Thursday, January 29, 2026 3:14:35 PM
No one is trying to prove you wrong.
Just open your eyes which is a big difference.
A reverse stock split is like bundling up a bunch of cheap candy bars into one premium chocolate bar. Your total candy value stays exactly the same, but now you have fewer, higher-priced pieces.
Why AFFU Needs ItAFFU trades on the OTC market (pink sheets) at around $0.0001/share right now.
Bigger exchanges like Nasdaq require minimum prices of $1–$4/share to list. Without hitting that price naturally, they can't "up-list" to a more visible, credible exchange that attracts real investors. The reverse split artificially boosts the share price to meet that rule.
How It Works (Simple Example)Say AFFU announces a 50:1 reverse split (common ratio they've discussed):You own 10,000 shares at $0.0001 each = $1 total valueAfter 50:1 split: Your 10,000 shares become 200 shares at $0.005 each = still $1 total value. Price jumps high enough for Nasdaq compliance, but your ownership slice of the company stays identical.
Basic Strategy: Clean the balance sheet (they've done this via debt-to-share conversions)
Reverse split to spike price from pennies to $1+Apply to Nasdaq (higher visibility = more buyers/institutions)
Grow revenue (MTI's AI/digital twins fuel this)Your long-term hold gets the full upside of uplisting buzz without losing proportional ownership.
It's mechanical housekeeping for the big leagues. NOT* value destruction.
Just open your eyes which is a big difference.
A reverse stock split is like bundling up a bunch of cheap candy bars into one premium chocolate bar. Your total candy value stays exactly the same, but now you have fewer, higher-priced pieces.
Why AFFU Needs ItAFFU trades on the OTC market (pink sheets) at around $0.0001/share right now.
Bigger exchanges like Nasdaq require minimum prices of $1–$4/share to list. Without hitting that price naturally, they can't "up-list" to a more visible, credible exchange that attracts real investors. The reverse split artificially boosts the share price to meet that rule.
How It Works (Simple Example)Say AFFU announces a 50:1 reverse split (common ratio they've discussed):You own 10,000 shares at $0.0001 each = $1 total valueAfter 50:1 split: Your 10,000 shares become 200 shares at $0.005 each = still $1 total value. Price jumps high enough for Nasdaq compliance, but your ownership slice of the company stays identical.
Basic Strategy: Clean the balance sheet (they've done this via debt-to-share conversions)
Reverse split to spike price from pennies to $1+Apply to Nasdaq (higher visibility = more buyers/institutions)
Grow revenue (MTI's AI/digital twins fuel this)Your long-term hold gets the full upside of uplisting buzz without losing proportional ownership.
It's mechanical housekeeping for the big leagues. NOT* value destruction.

