Global Mofy Metaverse (GMM) showed what looked like an eye-popping gain on June 11, 2026 — but don’t be fooled by the headline number.
Global Mofy Metaverse Limited, GMM
The stock appeared to rise roughly 5,000% in morning trading, with shares hitting a high of $3.05 and printing at $2.99 in the latest read. The prior close was $0.0587.
That’s not a rally. That’s a reverse stock split.
GMM’s 1-for-50 reverse split became effective at market open on June 11, meaning every 50 shares were consolidated into one. The per-share price adjusted upward mechanically — no new buyers, no new catalyst, no change in the underlying value of the business.
Shareholders had authorized the board to execute a reverse split at the company’s annual general meeting on January 5, 2026. The board formally approved the 1-for-50 ratio on May 26, 2026. Class A ordinary shares began trading on a post-split basis under the existing “GMM” ticker, now with a new CUSIP: G3937M205.
The split cut outstanding Class A shares from approximately 89.58 million down to around 1.79 million. Class B shares went from roughly 8.17 million to about 160,000. Par value was adjusted proportionally, and authorized share counts were reduced to match.
The stated purpose is compliance with Nasdaq’s minimum bid price rules — a listing requirement that mandates stocks trade above $1.00. GMM had been trading well below that threshold, making the reverse split a necessary move to stay listed.
This isn’t the first time GMM has done this. The company executed a 1-for-15 reverse split back in 2024, making this a repeat adjustment to its capital structure.
On the operational front, GMM has been active. The company recently announced a strategic alliance with Shanghai Infinigence AI and a co-investment in AI-powered micro-drama content within ByteDance’s ecosystem.
Peer stocks showed only modest, mixed moves on the day — this was not a sector-wide move. The broader market was mildly positive, with the S&P 500 up 0.6%, the Dow adding 0.7%, and the Nasdaq rising 0.9%, but none of that had any bearing on GMM’s session.
The bottom line: the 5,000% figure is a mathematical artifact of share consolidation, not a reflection of anything changing in the business. Enterprise value remains unchanged.
The post Global Mofy Metaverse (GMM) Stock: Why the 5,000% Gain Is Not What It Looks Like appeared first on CoinCentral.


