Company Description
Oriental Rise Holdings Limited (NASDAQ: ORIS) is an integrated tea company in mainland China operating in the packaged foods industry within the consumer defensive sector. According to the company’s public disclosures, Oriental Rise focuses on the planting, cultivation, processing, and sales of primarily-processed and refined tea products, with a particular emphasis on white tea sourced from tea gardens in Fujian Province.
The company describes itself as a vertically integrated tea supplier. Its operations span tea cultivation, processing of tea leaves, and the sale of tea products to tea business operators, such as wholesale distributors, as well as to end-user retail customers in mainland China. Oriental Rise operates tea gardens located in Zherong County, Ningde City in Fujian Province, a region noted in company communications as a high-altitude tea-growing area that supports the production of higher-quality tea leaves suitable for premium and value-added products.
Core Products and Tea Categories
Oriental Rise’s major tea products include (i) primarily-processed tea consisting of white tea and black tea, and (ii) refined white tea and black tea. In its interim 2025 results, the company states that its revenue is primarily derived from the production and sales of:
- Primarily-processed white tea
- Primarily-processed black tea
- Refined tea
Primarily-processed teas represent tea leaves that have undergone initial processing steps, while refined teas represent further processed products. The company’s financial reporting breaks out revenue contributions from these categories, underscoring their importance to its business model.
Vertically Integrated Tea Operations
Oriental Rise reports that its cost of sales is mainly driven by plantation costs and processing costs associated with the tea products sold. Plantation costs include picking fees, cultivation costs, fertilizer costs, staff salaries for patrollers, management fees for tea garden managers, and depreciation of tea gardens. Processing costs relate to the handling and transformation of harvested tea leaves into primarily-processed and refined tea products.
The company’s vertically integrated structure is reflected in its description of operations “from cultivation and processing to branding, distribution, and export” in various press releases. It has highlighted a strategy of expanding across the tea value chain, including tea garden resources, processing capacity, product development, branding, and distribution channels.
Geographic Focus and Tea Garden Resources
Oriental Rise generates its tea-related revenue from business in mainland China. The company operates tea gardens in Zherong County, Ningde City, Fujian Province. In its news releases, Oriental Rise notes that Zherong is known for a high-altitude tea-growing environment and significant day-night temperature variation, which it associates with the development of higher-quality tea leaves. These tea gardens support the company’s focus on white tea and black tea products.
Strategic Focus: Vertical Integration and Product Diversification
Across multiple press releases and filings, Oriental Rise emphasizes a long-term strategy centered on vertical integration and product diversification within the tea industry. The company has entered into several non-binding letters of intent (LOIs) aimed at expanding its capabilities along the tea value chain:
- Upstream expansion: A non-binding LOI to acquire a controlling equity interest in Hubei Daguan Tea Industry Group Co., Ltd., described as a vertically integrated tea enterprise with tea cultivation, large-scale processing, product development, and brand management, and substantial self-owned and managed tea plantation resources.
- Distribution and market access: A non-binding LOI to acquire Fujian Daohe Tea Technology Co., Ltd. and Ningde Minji Tea Co., Ltd., which are described as leading tea distributors in China with nationwide coverage including both online and offline sales channels.
- Ready-to-drink and value-added products: A non-binding LOI to acquire the PoDu white tea beverage brand and related assets, a ready-to-drink botanical tea beverage positioned around high-altitude white tea from Zherong County.
In its communications, Oriental Rise indicates that these contemplated transactions, if completed, are expected to enhance upstream supply control, improve product mix, extend the white tea value chain into ready-to-drink formats, and broaden distribution capabilities. The company consistently frames these LOIs as non-binding and subject to due diligence, definitive agreements, and customary closing conditions, and does not represent them as completed acquisitions.
Ready-to-Drink and Health-Oriented Tea Beverages
In relation to the PoDu brand LOI, Oriental Rise describes PoDu as a ready-to-drink botanical tea beverage formulated using aged Shoumei white tea sourced from Zherong County, produced through a slow-boiling process with botanical ingredients such as vine tea, monk fruit, and dried citrus peel. The product profile is described as “zero sucrose, zero fat, zero artificial coloring, and zero preservatives,” and is positioned for a broad range of consumption scenarios, including family gatherings, restaurant dining, and business entertainment. Oriental Rise states that it views this potential acquisition as aligned with a focus on extending the value chain of its core white tea category into ready-to-drink products and capturing health-oriented demand trends.
