Most companies I have watched that were in a toxic debt mess like this follow the same game plan. Dilute, reverse split, more toxic debt, more dilution, and the share price finds its way back down to where the initial r/s occurred. So dcfc after a 1:200 would result in a share price of $20 and room to issue another 200 million shares or more to get right back to where it is today unless the business starts generating positive cash flow. I could be wrong about this, and the March 7 report could show a big operational turnaround. But if that's the case, why would a "radical" 1:200 stock restructuring be necessary? Me? I'm out but will keep watching.
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