NEW YORK, June 3, 2026, 12:13 EDT
- Interlink Electronics shares finished at $4.92, falling 7.9%, as light volume moved in regular Nasdaq trading.
- The latest filing from the company was a Form SD on June 1. That’s a supply-chain disclosure about conflict minerals, not an update on operations.
- U.S. stocks lost ground, but a few big electronic-component names posted gains.
Interlink Electronics shares dropped almost 8% in light Nasdaq action Wednesday. The Fremont, California-based sensor maker didn’t put out new company news to drive the fall.
LINK’s slide is notable as it’s a micro-cap, meaning it has a small public-market value and its price can shift on light trading. The company’s total market cap was around $77.5 million.
LINK fell 42 cents to last trade at $4.92. The stock opened at $5.38, then moved between $4.90 and a session high of $5.44. Trading volume was a little over 12,000 shares.
Nasdaq traded as usual on Wednesday. Regular hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET, and June 3 is not on the 2026 holiday list as a day off.
The company filed its most recent Form SD in the past 48 hours, with CFO Ryan J. Hoffman signing on June 1. Form SD is a conflict-minerals disclosure, dealing with supply-chain rules for minerals like tin, tungsten, tantalum, and gold.
Interlink’s May update gave investors a look at the numbers. First-quarter revenue rose 15.4% from last year to $3.07 million, while net loss narrowed to $338,000 from $805,000 a year ago. Gross margin improved, up to 43.5% compared to 35.6%.
Interlink Electronics said revenue rose thanks to more force-sensing and printed-electronics shipments, but gas-sensor sales fell. In its quarterly filing, the company also said uneven order timing is possible since customer demand changes with project and production cycles.
Interlink CEO Steven N. Bronson said in the company’s May results release he was “excited about our recent commercial momentum and acquisition activity.” The company also plans to open a new research and production site in South Yorkshire, England, in early July for conductive-transfer tech in smart textiles and wearables. GlobeNewswire
Acquisition talk is still in play for the stock. Interlink said on May 11 it signed a non-binding letter of intent to possibly buy a high-performance manufacturing business. That target posted more than $33 million in 2025 revenue and around $4 million in EBITDA.
Bronson said at the time a deal would put Interlink in a better position to support customers needing “precision, reliability, and performance.” Interlink said it might pay with a mix of debt and equity issued to sellers, valuing the equity at the market price at closing, but with a floor of $5 and a cap of $10 per share. GlobeNewswire
LINK went the other way from some of the bigger electronic-component and sensor stocks. Methode Electronics added 4.6%. TE Connectivity was up 2.3%. CTS Corp. barely moved, down 0.2%.
But there’s a chance the share move has as much to do with liquidity as with fundamentals. Interlink closed March with $2.1 million in cash, no debt, and $4.4 million in working capital. The company used $543,000 in operating cash in Q1. In its filing, Interlink pointed to softer gas-sensor demand in industrial markets. The acquisition letter is still non-binding, with financing and approvals not settled yet.
Interlink is putting up numbers—revenue up, losses slowing—but shares stayed under the $5 mark tied to its possible buyout financing as of midday Wednesday.