TIGR UP Fintech Holding Limited
CATEGORY BREAKDOWN
METRIC BREAKDOWN
Revenue Growth (YoY)
Year-over-year revenue growth rate
> 50% strong
Gross Margin
Revenue retained after direct costs
> 50% strong
Cash Runway
Months of cash at current burn rate
> 24 months ideal
Debt / Equity
Total debt relative to shareholder equity
< 25% strong
Price / Sales
Market cap relative to trailing revenue
< 3x strong
Rule of 40
Growth rate plus operating margin
> 40 excellent
Insider Ownership
Percentage of shares held by insiders
> 20% strong
Share Dilution (12M)
Share count increase over last 12 months
< 5% ideal
SCORE HISTORY
RESEARCH NOTE
BUSINESS SUMMARY
UP Fintech, operating as Tiger Brokers, runs an online retail brokerage targeting Asian retail investors who want access to US, Hong Kong, and Singapore-listed equities through one mobile app.
The business started in mainland China, but Chinese regulatory tightening on cross-border retail brokerage in 2022-2023 forced the company to stop onboarding new mainland accounts and reposition to overseas Chinese diaspora plus Singapore, Hong Kong, US, Australia, and New Zealand customers.
Revenue mix is commission and financing income (margin lending, IPO subscriptions, securities lending) plus a growing wealth-management and corporate-services line (employee-stock-plan administration for Chinese-listed companies, cash management, US-listed-IPO underwriting via subsidiaries).
MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The Asian retail-brokerage market is fragmented and structurally moving online. Where TIGR is exposed:
- Singapore is the priority growth market — high-income, English-speaking diaspora, and the regulatory home base post-China tightening
- Hong Kong remains material, with crossborder Chinese investors using HK-account routes legal under current rules
- US-listed Chinese ADRs continues as a niche product — IPO subscriptions and post-IPO trading for Chinese companies listing in the US
- Mainland China is wind-down, not growth — existing accounts kept, new ones not onboarded
Macro context: the operating margin of 46% is exceptional for a retail broker and reflects Tiger's order-flow and financing-income mix. Compared to US retail brokers (Schwab ~40% operating margin, Robinhood ~25-30% in good quarters), Tiger is benefiting from higher margin-lending balances and structurally lower customer-acquisition cost in markets with thinner competition.
REVENUE QUALITY
The reported numbers are exceptional but need careful framing:
- $612M TTM revenue, 56% YoY growth — driven by a combination of US-equity trading-volume mean reversion, Asian retail re-engagement, and Singapore client acquisition
- Gross margin 69%, operating margin 46% — broker-economics, not software-economics; financing income (margin lending) and order-flow fundamentally differ from SaaS revenue
- P/S 2.2 — reasonable for the growth and margin profile, expensive only if you anchor against a no-growth incumbent
- Cash and equivalents $791M vs $173M total debt — net cash position; the balance-sheet is overcapitalized for a brokerage of this size
The −93.5% 12-month share-count change is a reverse split, not a buyback. Same caveat as COE — treat it as cosmetic.
What hides in the data: Tiger's commission take-rate has been compressing for years as the industry races toward zero. Operating margin can hold if financing income picks up the slack — but a sustained low-volatility environment that keeps margin balances flat would expose the dependence.
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
The structural moat is the Chinese-diaspora retail base built over a decade plus the Mandarin-first product experience in markets where most brokers ship English-only apps.
Genuine differentiators:
- Multi-market account from one app — US, HK, SG, AU listings in one workflow is operationally hard
- IPO-subscription product — early access to US-listed Chinese ADR IPOs is a feature retail customers actively want
- Employee-stock-plan administration for Chinese-listed companies is a B2B revenue line with switching costs
What it is not: a moat against Western incumbents. Robinhood and Webull are not competing for Tiger's diaspora customer in Singapore — different user, different product surface. The real competitor is Futu Holdings (FUTU), a larger Hong-Kong-and-Singapore peer with a similar diaspora playbook.
GROWTH THESIS
The bull case has three legs:
- Singapore client-acquisition compounds — Tiger has been the more aggressive acquirer in SG retail post-2023 and the diaspora-tilted positioning is working.
- Wealth management and corporate services scale beyond pure commission revenue, which structurally diversifies the income mix away from market-cycle dependence.
- The reverse-split-adjusted equity story continues to attract institutional flow that wouldn't touch a sub-$2 ADR.
The operating margin of 46% gives the company unusually large optionality — in a flat year it can absorb meaningful investment in market expansion without going through quarterly losses, which most retail brokers cannot.
KEY RISKS
Three specific risks:
-
Regulatory exposure on the diaspora-China rail. Tiger is past the worst of the 2022 mainland-China tightening, but US-China financial-flow regulation can move on either side and TIGR's customer mix sits exactly on those rails. A tightening on either side has historically moved the stock 30%+ within days.
-
Volume cyclicality compounded by margin-balance sensitivity. Both commission and financing income move with the same retail-engagement cycle. A bear market hits both lines simultaneously, and the operating leverage works in reverse — expense base is largely fixed.
-
FUTU as the larger competitor. Futu is roughly 5× Tiger's market cap, has a more developed Hong Kong base, and competes for the same Singapore retail. Direct take-rate competition in SG would compress Tiger's most-strategic growth line.
VERDICT
The 93.3/100 score is genuinely earned — growth, margin, capital structure, insider alignment all check out, and unlike most small-caps near this score, the absolute revenue base ($612M) is large enough that the metrics aren't artifact of small-numbers leverage.
For investors comfortable with US-listed Chinese-roots ADRs and the regulatory rails between China, US, HK, and SG, TIGR is a credible name to research at the current valuation. For investors with hard mandates against ADRs or Chinese-operating-history exposure, the structural risk is disqualifying regardless of fundamentals.
The single metric to watch next is client-asset growth in Singapore specifically. Tiger discloses geographic AUM splits — if SG continues to outgrow the rest of the book, the diaspora-thesis is intact. If SG flattens or grows slower than HK, the strongest leg of the growth case is wobbling.
Report last updated: May 4, 2026
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DATA INFO
Last updated: May 4, 2026
Sources: SEC EDGAR, Financial Modeling Prep, Yahoo Finance. Not financial advice.