What happened

Shares of Turtle Beach (HEAR 0.64%) jumped as much as 14.2% higher on Wednesday. Investors responded to the sound card and gaming headset maker reshuffling its balance sheet. Turtle Beach's stock ended the day 13.3% above Tuesday's closing prices.

So what

$19.3 million of preferred stock in a Turtle Beach subsidiary was retired near the end of April, removing that liability from Turtle Beach's accounts at a 50% discount. The actual transaction happened a month ago, but Turtle Beach hadn't provided full details on the deal until now.

Adult male holding a gaming console controller and wearing an audio headset.

Image source: Getty Images.

Now what

This is a pretty extreme turnaround story. Turtle Beach was on the verge of being delisted from the NASDAQ exchange for several months, as the stock price had fallen below the required price of $1 per share for more than 30 consecutive days in early November 2017. The stock regained compliance with Nasdaq's listing rules in April, right around the time when the preferred shares were retired.

Today, Turtle Beach shares trade at nearly 10 times their 52-week lows, mostly due to Player Unknown Battlegrounds andFortnite Battle Royale players snapping up lots of gaming headsets. Talking to other players is a key feature of these massive hit games, giving headset specialists like Turtle Beach a unique growth engine.

"We expect the Battle Royale format to have lasting appeal and not be a short-lived phenomenon due to the style of the games and the addition of new participants into gaming," said Turtle Beach CEO Juergen Stark in a conference call with analysts.

If he's right, Turtle Beach will do fine for years to come. If not, these crazy stock-chart spikes could be temporary. Volatility is the name of the game, here -- it took no more than an announcement of financial jockeying to move share prices more than 10% higher today, though the company only saved $20 million. I wouldn't bet the farm on Turtle Beach quite yet.