RE:Hyper Focus ?In a thinly traded stock that is followed mostly by retail, I agree that all sorts of stuff can happen at the close usually consisting of deliberate manipulation (yes, regulators take issue witht his but good luck enforcing it on hundreds of stocks if not much more) or simply trying to be opportunistic. Also, good luck with trying to do something on MSFT or any blue chip with your few thousand bucks at the close!
This can be trying to prop the price up, trying to push the price down, on well performing companies or those that are struggling.
I would submit that you are not playing fire with stocks that may have this happening at times, but rather that you are playing with fire where you are ignoring publicly available information that clearly shows risks.
As for the repricing exercise prices of options or warrants significantly below their initial values, I do not understand how you are trying to spin that into a positive. It is a positive for those that hold them because they are given a better chance to make some money or a chance to make more money. But as a shareholder whose cost base is not lowered by these decisions, indications that things are no longer as prospective for my shares in the short term are not a positive. Nothing to do with "continued cash flow management" unless you are encouraged that if things go well they will raise about $1.8 million if these are exercised. That is indicative of a risk if you have to dilute more than expected and be happy to raise some money.