ITNF posted a 27% gain this week, closing at $0.0305 on April 29. That move is the headline. Almost everything else in the data is too stale to carry weight.
The short interest data is over six years old. Cost-to-borrow readings date to late 2019. The ORTEX short score, utilization figures, and valuation multiples are all similarly dated — none of these figures can be treated as current, and presenting them as such would be misleading. The most recent official short interest from FINRA shows just 300 shares short as of September 2025, but even that reading is more than seven months old. The lending market picture is essentially a blank page.
The price action itself is the only live signal. A 27% weekly gain on a stock trading at three cents, with no confirmed earnings event on the calendar and a market cap that registers as null, points squarely at the micro-cap OTC dynamics that are common at this end of the market — thin liquidity, wide spreads, and moves that can reverse just as quickly as they appear. The one-month gain of 22% confirms the upward drift predates this week, but the identical 1-day and 1-week percentage change suggests the bulk of the move compressed into a single session.
Insider data from late 2025 shows a Managing Director selling small lots — 300 to 1,000 shares at a time — at prices around $630 to $646. Those prices are not remotely consistent with the current $0.0305 close. The mismatch almost certainly reflects a reverse split or share consolidation at some point between those transactions and today. The insider data cannot be reconciled with the current price and should not be used to draw conclusions about positioning.
The one thing worth watching is whether the price can hold above the $0.03 level after this week's move, and whether any volume data emerges to clarify what drove the spike.
See the live data behind this article on ORTEX.
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