STR.H — Santa Rosa Resources Corp. — enters the week of April 27 in near-total informational silence, making the stock one of the most data-sparse names on the TSXV.
The price tells a stark story. Shares closed at CAD $0.065 on April 29, down 7.1% on the day, the week, and the month — a uniform decline suggesting a single session drove all recent losses rather than sustained selling pressure. With a market cap below $360,000 USD, this is a micro-cap in the truest sense: the float is tiny, daily liquidity is negligible, and single trades can move the needle materially. No short interest data is available, which is unsurprising at this size — the lending market for names this small is effectively non-existent.
The most concrete near-term reference point is a scheduled event on May 7. The earnings history in the data is mixed at best. The two most recent events with meaningful price reactions delivered a 7.7% gain over one week following a September 2025 announcement, and an 8.3% single-day loss followed by a 16.7% five-day gain after an August 2025 release. The two most recent events in December 2025 produced zero movement in either direction. That pattern — alternating silence and volatility — is characteristic of micro-cap names where market-making is thin and reaction depends heavily on whether any buyers or sellers are paying attention on a given day.
Insider data is stale by more than a decade and carries no weight in the current analysis. The most recent recorded trades date to April 2016, when director David John Roberts sold 730,000 shares at CAD $0.035. Before that, a cluster of director and officer purchases in July 2014 at CAD $0.05 set the historical baseline. Neither data point is relevant to current positioning. The 90-day net share figure in the snapshot reflects those ancient trades, not recent activity.
Factor scores offer almost nothing to work with. The dividend score of 47 and a sector score of 50 are both mid-table readings with no sector classification, which simply reflects the company's place as an unclassified resource-stage issuer. No analyst coverage, no valuation multiples, and no institutional data are available.
The May 7 event is the single thing worth watching — less for what it will reveal about fundamentals and more for whether it draws any trading volume into a stock that has been near-dormant.
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