New York, June 8, 2026, 17:02 EDT
- Texxon jumped 283.7% to finish at $4.95, with shares moving from $1.31 to as high as $12.24.
- NPT trading was halted six times for volatility in the U.S. session.
- Texxon shares ended just under the $5 level, the same price Texxon used for its IPO back in October.
Texxon Holding Limited shares jumped almost fourfold on Monday to end at $4.95. The stock, trading on Nasdaq, spiked above $12 at one point. Volume hit about 141 million shares, well over six times its total outstanding.
NPT ended Friday at $1.29 and stayed just under its IPO price by Monday’s close. Texxon debuted on the Nasdaq in October with the ticker NPT, selling shares in its IPO at $5 each.
Texxon moved in its own direction, well apart from the broader market. While the Nasdaq Composite added 0.9% Monday, Texxon shares surged by hundreds of percentage points, ranking it as one of the most volatile U.S.-listed stocks that day.
Cboe halt data flagged six volatility pauses in NPT from 12:00:15 p.m. Eastern through 3:33:38 p.m. Eastern. A volatility pause stops trading when a stock jumps or drops too quickly; Nasdaq says the trigger is a swing of 10% or more in five minutes.
After hours, the rally faded. StockAnalysis listed NPT at $3.60 in after-hours trade at 4:38 p.m. EDT, off 27.3% from its close in the regular session.
Shareholders cleared a new board move in a May 28 filing. The board now has power to do a share split or share consolidation within a year, or to skip action. A split means more shares, lower price per share. A consolidation cuts the number of shares and raises the per-share price.
Texxon, which does supply-chain management for plastics and chemicals companies in China, reported fiscal 2025 revenue up 18.5% at $797.2 million. But gross margin dropped to 0.6%. Texxon posted a net loss of $932,621 attributable to the company.
Texxon CEO Hui Xu said in November the company was putting business scale first and aiming for stronger customer relationships to drive “sustainable profitability.” Xu said Texxon was taking tighter margins as it looked to expand in plastics and chemicals supply-chain services. PR Newswire
Texxon in its annual report pointed to Xiangyu Group, Dawn Group and Juxitang as competitors. The company said the supply-chain management sector in China is big and fragmented, and bigger firms are in a position to squeeze margins and prices.
The setup looks risky. Texxon flagged in its annual report that companies with similar public floats and IPO sizes have seen sharp rallies and then fast drops that didn’t match their actual performance, a warning that seems to fit what happened Monday more than a typical earnings swing.
The next things to watch are company filings, any board decisions about the split or consolidation authority, and if Monday’s volume sticks. If not, NPT might keep trading on quick order flow instead of business fundamentals, with price swings typical for a small, recently listed Nasdaq name.