Customer Base and Sales Channels
According to its company description included in multiple press releases, Oriental Rise sells its tea products to tea business operators, such as wholesale distributors, and to end-user retail customers in mainland China. In its discussion of potential acquisitions of Daohe and Minji, the company notes that these targets have established distribution networks with nationwide coverage, including online and offline sales channels, which Oriental Rise views as complementary to its existing operations.
Capital Markets and Corporate Structure
Oriental Rise Holding Limited’s ordinary shares trade on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the ticker symbol ORIS. The company completed an initial public offering of ordinary shares and has subsequently conducted additional offerings of units consisting of ordinary shares (or pre-funded warrants) and common warrants. Proceeds from these offerings, as described in company filings, are intended for purposes such as sales network expansion, development of regional sales channels, expansion of production and capacity, acquisition of equipment, upgrades to manufacturing facilities, settlement of amounts related to tea garden rights, establishment of new production plants, and general corporate purposes and working capital.
The company has also reported corporate actions approved by shareholders, including an increase in authorized share capital, the designation of Founder Preferred Shares with enhanced voting rights, issuance of those Founder Preferred Shares to a company owned by its founder and largest shareholder, and shareholder authorization for a potential share consolidation within a specified range, with the exact ratio and timing to be determined by the Board of Directors.
Financial Reporting and Business Drivers
In its interim 2025 results filed on Form 6-K, Oriental Rise provides detail on revenue composition, cost of sales, gross profit, and operating expenses. It explains that revenue is primarily derived from sales of primarily-processed white tea, primarily-processed black tea, and refined tea in mainland China. The company attributes changes in revenue and gross margin to factors such as selling price movements, sales volumes, and broader market conditions affecting white tea supply and demand.
Plantation and processing costs are identified as key components of cost of sales. The company describes specific elements of plantation costs, including picking fees, cultivation costs, fertilizer costs, staff salaries for patrollers, management fees for tea garden managers, and depreciation of tea gardens. It also outlines the nature of selling and distribution costs (staff costs and packing materials) and administrative expenses (including listing expenses, legal and professional fees, staff costs, depreciation, and social insurance and housing provident fund contributions).
Nasdaq Listing Compliance
Oriental Rise has disclosed that it received a notification from Nasdaq regarding non-compliance with the minimum bid price requirement under Nasdaq Listing Rule 5550(a)(2), after its ordinary shares traded below US$1.00 per share for a specified period. The company reports that it has an initial 180-calendar-day period to regain compliance and that it may be eligible for an additional grace period if certain conditions are met. In its filings, Oriental Rise states that the notification does not immediately affect the listing of its ordinary shares on the Nasdaq Capital Market and that it is monitoring the closing bid price and considering options that may include a reverse stock split.
Position in the Packaged Foods and Tea Industry
Within the packaged foods industry and consumer defensive sector, Oriental Rise positions itself as a vertically integrated tea company with a focus on white and black tea products in mainland China. Its disclosures emphasize control over tea garden resources in Fujian Province, integration of cultivation and processing, and efforts to expand into higher value-added and consumer-facing segments of the tea market through potential acquisitions and product development initiatives related to refined tea and ready-to-drink beverages.
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Short Interest History
Short interest in Oriental Rise (ORIS) currently stands at 82.7 thousand shares, down 1.3% from the previous reporting period, representing 8.0% of the float. Over the past 12 months, short interest has decreased by 71.6%.
Days to Cover History
Days to cover for Oriental Rise (ORIS) currently stands at 1.0 days. This low days-to-cover ratio indicates high liquidity, allowing short sellers to quickly exit positions if needed. The days to cover has decreased 42.9% over the past year, suggesting improved liquidity for short covering. The ratio has shown significant volatility over the period, ranging from 1.0 to 2.3 days.