JLHL (Julong Holding Limited) is back in violent territory — up 28% on the week but down 34% in a single session on June 9, with the borrow market now closer to fully used than at almost any point this year.
Since the June 8 convergence note flagged rapid tightening, the lending picture has deteriorated further. Availability has collapsed to just 5.3% — meaning roughly one share remains available to borrow for every nineteen already lent out. That's down from 15% a day earlier and a dramatic fall from 46% just a week ago. The 52-week low hit 0%, so the current reading is barely above the floor the pool has ever touched. Cost to borrow has climbed to 233% APR, up from 177% when the previous note was written and more than double the level from a month ago. Short sellers have actually been covering — shares short fell 29% in a single day on June 9, and are down 26% on the week — yet availability is tightening anyway. That combination points to shrinking pool supply rather than a wave of new shorts pressing in.
The ownership structure helps explain the structural squeeze. Hushi Holding Limited controls 93% of shares outstanding, leaving a tiny tradeable float. With so few shares in circulation, any uptick in borrow demand moves availability dramatically. The ORTEX short score stands at 61.7 — largely stable over the past ten days, ranging between 61.8 and 62.8 — but the days-to-cover rank at the 78th percentile reflects how quickly a short position would need to unwind if conditions turned against it. The utilization rank sits in the 7th percentile, meaning the borrow market here is tighter than 93% of comparable names tracked by ORTEX.
The price action tells its own story. JLHL closed at $28.60 on June 9, having shed a third of its value in a single day after a run that added 50% over the prior month. The one-day drop is the sharpest in the recent history of this note, yet the stock is still up 28% on the week — a measure of how violent the intraday swings have become. There is no analyst coverage or valuation framework that gives this price meaningful anchor: the only institutional data of note is a pair of small positions from FMR and Morgan Stanley, both of which had been trimming as recently as March. Peer SKK (Nasdaq) rose 21% on June 9 and is up 32% on the week, suggesting some sympathy momentum in related small-cap names.
Earnings history offers thin comfort as a framework: past prints produced muted single-day moves of under 10%, well below the daily swings now being recorded outside of reporting season. The most relevant signal going forward is whether availability stabilises or continues its slide toward zero — at 5.3% and falling, there is very little room left before the lending pool is fully exhausted again.
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