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comments like this is why people lose thousands and others lose millions. you advise that its a terrible investment with 0 EVIDENCE nor a even decent bear case
comments like this is why people lose thousands and others lose millions. you advise that its a terrible investment with 0 EVIDENCE nor a even decent bear case
alright I wasn't gonna make a post about this and I dont like making these posts because they're really irrelevant and i would prefer to stay on the subject matter but its so hard too when an obvious shill keeps claiming you're a bot and downplaying my knowledge as if it doesnt matter because I only own 555 shares. am trying my best to stay as formal as possible but its not easy when some loser comments claiming its ai like dude. so yeah just be aware of this shill and understand that he doesnt understand what makes a trader and im definitely not the only person he's bothered
OK let's settle this debate once and for all. people are genuinely having a tug of on where price will go. I think we're guaranteed to atleast make .50 cents and the problem is, some people think it'll only peak their, some people think it can't go higher than $1-$2, a select few thinks 10 dollars is the price point. We have to take a few things into consideration before speculating where price can go.
Why i think $0.50 is just the Warm up
the people saying this tops out at $0.50 completely misunderstand Eric Jackson's personal incentives. He isn't putting his institutional reputation on the line to run a 50-cent penny stock.
According to the SEC filings, Eric Jackson’s massive performance stock options only unlock when the combined company hits two massive valuation targets:
Milestone 1: Hitting a $1 Billion Market Capitalization (Unlocks a 12% stake).
Milestone 2: Hitting a $2 Billion Market Capitalization (Unlocks a 20% stake).
Right now, SRXH has a micro-cap valuation sitting at roughly $45M to $80M. If the post-merger share pool lands around 500 million shares, the math dictates the stock price milestones:
To hit the $1 Billion milestone, the stock must reach ~$2.00.
To hit the $2 Billion milestone, the stock must reach ~$4.00.
Ej's entire payday is legally tethered to driving the stock into the $2.00 to $4.00 range. a $0.50 peak would mean he fails to capture his primary incentives.
When a stock moves 10% to 20% in a couple of days, it hits the radar of Stock Screeners across Wall Street. Thousands of day traders wake up, open their software, and scan for "Top Percentage Gainers" and "Highest Relative Volume."
Suddenly, $EMJX is one of the popular stocks flashing on every scanner in the country due to the volatility.
Late traders, FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) buyers, and "dumb money" don't care about the S-4 filing. They just see a green vertical line on a chart.
They flood the market with market buy orders. Because the 418 million insider shares are legally locked up and cannot be sold, there is no supply to meet this massive wave of demand. The sheer velocity of millions of retail dollars chasing a tiny, locked float is what violently forces the price past $1.00, through $2.00, and up toward those multi-billion dollar milestone targets.
alr now for you $5 to $10 activists
you understand that once the social media FOMO machine merges with a locked institutional float, the stock will heavily overshoot its actual value due to pure mechanical momentum (just like Carvana did).
so plan your exits around this information all based on history and the SEC filings. I myself aint selling till this stock atleast reaches $2 minimum, and im not holding past 5 dollars most likely, anything else I agree would probably be long term but again it could genuinely shoot up to $10 per share.
can The deal still be cancelled halfway?
Technically, yes, any merger can fail before the final signatures are inked. However, in this specific case, a cancellation is highly unlikely for a few crucial reasons:
The SRXH Board of Directors already unanimously approved the transaction.
Majority stockholders holding 51.15% of the voting power have already executed written legal consents approving the proposals.
If either party breaches the contract or backs out without a valid regulatory reason, they have to pay a $300,000 penalty fee. Eric Jackson and the SRXH board are fully locked in.
Market makers and short sellers have actively kept the price pinned in the low teens ($0.11 to $0.14) to scare retail investors into selling. They want you to think it's a dead stock so they can accumulate cheap shares.
Why Shorting Fails Once the Merger Closes
The bears think they can force a "sell the news" event. But a traditional "sell the news" dump only happens when a company has nothing left to look forward to after the announcement. EMJX is the exact opposite. The closing of the merger is the beginning of the actual catalysts.
And the merger deadline is June 30th, 2026
can The deal still be cancelled halfway?
