New York, June 4, 2026, 13:04 (EDT)
JBDI Holdings shares climbed on Thursday, with the Singapore container recycler still trading under the $1 Nasdaq minimum bid, leaving questions about its listing status in focus for investors.
The stock was recently quoted at $0.4901, up around 4.4%. Shares moved in a $0.4694 to $0.51 band. Volume was light, with 6,881 shares changing hands in the last trade.
JBDI faces a July 6 deadline to meet Nasdaq’s $1 minimum bid price rule, meaning the stock has to close at or above $1 for at least 10 consecutive business days. The Nasdaq notice stops short of delisting JBDI right away but sets a cutoff date for compliance.
JBDI shareholders signed off on a 1-for-2 reverse stock split at the company’s annual meeting on May 28, giving the board the option to combine every two shares into one. The move, approved last week, would boost the share price, but would not change market value on its own. The board now has 12 months to decide if it will go ahead with the split.
JBDI CEO Lim Chwee Poh said in January the company would make its “best efforts towards improved performance” as it tried to comply with Nasdaq’s continued listing rules. Lim’s comment was made when JBDI shared news of the bid-price notice. Nasdaq
JBDI, a small holding company from the Cayman Islands, runs operations in Singapore. The company reconditions, recycles and sells steel and plastic drums, along with other related containers. Its main customers are chemical and oil-and-gas firms in Singapore and Southeast Asia.
Sales stayed flat, but the business showed some improvement in its latest interim results. Revenue dropped 8.1% to around $4.1 million for the six months ended Nov. 30, 2025. The company posted net income of about $198,000, reversing a $1.6 million loss from a year ago as expenses came down.
Nasdaq Composite slipped as tech stocks fell, but the Dow jumped. That left JBDI’s move looking tied to its own listing setup, not a broader packaging pop. The overall market was mixed.
Larger packaging names traded mixed at midday. Greif inched up 0.3%. Ball slipped 0.5%. Crown Holdings dropped 1.1%. All three are much bigger and more liquid, but they still offer some readthrough for the broader container and packaging segment.
Reverse splits can push up the share price, but don’t solve problems with demand, earnings or liquidity. The risk for JBDI is clear. If the company doesn’t get back in line with compliance, or if Nasdaq says it falls short on other listing rules, the stock could start a delisting process.