tmaster schreef op 26 november 2020 12:30:
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Het feit dat ze een notering op de nasdaq willen is niet nieuw. dus waarom vorige maand geen stijging en nu ineens wel? Niet dat ik het erg vind, want ik zit ook long.
Overigens bestaat er ook een reele kans dat er een reversed stock split komt omdat men op de nasdaq exchange zelf niet zo happig is op pennystocks van rond of onder de 1 dollar. Ze zijn fraudegevoelig en de koersuitslagen vaak groot. Je hebt dan kans om delisted te raken.
Bedrijven voeren, als ze door wat voor reden dan ook onder die 1 dollar komen vaak een reversed stock split uit. Ik zie dat ook gebeuren bij Pharming:
Meer info hier: en dan het kopje stay listed:
www.investopedia.com/investing/the-di... o stay listed, a company must maintain certain ongoing standards imposed by the exchange. These requirements serve to reassure investors that any company listed is a suitably credible firm, regardless of how much time has passed since the firm's initial offering.
To fund their ongoing scrutiny, exchanges charge periodic maintenance fees to listed companies. On the Nasdaq Global Market, annual listing fees in 2020 range from approximately $46,000 to
$159,000 (higher fees are charged to companies with more shares outstanding).4? To extend the university analogy, these ongoing requirements are much like the minimum grade point averages students must maintain once admitted, and the annual listing fees are like paying tuition.
For stock exchanges, the ongoing minimum standards are similar to the initial listing standards, but they're generally a little less stringent. In the case of the Nasdaq Global Market, one ongoing standard that a listed company must meet is to maintain 750,000 public shares outstanding worth at least $1.1 million—anything less could result in a delisting from the Nasdaq.5?
I
n other words, if a company messes up, the exchange will kick the company out of its exclusive club. A stock that has experienced a steep price decline and is trading below $1 is very risky because a relatively small price movement could result in a huge percentage swing (just think—with a $1 stock, a difference of $0.10 means a change of 10%). In low volume penny stocks, the fraudsters flourish and stocks are much more easily manipulated. Major exchanges don't want to be associated with this type of behavior, so they delist the companies that are liable to be affected by such manipulation.