Marketdash

Davis Commodities Stock Jumps 12% Despite Profit Plunge: Here's Why

MarketDash Editorial Team
22 hours ago
Davis Commodities saw its stock surge over 12% in after-hours trading Wednesday despite reporting a 97% drop in net income. Strong revenue growth and geographic expansion in Africa and China drove investor optimism.

Sometimes the market looks at a company that just reported a 97% profit collapse and thinks, "Yeah, but..." That's exactly what happened Wednesday when Davis Commodities Ltd. (DTCK) released first-half results that were objectively terrible on the bottom line but apparently interesting enough on the top line to send shares up 12.65% to $0.27 in after-hours trading.

The Revenue Story Investors Liked

The Singapore-based agricultural commodity trader posted revenue of $95 million for the six months ended June 30, up 42.1% from $66.9 million in the same period last year. That's the kind of growth that catches attention, even when profits are evaporating.

Sugar sales climbed 35.4% to $60.8 million, powered by stronger liquid sugar demand in China and Brazilian sugar sales flowing into Africa. These are the headline numbers that probably sparked the after-hours rally—investors betting on momentum rather than margins.

But here's the catch: net income cratered 96.9% to just $0.04 million from $1.3 million a year ago. Gross margin compressed from 4.4% to 2.8% as higher raw material and logistics costs squeezed profitability. The company couldn't pass those increases along to customers, which is never a comfortable position for a commodity trader.

Where the Growth Is Coming From

The geographic breakdown tells a story of dramatic regional shifts. Africa became the star performer with revenue jumping 64.9% to $66.2 million. China posted even more explosive growth—up 164.4% to $15.2 million—though from a much smaller base.

Meanwhile, Vietnam revenue collapsed 54.2% to $1.3 million and Thailand plunged 81.7% to $1.6 million. Singapore held relatively steady with $4.8 million, down just 2.0%. Basic and diluted earnings per share came in at $0.01, down from $0.05 the previous year.

The Technical Picture Isn't Pretty

Davis Commodities has a relative strength index of 37.26, suggesting the stock is approaching oversold territory but hasn't quite gotten there yet. Over the past 12 months, shares have crashed 78.57%—the kind of decline that reflects serious fundamental challenges.

The company now sports a market capitalization of just $5.85 million. The stock's 52-week range stretches from a high of $6.89 to a low of $0.23. Wednesday's regular session close of $0.24 (down 8.85%) put shares about 0.15% above that 52-week low, meaning the stock is scraping along the absolute bottom of its range. Any attempted rally will likely face substantial resistance from investors looking to exit.

Price Action: According to market data, DTCK closed Wednesday's regular session at $0.24, down 8.85%, before the after-hours surge.

Technical indicators show the stock has a negative price trend across all timeframes, suggesting traders remain skeptical despite the post-earnings bounce. Whether Wednesday's after-hours enthusiasm translates into sustained buying remains to be seen, especially given the margin pressure and volatile geographic performance.

Davis Commodities Stock Jumps 12% Despite Profit Plunge: Here's Why

MarketDash Editorial Team
22 hours ago
Davis Commodities saw its stock surge over 12% in after-hours trading Wednesday despite reporting a 97% drop in net income. Strong revenue growth and geographic expansion in Africa and China drove investor optimism.

Sometimes the market looks at a company that just reported a 97% profit collapse and thinks, "Yeah, but..." That's exactly what happened Wednesday when Davis Commodities Ltd. (DTCK) released first-half results that were objectively terrible on the bottom line but apparently interesting enough on the top line to send shares up 12.65% to $0.27 in after-hours trading.

The Revenue Story Investors Liked

The Singapore-based agricultural commodity trader posted revenue of $95 million for the six months ended June 30, up 42.1% from $66.9 million in the same period last year. That's the kind of growth that catches attention, even when profits are evaporating.

Sugar sales climbed 35.4% to $60.8 million, powered by stronger liquid sugar demand in China and Brazilian sugar sales flowing into Africa. These are the headline numbers that probably sparked the after-hours rally—investors betting on momentum rather than margins.

But here's the catch: net income cratered 96.9% to just $0.04 million from $1.3 million a year ago. Gross margin compressed from 4.4% to 2.8% as higher raw material and logistics costs squeezed profitability. The company couldn't pass those increases along to customers, which is never a comfortable position for a commodity trader.

Where the Growth Is Coming From

The geographic breakdown tells a story of dramatic regional shifts. Africa became the star performer with revenue jumping 64.9% to $66.2 million. China posted even more explosive growth—up 164.4% to $15.2 million—though from a much smaller base.

Meanwhile, Vietnam revenue collapsed 54.2% to $1.3 million and Thailand plunged 81.7% to $1.6 million. Singapore held relatively steady with $4.8 million, down just 2.0%. Basic and diluted earnings per share came in at $0.01, down from $0.05 the previous year.

The Technical Picture Isn't Pretty

Davis Commodities has a relative strength index of 37.26, suggesting the stock is approaching oversold territory but hasn't quite gotten there yet. Over the past 12 months, shares have crashed 78.57%—the kind of decline that reflects serious fundamental challenges.

The company now sports a market capitalization of just $5.85 million. The stock's 52-week range stretches from a high of $6.89 to a low of $0.23. Wednesday's regular session close of $0.24 (down 8.85%) put shares about 0.15% above that 52-week low, meaning the stock is scraping along the absolute bottom of its range. Any attempted rally will likely face substantial resistance from investors looking to exit.

Price Action: According to market data, DTCK closed Wednesday's regular session at $0.24, down 8.85%, before the after-hours surge.

Technical indicators show the stock has a negative price trend across all timeframes, suggesting traders remain skeptical despite the post-earnings bounce. Whether Wednesday's after-hours enthusiasm translates into sustained buying remains to be seen, especially given the margin pressure and volatile geographic performance.