Technically, yes, any merger can fail before the final signatures are inked. However, in this specific case, a cancellation is highly unlikely for a few crucial reasons:
The SRXH Board of Directors already unanimously approved the transaction.
Majority stockholders holding 51.15% of the voting power have already executed written legal consents approving the proposals.
If either party breaches the contract or backs out without a valid regulatory reason, they have to pay a $300,000 penalty fee. Eric Jackson and the SRXH board are fully locked in.
Market makers and short sellers have actively kept the price pinned in the low teens ($0.11 to $0.14) to scare retail investors into selling. They want you to think it's a dead stock so they can accumulate cheap shares.
Why Shorting Fails Once the Merger Closes
The bears think they can force a "sell the news" event. But a traditional "sell the news" dump only happens when a company has nothing left to look forward to after the announcement. EMJX is the exact opposite. The closing of the merger is the beginning of the actual catalysts.
And the merger deadline is June 30th, 2026
Please do not listen to whomever this is, they believe that the capital you withhold defines the trader you are. Everyone starts somewhere big or small and its important for us as a community to encourage each other for the best possible outcomes for all of our investments. Not to belittle one another because of their arguably low investment. The guy has negative karma for a reason
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The S-4 Milestone Math: The legal structure of the S-4 filing is the strongest anchor for the bulls. The equity incentive milestones are legally pegged to massive market cap targets ($1B and $2B). This means insiders are blocked from achieving generational wealth unless they successfully engineer a multi-dollar stock price.
Locked-In Supply: Majority shareholders face strict post-merger lock-up periods. The fear of an immediate insider dump on Day 1 is structurally highly improbable.
The Institutional Gateway: Current low institutional ownership isn't a sign of failure—it's a compliance rule.
Major funds are legally barred from buying sub-15-cent micro-caps. The real buying volume doesn't even arrive until the stock clears the penny thresholds
Shall I explain it simplier?? All of this is important so read up
When a regular company merges with a penny stock to go public, the founders and early investors suddenly get millions of shares of the new public stock.
The New Investor Fear: "What if the CEO wakes up on Day 1 of the merger, sees the stock at $0.15, and dumps all 100 million of his shares onto the market to cash out?" If he did that, the stock price would instantly crash to $0.01, and regular investors would be left holding worthless bags.
The "Locked-In" Reality: The SEC and the lawyers who write the merger documents anticipate this exact fear. They include a legal clause called a Lock-Up Period.
This means major insiders (like Eric Jackson and the big EMJX founders) are legally banned from selling their shares for a set amount of time after the merger completes (usually 6 months to a year).
Their shares are essentially frozen in a digital vault. They can look at them on paper, but they cannot click "Sell."
Because their supply of shares is locked up, they cannot rug-pull the market. The only way they can eventually cash out a year from now is if the company is stable, growing, and trading at a healthy price when the vault finally opens.
2. S-4 Milestone Math (The Incentive Structure)
An S-4 is just the official legal document filed with the SEC that outlines every single rule, contract, and detail of a corporate merger.
Inside this specific S-4, they didn’t give Eric Jackson a massive, guaranteed cash salary. Instead, they set up an Equity Incentive Plan based purely on Market Capitalization (the total dollar value of the entire company).
How Market Cap Works
Market Cap is calculated by a simple formula:
If a company has 1 billion shares total:
At $0.13 per share, the company is worth $130 Million.
At $1.00 per share, the company is worth $1 Billion.
At $2.00 per share, the company is worth $2 Billion.
Here's what you should take away from this
As a new investor, you always want to look for "Aligned Incentives." You don't want to invest in a company where the CEO gets paid millions of dollars even if the stock crashes. You want to invest where the CEO is broke unless the stock skyrockets.
Because of the Locked-In Supply, Eric Jackson can't dump his current shares to get rich. And because of the S-4 Milestone Math, he only gets his massive bonus shares if he successfully drives the stock price into multi-dollar territory. He is trapped in the exact same boat as you. and he has to row as hard as he can to get to the finish line in June.
My theory on the morning gap is spot on. That massive opening spike wasn't a slow, natural climb, it was a violent influx of thousands of market buy orders hitting the exchange all at once at 8:30 AM CT.
When the price instantly shot over 10% higher, a huge cluster of traders who had been stuck holding bags from previous weeks suddenly saw green. Human nature took over: “Oh my god, I’m finally green, let me take this money and run before it drops again.”
