Evercel, Inc. heads into the final days of April with stale data across almost every dimension — a profile that says more about the stock's illiquidity than about any directional view.
The price tells the most recent story, and it is a brief one. The last recorded close was $0.35 on April 17 — thirteen days ago. That session saw the stock drop 12.5%, though on a name this thinly traded, a single transaction can move the quoted price materially. No subsequent close has printed. For context, the stock is flat over the past month on the few days it has traded.
Positioning data carries almost no weight here. The most recent short interest estimate dates to August 2024, at 3,284 shares — a number that has not moved in over a year of history. No float figure is available, so a meaningful percentage cannot be calculated. Cost-to-borrow data is similarly dated, last recorded at 8.6% in August 2024. The one current data point is availability: zero shares have been lent out consistently across every session tracked through late April 2026, meaning there is simply no active borrow market in this name.
The broader data picture reinforces the illiquidity theme. Valuation multiples reference a 2021 fiscal year-end. The ORTEX short score last updated in February 2023. Analyst coverage, options data, and institutional holdings are all absent from the snapshot entirely. Earnings history shows four events going back to late 2023, with price reactions ranging from zero to a 10.5% one-day drop — but the sample is too small and too infrequent to draw patterns from.
What to watch is straightforward: any resumption of regular daily price prints would be the first signal that liquidity conditions are changing. Until then, the data gaps are the story.
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