Shares of Inno Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ:INHD) remain halted Tuesday evening under a Nasdaq T12 code — and the longer traders look at this company, the more questions emerge.
- INHD stock is halted. See all of the company’s news here.
The Trading Halt
Nasdaq issued the halt at 5:18 p.m. ET on Monday after INHD surged more than 3,600% in a single session, rocketing from roughly $1.01 to highs above $66.
The catalyst was a $3 million Development Services Agreement with a Hong Kong-based AI provider — a deal smaller than what many mid-cap companies spend on office supplies.
Benzinga reached out to Inno Holdings for comment, but did not receive an immediate response.
A T12 halt means Nasdaq is requesting additional information from the company before allowing trading to resume. No resumption date has been set.
The Backdrop
The backdrop makes Nasdaq’s scrutiny easy to understand. INHD executed two reverse splits in six months — a 1-for-24 in December 2025, followed by a 1-for-20 in May 2026 — to stay above the exchange’s $1 minimum bid requirement.
The company also launched a $60 million at-the-market equity offering in May.
Per its own 10-K filing, the company’s entire business is trading recycled iPhones through two Hong Kong subsidiaries — Lear Group Limited and Baymax High Technology Co., Limited.
Fiscal 2025 revenue totaled just $2.85 million against a $7 million net loss and auditors flagged going-concern doubts.
Despite all that, the SEC still classifies INHD under SIC code 3317 — Steel Pipe & Tubes — which no longer reflects the actual business.
Then there is the website.
Inno Holdings lists a site for its former metal stud manufacturing subsidiary with a corresponding URL — innometalstuds.com.
Navigate there and the domain resolves to Spinanga Casino, an Italian-language gambling and sports betting site advertising over 7,400 games.
Shares were last halted at $39.49 on Monday evening. No company statement has been issued as of publication.
What Can INHD Investors Do Now?
Traders holding INHD stock have limited options while the halt is in effect — all buy and sell orders are frozen until Nasdaq lifts it.
Some brokers may allow clients to submit a request to close the position at the halted price, but approval is not guaranteed.
Investors should contact their brokers directly to understand what relief, if any, is available.
Photo: La Terase / Shutterstock
