New York, May 31, 2026, 15:04 (EDT)
Samfine Creation Holdings Group Limited ended the holiday-shortened U.S. week little changed, closing Friday at $2.51 after trading between $2.48 and $2.62 on volume of 21,506 shares. The Nasdaq-listed Hong Kong printer was up 0.12% on the day and down about 0.8% from the prior Friday’s $2.53 close.
That matters now because this is a thinly traded stock. In names like this, a few orders can shape the close, so Monday’s tape may say more than Friday’s last print.
U.S. trading was also compressed. Nasdaq’s 2026 calendar listed Memorial Day, May 25, as a market holiday, and its regular stock-market hours run Monday to Friday from 9:30 a.m. Eastern time.
For the week, Samfine moved in a tight band. It fell Tuesday, rose Wednesday, dipped Thursday and edged up Friday. The stock did not catch much of Wall Street’s broader May rally.
The backdrop was stronger than Samfine’s own move suggests. U.S. stocks finished May in record territory, with the S&P 500 completing a ninth straight weekly gain and all three major indexes closing at records for a third straight session, MarketWatch reported.
Samfine’s company-specific story remains its March permit announcement. The company said it received a Publication Printing Business Permit from relevant PRC press and publication authorities, allowing domestic publication printing in mainland China; Cheng Kwan Hong, general manager and director of Samfine Printing, called it a “key milestone in our expansion into the Chinese market” and said the domestic market “may support our next phase of development,” while the company was “executing this strategy prudently.” Samfine
The competitive set is narrow, and not perfectly comparable. Cre8 Enterprise is a Nasdaq-listed Hong Kong financial printing provider, while Powell Max provides financial communications and financial printing services for capital-market clients; Samfine’s mix is more books, novelty products and packaging, but all three sit in the small Hong Kong-linked print-services corner of U.S. listings.
The but is financial execution. Samfine’s 2025 revenue rose 10.6% to HK$169.8 million, helped by price cuts to lift volume, but its net loss widened to HK$19.8 million and operating cash outflow reached HK$21.1 million. The annual report also flagged PRC and Hong Kong regulatory and audit-inspection risks for U.S.-listed issuers with operations there.
Investors are also watching listing mechanics. In February, Samfine announced a 1-for-5 share consolidation, a reverse split that cuts the share count and mechanically lifts the per-share price, saying the objective was to regain compliance with Nasdaq’s minimum bid-price rule.
The week ahead is plain: hold the $2.50 area, find volume, and show whether the China permit can turn into orders investors can measure. Without that, SFHG remains more a liquidity story than a sector story.
For now, the stock is quiet. The next move will need more than a broad market tailwind.