How do you intend for the company to fulfill stock price requirements for Nasdaq uplisting without one? The assumption that I keep seeing is that you'll lose equity. How is that possible if the current share price is severely undervalued due to limited access by institutions? The data shows if you uplist correctly the share price effect is positive most of the time. If people are used to the typical trip stock, reverse splitting, and failing miserably on uplist due to no business model, I can't help that. But it shouldn't serve as the benchmark model for what happens when you reserve split. You either believe the company has a profitable business model and long term value or you don't. You can't lose equity if the price appreciates after the split.