New York, May 25, 2026, 15:04 (EDT)
Webuy Global Ltd is facing another share-supply overhang as trading resumes Tuesday. The Nasdaq-listed travel firm lost about 5% last week. U.S. equities were paused Monday for Memorial Day, with Nasdaq showing the market shut May 25. Trading hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern on open days.
WBUY ended Friday at $1.13, gaining 2.7% for the session but off from the $1.19 close last week. Only 25,654 shares changed hands. WBUY traded between $1.04 and $1.19 for the week. Liquidity in WBUY can be thin, making it harder to buy or sell without big price moves.
WBUY lagged last week even as the big indexes posted gains. The S&P 500 added 0.9%, the Nasdaq Composite was up 0.5%, and the Russell 2000 jumped 2.7%. WBUY fell while everything else rose.
Supply is at the center for the company. On May 18, a prospectus detailed up to 50.2 million Class A shares that Dogwood Partners could resell. That’s linked to a committed equity financing deal. Webuy reported 5,202,808 Class A shares outstanding when that prospectus was filed. The deal is based on VWAP, the volume-weighted average price, which factors in both price and trading volume.
A May 18 filing registered as many as 1,139,472 Class A shares for resale from a selling shareholder after an April private placement. Webuy said it won’t get any money from that resale; the cash would go to the seller, not the company.
Webuy got a boost this month on its Nasdaq standing. The company said in a statement that Nasdaq told it on May 6 compliance was back in place with the minimum stockholders’ equity rule, thanks to $3.29 million in reported equity in Webuy’s 2025 annual report. Stockholders’ equity measures net assets after liabilities come out.
Webuy is shifting gears. The company, which used to focus on community e-commerce and groceries, said in its annual report that now its main business is travel. Webuy said it is operating travel agencies and tour operators for markets like Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and China.
Management flagged early signs of travel demand. In April, Webuy reported over $3.34 million in bookings at the NATAS Travel Fair across three days, a rise of about 27% from the previous year. CEO Bin Xue said this pointed to “strong demand for curated travel experiences.” Sahm
Webuy said its Altitude premium travel brand did more than $777,500 in first-month transaction value with its Antarctica expedition offer. Xue said Altitude targets “truly differentiated journeys,” signaling the company wants investors to look at higher-end, experience-driven travel instead of low-margin commodity bookings. ADVFN
Webuy is making a move into travel, putting it up against heavier players like Trip.com and Booking Holdings, but traders say WBUY is trading more on filings, liquidity, and evidence that its bookings are turning into real revenue. The sector read remains tight.
But the financing carries risks too. In its May filing, Webuy warned that dumping a big block of shares on the market, or even fears of that, could push the stock down and make it swing more. Dilution was another warning—when new shares come in, existing investors can see their stake shrink. The risk is clear if buyers don’t show up: supply hits the market before the travel unit proves it can really generate cash.
Webuy (WBUY) traders are focused on whether shares stay near Friday’s $1.13 close on Tuesday, looking for volume to recover after the holiday. New filings could shift the float. Broader markets turning higher could help, but for WBUY, the next real upside still depends on proof that travel transaction values translate to actual revenue, margins, and cash flow.