SINGAPORE, June 5, 2026, 00:05 (SGT)
- Ohmyhome shares traded on Nasdaq rose 1.25% to $0.7189 late morning in New York.
- Singapore property-tech firm is trading at micro-cap levels, while recent filings show its losses are set to widen in 2025.
- U.S. markets stayed open, tech names dragged on the Nasdaq.
Ohmyhome Limited (OMH) stock picked up 1.25% in New York on Thursday, closing at $0.7189. The Singapore-based proptech firm’s shares moved between $0.7011 and $0.7864 through the day. Trading stayed thin, and the low price plus worries about cash burn stuck with investors.
OMH is a micro-cap, so any small trade can move the stock a lot. StockTitan said Ohmyhome has a market cap near $17.3 million, with shares dropping almost 65% in the last 12 months.
The U.S. market traded normally on June 4. The next market close in June is set for Juneteenth, June 19, according to Nasdaq’s 2026 holiday calendar.
Ohmyhome’s latest annual filing showed revenue up 12.5% in 2025 at S$12.2 million, driven by property management and services, but brokerage revenue dropped 32.6% to S$2.6 million. It’s not just about the stock price.
The move has a double edge. Property management added steady fees for the company, but the main brokerage unit—where Ohmyhome gets commissions on sales—shrunk as a share of the total.
Losses grew. The company posted a 2025 net loss of S$9.2 million versus S$4.4 million last year. Loss per share was S$0.67, both basic and diluted.
Cash flow is in focus too, the cash companies make or spend running their business. Ohmyhome reported it used S$4.2 million for operating activities in 2025 and warned more negative operating cash flow could bring liquidity risks.
OMH shares are listed on the Nasdaq Capital Market. The group operates its businesses with subsidiaries in Singapore and Malaysia.
Management has shifted too. In April, the company named Agus Prasetyo, who is already CEO, as acting CFO starting April 23. The company said he would handle financial operations in the transition.
S&P 500 and Nasdaq started lower Thursday, after Broadcom missed revenue, hitting chip names and giving small growth stocks little support. Reuters said chip names dropped after the Broadcom results. Daniela Hathorn, senior market analyst at Capital.com, called out “profit-taking, stretched positioning and a reassessment of geopolitical risks.” Reuters
Zillow gained 2.6% among bigger U.S. real estate tech stocks, but Offerpad edged down 0.7%. That left investors with a mixed picture for housing-platform names.
Thursday’s uptick might not say much about what comes next. If Ohmyhome fails to convert higher revenue into more cash, or if its next funding round means dilution for current holders, the stock could stay stuck around penny levels, even as some parts of the business grow.