Full House Resorts enters its May 7 earnings call in an unusual spot: the stock is up 13% over the past month to $2.42, yet its own CEO just sold $170,000 worth of shares days before the print.
The insider story is the clearest signal this week. CEO Daniel Lee sold 68,687 shares on April 24 at $2.475 — a material clip for a micro-cap with a float this size — just six trading days before the company reports Q1 results. The Independent Chairman also sold a smaller parcel on April 20. That follows a cluster of awards granted to Lee in late March, making the timing of the subsequent sale worth noting. The most recent buy from the CEO dates back to June 2025, when he purchased over $1.3 million worth of shares at $4.75 — well above the current price — so the insider picture is mixed rather than definitively bearish.
Short positioning tells a relaxed story. Short interest has fallen about 16% over the past month to roughly 1.9% of the free float, a level that implies modest conviction from the bear side. Borrowing costs have eased sharply — down nearly 29% on the week and 38% on the month to just 0.46% annualised, one of the cheapest borrow rates in the small-cap gaming universe. Availability remains loose, with lending market utilisation well below the 52-week high of 32%. The ORTEX short score of 43.7 is broadly neutral and has drifted slightly lower over the past two weeks. None of this signals a crowded short or squeeze setup.
Options positioning has tilted decisively bullish. The put/call ratio is running near a 52-week low at 0.015, well below its 20-day average of 0.047. For most of March and early April, the PCR sat above 0.05; it broke lower mid-April and has stayed there. That collapse in put demand relative to calls suggests the options market is positioned for upside, not a hedge against a miss.
The Street's formal coverage is dated — the most recent analyst action on record is Craig-Hallum's Ryan Sigdahl in early March, who lowered his target from $5 to $4 while keeping a Buy. The mean target across coverage sits at $3.375, implying roughly 39% upside to the current price. Most recent moves across the handful of covering analysts have been target cuts while retaining positive ratings, a pattern that reflects a stock still seen as undervalued but on a declining earnings trajectory. The EV/EBITDA multiple of 8.8x has compressed modestly over 30 days. The company carries a negative book value and trades at a negative P/E, reflecting ongoing losses, though the bull case centres on American Place — the Illinois venue — which last reported 13% revenue growth and 17% EBITDA growth year-on-year.
FLL has a striking post-earnings history. The last confirmed report in early March produced a 17.5% single-day move and a 20% gain over the following five sessions. The prior print similarly delivered a 16% one-day jump. That reaction pattern makes the May 7 release the dominant near-term catalyst, and the combination of a bullish options skew and a CEO who just trimmed into strength frames the tension squarely: the options market is leaning toward another large upside move, while the man running the company chose this week to lighten his position. Close gaming peers CZR fell marginally on the week while MTN dropped over 6%, providing a softer sector backdrop heading into the print.
What to watch on May 7: whether American Place can sustain its revenue momentum into Q1, how the cost-saving programme at Chamonix Casino Hotel is tracking against the $4 million annualised target, and whether management commentary on the Illinois ramp changes the tone that has driven two consecutive outsized post-earnings rallies.
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