Autozi Internet Technology (AZI) exploded higher on Tuesday, with the stock surging over 400% in morning trading to reach $5.74, up from a prior close of $1.13. Trading volume hit around 76.5 million shares — compared to a daily average of just 48,000.
Autozi Internet Technology (Global) Ltd., AZI
The move has the hallmarks of a low-float squeeze. With only approximately 1.73 million shares in the public float, even modest buying pressure can send the price flying. Today’s volume was more than 500 times the normal daily activity.
No earnings release or press release was identified as a direct trigger. The move appears to be driven almost entirely by market mechanics rather than any change in Autozi’s business.
The stock swung between $1.10 and $11.84 intraday — a striking range for a small-cap name.
One detail adding fuel: founder and chairman Dr. Zhang Houqi previously announced plans to purchase between $10 million and $30 million of AZI stock over 12 months at $5 per share. That signals insider confidence and gives speculators a price anchor to work with.
There’s also a Nasdaq compliance clock ticking. In March 2026, Autozi received a notification that it wasn’t meeting the minimum Market Value of Listed Securities requirement of $50 million. The company has until September 21, 2026 to fix that. A 400% price surge dramatically lifts the market cap, potentially checking that box — a detail likely attracting attention from traders.
The company completed a 10-for-1 reverse stock split in March, which brought Class A ordinary shares outstanding down to around 4.49 million. That consolidation was part of Autozi’s effort to stay listed on Nasdaq.
Underneath the price action, the fundamentals are rough. For the six months ending March 31, revenue dropped 63.1% to $29.5 million. Gross profit fell 82.5% to just $0.24 million, and the net loss attributable to ordinary shareholders widened to $13.8 million from $5.2 million a year earlier.
Autozi blamed the revenue slide on difficult conditions in the lubricant market and its ongoing push into new-energy vehicles. Operating expenses jumped 64.6%, with increased financing costs cited as the main driver.
In its annual report, the company disclosed it was not profitable, had negative operating cash flow, and flagged “substantial doubt” about its ability to continue as a going concern.
Nearby U.S.-listed China auto names didn’t follow AZI’s lead. Jiuzi Holdings jumped 74% to $2.19. U Power slipped 3% to $1.31, while SunCar Technology gained 3% to $1.17.
In March, Autozi announced that co-investors would begin moving a $30 million chunk of assets — the first tranche of a $110 million equity deal at $1.30 per share — following a $7 million injection from its main shareholder.
Traders are watching whether volume holds after Tuesday’s initial pop.
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