because they have to Cover their "Short Positions" !
* They lose money as the stock climbs !
* Your Buying, Forces them to Buy,
and their Buying, causes the stock to Climb Higher !
The possibility of a "Short Squeeze"
Short Squeeze - What it is:
A short squeeze occurs when the stock's price doesn't decline as anticipated.
A short squeeze is a situation in which a stock's price increase triggers a rush of buying activity among short sellers.
Short sellers must buy stock to close out their short positions and cut their losses, which results in a further increase in stock prices, which compel still more short sellers to cover their positions.
The possibility of a "short squeeze" is one reason some analysts look at a high amount of short interest as a Bullish Indicator.
Short Interest is the fuel, performance is the fuse, says ShortSqueeze.com
Fibonacci Numbers are commonly used in Technical Analysis with or without a knowledge of Elliot Wave Analysis to determine potential support, resistance, and price objectives.
The most popular Fibonacci Retracements are 61.8% and 38.2%
61.8% retracements imply a new trend is establishing itself.
38.2% retracements usually imply that the prior trend will continue
38.2% retracements are considered natural retracements in a healthy trend.
Fibonacci Retracements can be applied after a decline to forecast the length of a counter-trend bounce.
The 50% retracement is not based on a Fibonacci number. Instead, this number stems from Dow Theory's assertion that the Averages often retrace half their prior move.
because they have to Cover their "Short Positions" !
* They lose money as the stock climbs !
* Your Buying, Forces them to Buy,
and their Buying, causes the stock to Climb Higher !
The possibility of a "Short Squeeze"
Short Squeeze - What it is:
A short squeeze occurs when the stock's price doesn't decline as anticipated.
A short squeeze is a situation in which a stock's price increase triggers a rush of buying activity among short sellers.
Short sellers must buy stock to close out their short positions and cut their losses, which results in a further increase in stock prices, which compel still more short sellers to cover their positions.
The possibility of a "short squeeze" is one reason some analysts look at a high amount of short interest as a Bullish Indicator.
Short Interest is the fuel, performance is the fuse, says ShortSqueeze.com
Fibonacci Numbers are commonly used in Technical Analysis with or without a knowledge of Elliot Wave Analysis to determine potential support, resistance, and price objectives.
The most popular Fibonacci Retracements are 61.8% and 38.2%
61.8% retracements imply a new trend is establishing itself.
38.2% retracements usually imply that the prior trend will continue
38.2% retracements are considered natural retracements in a healthy trend.
Fibonacci Retracements can be applied after a decline to forecast the length of a counter-trend bounce.
The 50% retracement is not based on a Fibonacci number. Instead, this number stems from Dow Theory's assertion that the Averages often retrace half their prior move.
A Reverse Merger allows a privately held company to go public by acquiring a controlling interest in, and merging with, a public operating or public shell company.
In a Reverse Merger process,
the private operating company shareholders exchange their shares of the private company for either new or existing shares of the public company
At the end of the transaction, the shareholders of the private operating company own a majority of the public company and the private operating company has become a wholly owned subsidiary of the public company.
(2) either no or nominal assets or assets consisting solely of any amount of cash and cash equivalents.
A Reverse Merger is the most common alternative to an initial public offering (IPO) or direct public offering (DPO) for a company seeking to go public.
In a Reverse Merger transaction, the private operating business must pay for the public shell company.
That payment may be in cash, equity or both.
The average cash value of a fully reporting public entity with no liabilities, no issues and which is otherwise “clean” is between $280,000 – $400,000.