KwikClick, Inc. closes the week at $2.24 — up 26% in five sessions — with almost no short-side activity to speak of and a fresh annual filing as the only material news.
The week's most striking feature is the price move itself. KWIK gained 25.7% across the week, adding to a 5.7% single-day gain on Monday, before paring about 6% on the month. The stock filed its Form 10-K on March 31, and the annual report appears to be the main catalyst driving the recent volatility. The two earnings-linked events recorded since November both produced sharp one-day drawdowns: the November release knocked the stock 6%, and the April 17 print saw it fall nearly 21% the next day. That pattern of post-filing weakness makes the current bounce worth noting.
Short sellers are barely present. KWIK's short interest is a negligible fraction of the float — well under 0.01% — and has sat frozen at 141 shares for the entirety of the past 30 days. Availability in the borrow market is wide open, reflecting a near-complete absence of demand to short the stock. Cost-to-borrow data is stale (last updated August 2025) so no reliable read on current borrowing costs is available, but with this level of short interest, borrow conditions are functionally irrelevant. There is no short-side pressure in this name.
Ownership is tightly held. The top five registered holders account for roughly 58% of shares, with founder Frederick Cooper alone controlling just over 49%. The remaining registered ownership is thin, comprising a handful of individuals. These figures date to March 2025 and are now over a year old, so precise current float composition is uncertain. What is clear is that free float is narrow — and that narrow float amplifies the price impact of even modest buying activity, which likely explains much of the week's outsized move.
The ORTEX short score ranks in the 97th percentile of its sector — an unusual reading given how small the actual short position is. That score reflects structural characteristics of the stock (thin float, low borrow demand, high days-to-cover rank at the 85th percentile) rather than any active bear campaign. Combined, these factors flag KWIK as technically squeeze-prone in theory, even if there are no shorts to squeeze in practice.
The next thing to watch is whether the post-10-K price recovery holds, or whether it follows the same fade pattern seen after the November and April filings.
See the live data behind this article on ORTEX.
Open KWIK on ORTEX →ORTEX Market Intelligence content is generated by AI from a snapshot of ORTEX's proprietary data. Content is informational only and does not constitute investment advice.