707 Cayman Holdings (JEM) had one of the more eye-catching sessions on Tuesday. The stock closed up 267.59% at $3.97 during regular trading, then extended those gains by another 154.41% in after-hours to reach $10.10.
707 Cayman Holdings Limited Ordinary Shares, JEM
The move was triggered by the announcement of Robin Hoksnes Karlsen as the company’s new executive director. The news dropped before the opening bell.
Karlsen founded Web3 and technology company AMIHAN Innovations Ltd. and brings more than a decade of experience in real estate investment, capital structuring and institutional-grade Real World Asset (RWA) tokenization in decentralized finance. He holds a master’s degree from the University of Hong Kong and a bachelor’s from University College London.
Volume told the full story of investor reaction. A total of 122.24 million units traded on the day — nearly 130 times JEM’s average daily volume of 940,600.
The company’s market cap sits at around $7.15 million, putting this firmly in small-cap territory. JEM has a 52-week range of $1.02 to $135, and the stock’s RSI sits at 67.99 following the surge.
Also on July 1, the board announced it had approved exploring a next-generation digital platform combining AI, blockchain traceability and a crypto payment pilot aimed at digitalising its global apparel supply chain.
The plan targets demand from European and North American clients for supply chain transparency, faster replenishment and verifiable ESG credentials.
Management outlined an indicative three-year investment of $10 million to $12 million across phased rollouts. That covers AI-driven supply chain optimisation, AI design tools, blockchain-based provenance tracking and a crypto settlement pilot.
The board stressed that no capital has been committed yet. The timing and scope of any crypto payment activities will depend on regulatory approvals in Hong Kong, the EU and under FATF rules.
Karlsen’s background in blockchain tokenization and real estate investment is being positioned as directly relevant to this expansion push.
It’s worth keeping some context in view here. Despite Tuesday’s surge, JEM is still down 96.17% over the past 12 months. Over the past six months, it has gained 12.15%.
Short interest has reached 36.2% of the float. That level can amplify volatility in both directions if short sellers begin covering positions quickly.
The stock’s technical sentiment signal is currently listed as a sell, according to TipRanks data.
JEM’s market cap remains small at $5.6–7.15 million depending on the snapshot. That means even relatively modest buying pressure can drive outsized price moves.
The company’s average daily trading volume before Tuesday was just 940,600 units, compared to the 122.24 million that changed hands during the session.
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