Current Setup & Catalysts
Figures converted from CNY at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.
Current Setup & Catalysts
1. Current Setup in One Page
The stock is currently trading at US$1.44 — the 14th percentile of its 52-week range — and the market is mostly watching whether the H1 2026 interim print (board meeting expected the last week of August) repeats H1 2025's blowout (revenue +33%, net profit +59%, gross margin 19.6%) or confirms the bear's call that FY2025 was a subsidy-and-working-capital peak. The recent setup is Mixed-to-Bearish: management delivered exactly what they promised on FY2025 (revenue $5.29B / +31%, net profit $416M / +129%, US$0.068 final dividend) and the market faded the print — shares are −6.3% since the 27-Mar-2026 results, the 50-day sits below the 200-day in a fresh death-cross regime, and SFC reportable shorts have rebuilt to 140.4M shares (highest since Q2 2025). The two market focus items inside the next six months are (i) the H1 2026 interim cash-flow statement (will bills-payable contract? will the new supplier-finance programme grow?), and (ii) the 17-Jun-2026 AGM (renewal of the share-issuance mandate and the Deloitte re-appointment vote). The H1 2026 print is the only catalyst that can credibly resolve the bull-vs-bear debate before year-end; everything else is incremental.
Recent Setup Rating
Hard-Dated Events (6m)
High-Impact Catalysts
Next Hard Date (days)
Last Close (US$)
52-Week Range Position (%)
SFC Reportable Shorts (M)
Consensus PT (US$)
The single highest-impact near-term event is the H1 2026 interim print (board meeting expected ~26-Aug-2026, full announcement within the following three trading days). The H1 2025 comp is a tough one — $2.68B revenue, 19.6% gross margin, $230M net profit, 8.79M units — so a clean beat would refute the bear's "subsidy peak" call, while a soft print would confirm it. Everything before then (AGM, dividend payment, monthly SFC shorts) is mechanical; everything after sits beyond the six-month window.
2. What Changed in the Last 3-6 Months
The recent setup is shaped by a tight cluster of events between January and April 2026: the FY25 profit alert, the Vietnam plant opening, the FY25 annual results, the Deloitte FY25 audit clearance, and the announced INED departure. None individually crystallised the thesis; collectively they tested both bull and bear cases and the tape concluded with shares back near the bottom of the 52-week range.
Narrative arc. Through Q3 2025 investors cared about whether the FY25 cyclical rebound was real (the answer: yes, headline). Through Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 they cared about whether it would clear an unmodified Deloitte audit (the answer: yes, on schedule, 30-Mar-2026). What they care about now — late May 2026 — is whether the cash-flow plumbing under the FY25 print holds up in H1 2026 without further bills-payable expansion, and whether the controlling family will produce a second consecutive year of >=50% payout-ratio capital return or revert to the FY24 base. Neither question can be settled before the late-August interim print. The unresolved overhang is governance succession: the audit-rotation pattern, the worst-decile ISS QualityScore, and the announced INED departure mean that even a clean operating result will leave a structural discount until the family produces a real Audit Committee chair succession plan and a buyback authorization with size.
3. What the Market Is Watching Now
The live debate is narrow. Bulls and bears agree on the FY25 print, the cash pile, the dealer footprint, the Vietnam plant, and the long-term consolidation thesis. They disagree only on whether the H1 2026 cash flow holds together without further bills-payable expansion and whether the family converts the $2.47B cash pile into a real capital-return regime. Both of those questions get partial answers in the next 90 days (AGM mandate + dividend payment) and full answers in the late-August interim print.
4. Ranked Catalyst Timeline
Dates are anchored to verified HKEX disclosures or known Hong Kong-listed cadence (H1 interim board meeting typically falls in the last week of August based on the 26-Aug-2025 precedent). Ranking is by expected decision value, not chronology — the AGM is closer in time but resolves less of the underwriting debate than the late-August interim print.
One catalyst rules the timeline. The H1 2026 interim print (board meeting ~26-Aug-2026) is the only event in the six-month window that can credibly resolve the bull-vs-bear debate. The AGM (17-Jun) and dividend payment (16-Jul) are mechanical confirmations of FY25 disclosures already in the price; the NDRC implementation rules and AIMA/Ninebot prints are decision-useful but second-order. Treat catalysts #1, #2, and #4 as the decision-relevant cluster; everything else is incremental evidence.
5. Impact Matrix
Three catalysts in the six-month window update durable thesis variables; the rest add information without changing the underwriting case.
The impact matrix concentrates the decision weight on three items. Catalyst #1 (the H1 2026 print) and Catalyst #2 (the AGM capital-return signal) together resolve roughly two-thirds of the institutional debate. Catalyst #3 (the NDRC implementation rules) is the largest swing factor for sell-side FY26 estimates — a near-term consensus driver, not a multi-year thesis driver. Catalysts #4 (governance succession) and #5 (AIMA comparison) are durable updates that change the underwriting multiple. Catalyst #6 (SPR direction) is the implementation-side tell — it does not update the thesis but it telegraphs how the institutional book is reading the same evidence.
6. Next 90 Days
The 90-day calendar is thin in headline events but heavy in implication. Two of the four 90-day items (AGM and dividend payment) are mechanical execution of FY25 disclosures; the late-August interim print is the only event in the window that can change underwriting. The trade-in subsidy implementation rules (Catalyst #4 from the ranked timeline) have a known issuing authority (NDRC) but no published date — they are the second-largest swing factor that could fall inside or just beyond the 90-day window.
7. What Would Change the View
Three observable signals over the next six months would most change the investment debate. First, the H1 2026 cash flow statement — specifically, whether bills payable contracts (or stays flat) and whether the supplier-finance outstanding balance declines or holds steady. A clean H1 2026 CFO/NI ratio above 1.0× without further working-capital release would validate the Long-Term Thesis driver #2 (mid-cycle margin uplift) and refute the bear's Failure Mode #2 (cash-flow quality fails). Second, an AGM or post-AGM buyback authorization with size — a >=$143M buyback program, or a second special dividend declared with the H1 2026 interim, would be the first observable evidence that the controlling family is committing to a sustained 50%+ payout regime rather than a one-off FY25 sweetener. This is the single multi-year signal that converts Yadea from a dividend-yield trap into a capital-return compounder. Third, an explicit Audit Committee chair succession announcement — given the PwC-to-Deloitte swap, the Wong Lung Ming departure, and the worst-decile ISS QualityScore, a credible chair successor with public audit credentials would be the first material reduction in the governance discount that limits the entire long-term thesis. None of these signals alone fully resolves the underwriting debate, but any two together would force the multi-year case to update; their joint absence after the late-August interim print would confirm that Yadea remains a narrow-moat cyclical at a fair multiple with a permanently discounted cash hoard — exactly the bear's "yield-trap" failure mode.