As I have tried to explain, many times, Kevin his his own eyes on the wrong target, the wrong prize. He's focused on his bondholders. He should, instead, be focused on his stockholders, knowing that we are in control of the stock price. The proof is the fact that small-volume trades can move the price by a double-digit percentage, up or down.
One more time. If the company's business is improving, if their year-over-year revenue is increasing, if they're signing contracts with an increasing number of large and medium-sized corporations, and if the science of the corn-to-oil process is sound, then there's no reason to expect any downside in the price if the company releases the 10-Q for the first quarter of 2019. I prefer for the company to release the older quarterly and annual reports first, for the sake of continuity, but I can't force Kevin to choose one missing report over another one.
Any upside in the number of outstanding shares is manageable if the financial figures are good and improving.