If you had "micro-cap real estate agency launches GPU financing business" on your Wednesday trading bingo card, go collect your prize. Linkhome Holdings ($LHAI) is gapping up 115.15% because apparently, brokering suburban homes and leasing Nvidia chips are virtually the same business model. Across the ticker, INLIF ($INLF) is putting on the grand finale of the penny stock lifecycle: a brutal 1-for-200 reverse split that sliced another 46.96% off its value today. We flagged $INLF's structural decay yesterday, and today the bill came due. History shows that across 2,800 similar catalyst-driven gap-ups, these setups close red 65% of the time. Are you buying the tech pivot, or are you just providing the exit liquidity?
$INLF -46.96% — what the base rate says
What the data showed
- $INLF -46.96% mcap $60M · float 6M shares
- $YHC -18.99% mcap $22M · float 21M shares · sector: BEVERAGES
- $NVDA -1.35% mcap $4663.3B · float 23.4B shares · sector: SEMICONDUCTORS & RELATED DEVICES
- $INTC -7.33% mcap $644.9B · float 4.0B shares · sector: SEMICONDUCTORS & RELATED DEVICES
- $SPCX -6.39%
- $T -0.58% mcap $157.9B · float 7.0B shares · sector: TELEPHONE COMMUNICATIONS (NO RADIOTELEPHONE)
Before you chase the next micro-cap real estate agency turning into an AI powerhouse, let the historical data do the talking. Run the historical gap-up odds on FILTRIX.net to see how these midday pumps actually finish. Discipline > FOMO
Find Your Edge on FILTRIX →