Any time a purchase of goods is made for the sole purpose of reselling said goods, once the purchase is made, it then becomes inventory. The two warrant holders purchased inventory at a fixed cost in order to sell into a selected market. They need demand in order to achieve profit. When demand wanes..they lose profit and could possibly loose principal. When capital is expended you need to "turn it" in order to maintain purchasing power. If you can not turn it then you have dead inventory.
Given that demand and inventory(stock) controls price with regards to HUMBL securities...they are limited at what they can dump into the market. So yes...like Home Depot, Krogers, Walmart, auto dealer, housing(builders)..etc..etc...etc.
If you can not turn your inventory effectively...you have dead inventory and have lost purchasing power. You then have to dump that inventory at reduced prices in order to recoup some purchasing power. That would be the definition of a "bag holder" . :)