Jowell Global Edges Down in Pre-Market on Light Volume

Jowell Global Edges Down in Pre-Market on Light Volume

June 5, 2026

New York, June 5, 2026, 05:05 (EDT)

  • Jowell Global ended Thursday at $2.26, slipping 1.31%. Shares moved in a range of $2.20 to $2.36.
  • Nasdaq is set to open its regular session at 9:30 a.m. ET. June 5 isn’t on the list of 2026 Nasdaq market holidays.
  • The company’s annual filing posted a bigger revenue forecast for 2025, but it still reported a net loss for the full year.

Jowell Global Ltd. shares fell in the latest U.S. session. The China-focused e-commerce micro-cap stays under pressure ahead of Friday’s Nasdaq open. There was no new company news to explain the drop.

The stock finished Thursday at $2.26, slipping 1.31%, according to Yahoo Finance. Shares started the session at $2.23 and moved between $2.20 and $2.36. Just 9,435 shares changed hands. That light volume can swing micro-cap names more in percentage terms.

Jowell is trading during a standard U.S. market day, not on a holiday. Nasdaq’s regular hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern, with premarket trading from 4 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. According to Nasdaq, its next market holiday in June is Juneteenth on June 19.

Jowell has a market cap of roughly $5.37 million, based on Google Finance figures. Shares outstanding are 2.38 million, with the stock trading between $1.47 and $3.00 over the past 52 weeks.

Wall Street finished mixed. The Dow climbed 1.73% and the S&P 500 added 0.41% on Thursday, but the Nasdaq Composite lost 0.09% as chip stocks dragged, Reuters reported. “About the only blemish on the market at this point is Broadcom,” Paul Nolte, senior wealth adviser and market strategist at Murphy & Sylvest, told Reuters. Reuters

Jowell (Nasdaq: JWEL), a Shanghai company selling cosmetics, health and nutrition items, and household goods, said in its latest Form 20-F that it had 4.79 million VIP members and 26,978 Love Home Stores at Dec. 31, 2025. Jowell runs both online and offline platforms in China.

Jowell’s latest numbers show some improvement but the picture is still uneven. Revenue climbed 24.1% to $165.0 million for 2025, up from $133.0 million in 2024, with gains coming from health and nutritional supplements. Still, operating expenses were higher than revenue. Net loss narrowed to $6.28 million, from $8.00 million the year before.

Jowell’s sales mix changed sharply. Health and nutritional supplements brought in $130.6 million, 79.2% of 2025 revenue, jumping 289.1% from 2024, according to the filing. Cosmetics revenue dropped 34.2%. Household products slid 83.4%. The company blamed the cosmetics decline on slow recovery and weaker demand in China, especially for premium brands.

China e-commerce stocks were mixed. JD.com last changed hands at $29.19, slipping 0.7%. Baozun edged up 1.3% to $2.67, and Yunji was steady around $1.51. The group offers a snapshot of market mood on China’s consumer and online retail space, though they differ in size and trading volume.

The risk here isn’t just a single-day drop. Jowell said it operates as a Cayman Islands holding company and runs its China business through a variable interest entity, or VIE—a workaround for when direct ownership isn’t allowed. The company warned that regulators in China could ban the VIE setup, which could hit its operations or the value of its stock. Jowell also flagged that as a foreign private issuer, it’s not required to disclose information as often as U.S. companies.

Jowell’s stock doesn’t see much trading volume. Earnings are still negative but getting better. Company news has been sparse. The focus on Friday is if buyers show up near Thursday’s low, or if the small float means the shares swing big again.

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