Great Elm Shares Hold Steady at $2.16 Before Holiday. What’s Next for the Stock

Great Elm Shares Hold Steady at $2.16 Before Holiday. What’s Next for the Stock

May 24, 2026

NEW YORK, May 24, 2026, 12:02 (EDT)

Great Elm Group Inc. (GEG) stock finished at $2.16 on Friday, barely moving for the week. Volume was lower than usual. Investors shrugged off the latest quarterly loss, focusing instead on the planned bigger buyback. Nasdaq will stay closed Monday for Memorial Day, so U.S. trading picks up again Tuesday.

GEG heads into a shortened week after light trading on Friday. About 2,330 shares changed hands—well under Google Finance’s average of 6,120. The Nasdaq microcap closed with a market cap near $67.7 million.

Stock ended quietly, but there’s more under the surface. Earlier this month Great Elm posted fiscal Q3 revenue of $3.4 million, up 7%. It also saw its net loss grow to $13.5 million from $4.5 million a year ago, mostly on unrealized investment losses linked to Great Elm Capital Corp., or GECC. These unrealized losses come from changes in asset values before a sale.

Chief Executive Jason Reese said the company dealt with “continued volatility” and sour market sentiment around private credit, or loans outside banks and bond markets. Reese said Great Elm is still focused on “prudent capital deployment.” Investors are watching that line as they weigh the company’s buyback plan.

Buybacks are now front and center for near-term support. Great Elm’s board raised the buyback to $40 million in April, up from $25 million, according to a May 6 filing. The company repurchased 1.37 million shares for an average $2.04 during the March quarter, and as of May 4, it had about $25 million left under the authorization.

GEG didn’t move much this week, finishing Friday at $2.16—exactly where it closed May 15, according to Yahoo historical data. For comparison, the Nasdaq Composite was up 0.19% and the S&P 500 added 0.37% on Friday.

GECC is in focus. Great Elm said in a filing it owns about 1.36 million GECC shares, which is close to 9.8% of the company, and has stakes in special-purpose vehicles that hold GECC stock. GEG books dividends and mark-to-market gains or losses on these positions. Fluctuations in GECC’s share price can hit Great Elm’s reported earnings.

GECC slipped 1.89% to $5.70 at Friday’s close, MarketWatch data showed. Other business development companies moved in both directions. Oxford Square Capital and FS KKR traded lower, but Investcorp Credit Management BDC rose, so private-credit stocks did not move together. A business development company, or BDC, is a listed investment fund that lends to smaller and midmarket firms.

Great Elm has more going on than just its credit business. The company also operates real estate investment and management arms. Among them is Monomoy Properties REIT, which focuses on industrial outdoor storage. Great Elm said fee-paying assets under management were $528 million as of March 31. Total assets under management were $744 million.

Reese told the May earnings call the company will “protect and grow NAV first,” pointing to net asset value. CFO Keri Davis said cash and equivalents stood at about $45.5 million as of March 31, which the company can use for its alternative asset management platform. Investing

The risk is the same factors that weighed on the March quarter could return. Great Elm said assets tied to management fees can move with investments, withdrawals or markets. In its filing, the firm notes exchange-traded securities mark to close, but trickier holdings rely on models. Earnings could fall again if GECC drops or private-credit marks slip, even if cash levels hold steady.

GEG heads into the week without much scheduled news. The focus is on how traders handle the first action after the holiday. With the bigger buyback and if GECC stops falling, GEG might keep trading around $2. But if credit stocks keep sliding, GEG’s light volume could make it easy for even small trades to swing the price.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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