Goldcliff Resource Corporation enters the final days of April with one striking feature of its data: a near-total unwind of short positions that had built through mid-March, against a backdrop of heavy insider ownership and a stock that is down 20% on the week.
Short interest has collapsed — not gradually, but in a single step. From roughly 37,600 shares short in mid-March, the position dropped to around 6,400 in early April, then to just 636 shares by April 21, where it has remained. That 90% week-on-week decline leaves SI at less than 0.001% of the free float, effectively nil. There is nothing here in terms of short-side pressure. Whatever prompted those early March positions — the stock briefly reached its 52-week maximum for borrow utilisation at 100% — it has fully resolved.
The lending market reflects how little demand remains. Availability is loose, and the cost to borrow has more than quintupled from around 1% in late 2025 to 6.86% now. That counterintuitive rise — CTB up sharply even as shorts exit — suggests fewer shares were returned to the pool rather than demand picking up. Borrow conditions are irrelevant at current position levels; days to cover is just one day.
The more telling feature of this company is ownership concentration. President and CEO George Walter Sanders holds approximately 36.7% of outstanding shares, a figure that has not changed in the most recent reported period. His last disclosed insider purchases were in October 2025 — two tranches totalling 400,000 shares at prices of $0.05 and $0.06 CAD. That follows a pattern stretching back through 2024, in which he bought repeatedly at prices between $0.015 and $0.06. However, the insider data carries a staleness flag of over 200 days at this point. At a current price of $0.04 CAD — up 14% on Wednesday but still down 11% over the past month — those October purchases are underwater.
The short score is moderate at 30.0, ranking in the 65th percentile. Days-to-cover ranks in the 90th percentile, though in absolute terms that means very little for a name this thinly traded. The most recent news was a drill permit extension for the Kettle Valley project, published April 20. Q1 results were released in late March, with the company reporting net income of CAD 90,258 for the quarter — a swing from a loss the year prior. The next earnings event is flagged for April 30, though this may be a confirmation of the already-reported Q1 figure rather than a fresh release.
Correlated TSXV peers FRI and LI both ended the week higher, up 7.7% and 5.1% respectively, while GCN shed 20%. What to watch is whether the Kettle Valley drill program extension produces any exploration update that shifts trading volumes — this stock trades in fractions of a cent, and in a name this thinly held, news flow is the primary driver of price movement.
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