New York, June 1, 2026, 18:04 (EDT)
Hydrofarm Holdings Group was last seen at $1.02 on Monday in late U.S. hours, trading lightly but sticking above $1 in a slow day for the Nasdaq hydroponics company. About 15,400 shares changed hands, under the latest average, with a range from 98 cents to $1.03.
Hydrofarm is not your standard small-cap rebound story. The company is operating under a lender forbearance right now. That’s a temporary deal where lenders hold back on enforcing remedies after a debt default, as Hydrofarm looks to keep its liquidity together.
Nasdaq’s main session was finished. The regular window is 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern, and trading keeps going after hours until 8 p.m. Monday didn’t appear as a holiday for U.S. stock markets on Nasdaq’s 2026 schedule.
Hydrofarm’s last official release is still its May 15 first-quarter results. Net sales dropped to $28.5 million from $40.5 million in the same quarter last year. Net loss widened to $14.6 million. Adjusted EBITDA came in at negative $3.9 million, down from negative $2.4 million a year earlier.
Hydrofarm CEO William Toler said in the release the company “continued to execute on our strategic priorities” and “completed the consolidation” of its U.S. manufacturing sites. Hydrofarm reported that overhead costs, or selling, general and administrative expenses, dropped 40.8% from last year. Hydrofarm
Hydrofarm’s balance sheet is under stress. In its latest quarterly filing, the company flagged recurring operating losses and negative cash flow combined with debt coming due inside a year. Hydrofarm warned these conditions bring “substantial doubt” it can stay in business over the next 12 months, a standard accounting warning that raises questions about its ability to meet obligations. SEC
The company missed a $2.8 million interest payment on its term loan, causing a default, and then agreed to forbearance with its lenders. According to the filing, that forbearance remained in place during the quarter and called for, among other things, proof of an average daily cash balance of at least $1 million.
Hydrofarm is facing Nasdaq listing issues. In April, a filing showed it got a Nasdaq notice for having a stockholders’ deficit of around $63.3 million, which is under Nasdaq’s $2.5 million equity minimum. The notice didn’t affect trading right away, but Hydrofarm had to send a compliance plan by May 16.
The stock moved higher as U.S. markets stayed firm but trades were focused. The Nasdaq Composite rose 0.42% with tech stocks up, and the S&P 500 added 0.26%. Reuters said just two of the 11 main S&P 500 sectors advanced.
GrowGeneration shares, another hydroponics and cultivation-products play, last traded at $1.72, off 6 cents. Scotts Miracle-Gro, the lawn-and-garden giant, was seen at $58.73, down 28 cents. Hydrofarm’s late action stuck out, but with a market cap near $4.9 million, the stock often swings on limited volume.
The worry for Hydrofarm isn’t just business, but the stock’s swings tied to thin volume and volatility. If lenders get tougher, Nasdaq pushes back on a compliance plan, or if sales drop again as growers face oversupply, Hydrofarm could look to asset sales, raise capital, or take on bigger restructuring. Any of those could leave shareholders worse off.
Investors have moved the price back above $1, but the filings keep pushing attention to cash, lenders, and staying afloat, not growth. It’s a basic trade, and still an uneasy one.