Canasil Resources Inc. heads into the final days of April with two things standing out: insider buying earlier this year and a stock that has drifted down 10% over the past month to C$0.045.
The most compelling story here is in the ownership data. In January, President and CEO Bahman Yamini bought 700,000 shares at C$0.05. General Counsel and Secretary Graham Scott added 1.5 million shares at the same price. Combined, that is 2.2 million net shares acquired in the 90 days to late January, worth roughly US$79,500. Both were buying above the current market price — the stock has since slipped below their entry point. The pattern is consistent with prior management behaviour: a cluster of director and CFO purchases also appeared in October 2022 at C$0.055, again at levels now above the current quote.
Short interest is effectively negligible. Estimated short interest has roughly doubled week-on-week in share terms, but the absolute figure remains tiny — 3,922 shares, or just 0.003% of the free float. There is nothing here to flag as meaningful bear conviction. Availability in the lending market is essentially unlimited, and borrow costs were last recorded at a benign 0.54% (a reading now stale by about seven weeks). The ORTEX short score of 25 is low, confirming that short sellers have shown no sustained interest in the name.
Factor scores tell a similarly muted story. The days-to-cover rank comes in at the 98th percentile and the short score rank at the 97th percentile — but both of those reflect how negligible the short position is, not how heavily shorted the stock is. A dividend score of 30 out of 100 is unremarkable for a junior miner. Valuation data is too stale to be useful here; the most recent EV figure carries a December 2024 date, nearly 500 days old, and should not be treated as current.
The earnings calendar flags a next event on May 26. Past reactions have been volatile on a percentage basis — moves of +33%, +20%, and -17% in recent history — though the absolute price moves are tiny given the stock trades in single-digit cents. The five-day post-event drift has generally tracked the one-day move, suggesting reactions have tended to persist rather than reverse.
For this stock, the price of C$0.045 and the May 26 event date are the two things worth watching: whether the stock can recover to the level where management bought, and whether the next results print lands closer to the +33% or -17% end of the recent reaction range.
See the live data behind this article on ORTEX.
Open CLZ 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.