International Digital Holding Inc. just put in one of its sharpest weekly reversals of the year — down 52% over seven days to $0.0432, even after a 10% bounce on Wednesday.
The price action tells the whole story here. IDIG is an OTC-listed micro-cap with a market cap near $27 million and essentially no publicly available fundamental data — no revenue, no earnings history, no analyst coverage, no short interest data. The three-month chart captures the full arc: a run from below $0.05 to a peak near $0.14, followed by a near-complete round trip. This week's 52% decline erased roughly half the stock's remaining value in a matter of days. The one-month change is nearly identical at -51%, confirming the collapse was concentrated and swift rather than a slow bleed.
Wednesday's 10% bounce deserves context. A single-session gain of that size on a sub-five-cent stock is common in thin OTC names — it can reflect a handful of trades rather than any shift in underlying sentiment. There is no earnings event on the calendar, no analyst moving price targets, and no insider transaction data visible for this name. Without those anchors, price alone carries the narrative.
The RSI reading of 43.78 puts the stock in modestly oversold territory but not at an extreme — it hasn't broken below the 30 threshold that would flag outright capitulation. Year-to-date the stock is down 31.5%, meaning even with this week's collapse the full-year drawdown is somewhat cushioned by gains from an earlier period. That earlier move is now almost entirely unwound.
What to watch: volume patterns on OTC names like this one tend to be the most reliable signal of whether activity is organic or driven by thin liquidity — any sustained increase in daily volume alongside price would be the first data point worth monitoring.
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