New York, June 5, 2026, 13:08 EDT
- Springview Holdings shares jumped more than threefold during intraday trading, with volume much higher than usual.
- The stock, which trades on the Nasdaq, was halted more than once for volatility during the morning session.
- The company’s investor-relations news feed didn’t show any new release tied to Friday’s move.
Springview Holdings Ltd shares jumped over 200% Friday, with the Nasdaq-listed construction stock halted several times for volatility.
The stock was at $7.68, up 221.5% at 12:57 p.m. EDT. It opened at $2.39 and hit $10.71 before easing. Volume hit 26.79 million shares, way above its usual 8,200, a rare surge for a typically quiet stock.
This is why the move stands out now. It didn’t come from the whole housing sector. This was a micro-cap name hit with a one-off stock move, enough to trigger exchange volatility limits while the market was still open.
SPHL was halted six times for volatility on Cboe between 9:38 a.m. and 10:54 a.m. ET, according to Cboe’s trading-halt data. A “Volatility Pause” means trading stopped for a few minutes when the stock price swings too much, letting orders reset. Cboe Global Markets
U.S. markets operated as usual on Friday. Nasdaq’s 2026 holiday calendar leaves June 5 off the list of holidays. Nasdaq Stock Market hours stayed at 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET.
Springview, a Singapore-based builder, designs and puts up residential and commercial properties through its operating arm. The company says it handles everything from new builds to reconstruction, additions, alterations, and other general contracting work.
The latest annual report shows the company lists its Class A ordinary shares on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the ticker SPHL.
Friday’s trading didn’t follow any fresh headline from Springview. The investor-relations page’s most recent press release, from Jan. 29, covered a rooftop-solar pilot in Singapore. Nothing new related to the stock move.
The company’s most recent SEC filings were from April. There was an April 30 registration statement for 400,000 Class A shares tied to its 2026 equity incentive plan. Its last annual report was filed April 28 for 2025.
Springview’s numbers are dwarfed by the day’s trading. The 2025 annual report showed total revenue of S$7.81 million, or $6.07 million, down 11.4% from 2024. Net loss came in at S$2.35 million.
The stock traded out of step with bigger U.S. homebuilding stocks. LGI Homes saw little movement, Beazer Homes ticked up under 1%, and Green Brick Partners slipped a bit, according to market data from the same period.
The rally could reverse just as fast. Springview flagged in its annual filing that Class A shares might swing wildly and see price surges unrelated to how the company is actually doing. It also pointed out that the business leans hard on Singapore construction and on landing fresh contracts.