders’ equity at negative $2.62 million.
Ming Shing’s main business has been wet trades in Hong Kong—plastering, tile and brick work, floor screeding, marble jobs—handled by two subsidiaries. With this acquisition, the value pitch to investors shifts. Now, via the newly acquired target, it holds PMA Singapore. In its filing, Ming Shing calls PMA a commercialization platform for graphene-based thermal management, including graphene heating, heat dissipation materials, temperature-control systems and related tech.
Financing structure is where the tension sits. The notes convert at $0.99 per ordinary share, but with a 9.99% beneficial-ownership cap per holder and other rules. That conversion price puts the $110 million principal at about 111.1 million shares if you strip out limits and terms. Dilution cuts existing shareholders’ percentage after new shares hit the market.
The unusual trading made more sense after the shift to a higher-growth tech theme wrapped up. The market moved first, reacting to the new direction. Investors then focused on the conversion price, which is under Wednesday’s late-morning level and much lower than the day’s high. That put the possible share issuance right at the center of talk about value.
Governance questions have come up around the deal. On June 4, Ming Shing said Han Yan quit as both director and CEO. Dongjie Lao resigned as independent director and from board committees. Zhijun Pan was named CEO, but Ming Shing said that’s just for now while it looks for a full-time replacement. Pan signed the June 9 closing filing in the roles of chairman and CEO.
There’s a clear bull case here but it isn’t proven in public filings yet. A small Hong Kong construction contractor is aiming to add a tech platform based on graphene heat management—a sector that many investors link to electronics, EVs, wearables, and high-end devices. The risks are right up front too. The company posts losses, the business it bought isn’t sharing much financial info, the notes might dilute shareholders, and management is in transition even as the company heads in a new direction. Ming Shing itself said in a filing that its forward-looking statements come with risks and uncertainties and aren’t promises of future performance.
Ming Shing has set June 16 for an extraordinary general meeting. Shareholders will vote on whether to raise authorized share capital from 100 million to 50 billion ordinary shares. They’ll also decide on a dual-class share setup, converting 6 million shares held by Chi Ming Lam into Class B shares, each with 100 votes. The stock has already been moving on dilution worries, so this vote could carry more weight than Wednesday’s intraday spike.