Classover stock jumps after $2 million buyback plan; what traders watch next for Nasdaq’s KIDZ

February 12, 2026
Classover stock jumps after $2 million buyback plan; what traders watch next for Nasdaq’s KIDZ

New York, February 11, 2026, 18:40 EST — After-hours

  • Classover’s shares jumped roughly 23% in after-hours trading.
  • The board gave the green light to buy back up to $2 million worth of Class B common stock.
  • The company clarified that purchases are optional and can be paused or stopped whenever you choose.

Classover Holdings, Inc. saw its shares jump in after-hours trading Wednesday following the announcement of a $2 million share buyback program—an uncommon move for a microcap with penny-level stock.

This announcement is significant since buybacks can swiftly reduce a small company’s share count, even if the dollar amount involved seems modest. It comes at a time when thinly priced stocks experience wild retail-driven swings, where even small trades can shift the market.

Classover announced in a filing that its board approved a buyback of up to $2 million in Class B common stock. The company might acquire shares through open market purchases, block trades, or private agreements, but emphasized there’s no obligation to repurchase a specific amount.

The filing also pointed to Rule 10b-18, an SEC regulation offering a “safe harbor” for companies repurchasing their own stock, provided they follow specific guidelines. SEC

Classover closed last at $0.186, marking a roughly 23% jump from the previous session. Trading volume surged past 495 million shares, with the stock bouncing between $0.17 and $0.3716 throughout the day, according to market data.

The company announced in its press release that it plans to finance any share repurchases using current cash reserves and future operating cash flow. Repurchased shares will either be held as treasury stock—meaning the company retains them instead of releasing them back to the market—or cancelled.

“After hitting key fiscal targets, we think the market isn’t fully pricing in Classover’s operational strides,” CEO Luo Hui said in the statement. He added the company seeks flexibility to continue investing while also delivering value back to shareholders. Classover

Traders are eyeing any signs that the program shifts into real buying, along with updates from the company on timing, pace, and any liquidity-related limits. The warrants, trading as KIDZW, could introduce extra volatility when the common stock swings sharply.

Here’s the catch: the company reserves the right to slow down, pause, or completely halt the program. According to the filing, any future share buybacks will hinge on factors like cash flow, investment priorities, the stock’s price, and overall market conditions.

Investors are eyeing more than just the buyback; they’re waiting on the next quarterly results and any clues about cash allocation. Market Chameleon predicts Classover’s report might drop between Feb. 25 and Feb. 27, following historical trends, although no official date has been announced.

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