CW (McCall? Ex Mayor of Ouray?),
The answer is that we have a temporary cap at .002. If you look at a longer term chart of CGFIA you will see that those folks that bought at 60 cents are now in extreme fear. Many of those people are day trading, buying at .0018 and selling at .002. This, over time, will lower the average price of the shares owned. As CGFIA gradually rises, it will take a period of time for those that have been burnt to gradually liquidate and go away. In technical terms it is called accumulation \ distribution.
This plays into Jenna's question as to how above ground gold plays into below ground gold price. A rising tide floats all boats. The difference being, what does it take to get the underground gold out of the vault so to speak. A good recent example would be Virginia Mines. Virginia Mines is a small explorer who proved that they have millions of underground ounces that are economically available. Their find proved to be valuable enough that a major producer stepped in and immediately began paying this small company $100,000/mo.
CGFIA is in a similar position. They have options on millions of ounces of underground proven & probable reserves. The present market cap of 2 million is ridiculous. At some point in the very near future, buying will massively overwhelm selling in this nano-cap stock. During the gold price runup of 1971 to 1980, fear & greed caused any stock related to precious metals to run to $5.00/share. It is still a little early here, but there is huge money to be made!