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Village Farms International Inc VFF

Village Farms International, Inc. is a vertically integrated supplier for plant-based consumer packaged goods in the cannabis and cannabidiol (CBD) categories in North America, the Netherlands and selected markets internationally. The Company’s segments include Produce, Cannabis-Canada, Cannabis-United States and Energy. The Produce segment produces, markets, and sells tomatoes, bell peppers and cucumbers. The Cannabis-Canada segment produces and supplies cannabis products to be sold to other licensed providers and provincial governments across Canada and internationally. The Cannabis-United States segment develops and sells high-quality, CBD-based health and wellness products including ingestible, edible and topical applications. The Energy business receives a royalty from a renewable natural gas facility that is located at the Company's Delta facility. The Company's subsidiaries include Pure Sunfarms Corp., Balanced Health Botanicals, LLC and others.


NDAQ:VFF - Post by User

Comment by FluidDrummeron Mar 13, 2019 3:38pm
85 Views
Post# 29480974

RE:It's just common math. For those not knowing how works....

RE:It's just common math. For those not knowing how works....Very informative, thanks for sharing this knowledge.
John815 wrote: 50-70% of the shares sold are artificial borrowed shares that short buyers sell in market cause they think $12-18 is high enough to manipulate to buy back shares cheaper. Cause for the past 2 weeks vff hit new highs each time and shorts try to manipulate a downward buy price and pump artificial borrowed shares to sell through their broker houses. These borrowed shares have to be paid back later by these shorters. Thing is vff is undervalued and should be in the $39-60 range cause of their asset /property values are bigger than most weed companies out there and are already in place and their market cap $800 million should be multiple times that. At 50 million shares outstanding in market, most would be held by insiders and institutions. So there might be only around 18-22 million shares out there for retail buyers. If 50-70% are artificial borrowed shares each day. Do the math, past 2 weeks probably over 30 million borrowed shares sold on market that have to be bought back. If people with the 18-22 million shares out there are seasoned investors and hold on to the shares til hit $38-60 range. The 30 million borrowed shares have to come somewhere. Shorts can keep selling more artificial shares to try to drop price but it has to give a short squeeze somewhere again each time and jump the price. Thing is to hold month to month for the year for the target $38-60. And not to panic on $1-3 day to day ups and downs. And sell if it can tilray $100+. That's when the brokerages asks shorters to pay up their borrowed artificial shares cause prices have gone up too much and shorters have to buy back the fake borrowed shares to pay the house.


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