That sudden wall of retail panic-selling is exactly what slammed the price back down to fill the gap.
The Benefit of Dropping Now: By cooling off and returning to the lows ($0.12–$0.13) during this midday lull, it completely bleeds out the short-term hype. It gives the stock room to breathe, build a solid structural base, and accumulate fresh buying energy. That way, when the real June catalyst triggers, it actually has the structural fuel to lift off instead of just exhausting itself.
I think eveeyone should hold their shares down as this is a great price to take off and we'll be the ones selling right after the merger goes through in June! But at the end of the day this isnt financial advice, just sharing my read on the price action.
I think what we're seeing is old orders from last week and futher sell because the unexpected gap in the market that caused the stock to go a bit over 10% in profit and we got probably a decent amount of panic sellers who just wanted to cash in profit not mention most people still believe its a failing dog company and it technically is untill the reverse merger in June, so sit back guys and do not worry whatsoever! dont take this as advice on what to do with your investments but what i would insinuate is to hold your orders till atleast june when the merger actually happens, thats when the real event happens, or if srxh contiunes to rise then when it is time for the merger to happen we may have to sell the news if you know what i mean. We have to just hope the stock doesn't violently crash or anything if we decide to hold. So the bottomline is don't lose faith and stay patience investors!
everyone price is still at a decent spot to catch in buys before it's too high, check out srxh before it's too late genuinely
Gonna feel stupid if it doesn't do well but genuinely boys I hope everyone's investment works out and here goes all of our effort
When the market opens at 8:30 AM CT, if there are 20 million buy orders sitting in the system from the weekend hype, but only 2 million shares actively being offered for sale at $0.125, the trading algorithms will instantly warp the price upward to $0.15, $0.18, or $0.20 just to find matching sellers.
The reverse is also true: if the hype suddenly dies and everyone tries to sell at the exact same time, the price will drop like a stone because there won't be enough buyers to absorb the flood of shares.
Make sure you guys got your alarms set because tomorrow has potential to be a huge day for us enthusiasts! This won't be a day to miss and fingers crossed we bring home riches!
It's a valid concern. Historically stocks with big floats are hard to squeeze to one dollar. Ironically Opendoor did that exact thing with a OS float share bigger than SRXH right now.
No one thought it would be possible for Opendoor to squeeze to $1 and not only did it squeeze to $1 it went up all the way to $10 before it consolidated down afterwards. Guess who made that conviction call? Eric Jackson. And he's going to be the CEO of SRXH after the merger.
Eric Jackson has already shown that he's able to pinpoint asymmetric bets that no one on the market or AI models can predict.
A lot of bears are the conservative types who will only invest in "certainties" like VOO or NVIDIA/GOOGLE. Those companies are great, but that's not where you're getting the multiple times growth within one year type stocks
It's important to stay humble in the market. The market is designed to be cutthroat and destroy retail investors.
I've learned it's also important to revise your thesis when new information comes in that does not line up with your original conviction. We invest in the market to grow and make our money work for us. We don't want to be in a situation where we're bag holders and making investments based on FOMO.
But so far at least with SRXH I have not heard a valid argument of why it can't go to at minimum $1 per share.
Many bearish investors are downgrading it for its past failures and comparing to other penny stocks. That's a false way of predicting because SRXH IS NOT like any other penny stock. There are some very strong positive catalysts backing SRXH when it merges that Bears are either ignoring, discounting, or even directly lying about (R/S). Every time I post a counter to a bearish argument regarding SRXH, most bears completely go quiet or ignore me afterwards.
At this point all we can do is for time to pass, watch merger news carefully, check the catalysts carefully, and see who's right. I am still feeling strong about my SRXH thesis. And I will continue to post about it until the merger and afterwards too
So overall a decent amount of people are actually saying they'll start selling off at 50 cents to a dollar. I think thats guaranteed but if alot of people or most people are sharing around to sell at around 50 cents and the "general consensus" is to, how do you investors who arent selling till you see it rise to $5, $10 take this info??? its an important question. Do you think the sheer amount of buyers and FOMO will increase the likelihood of expanding well over $1?
I have a question, alot of AI are as aspect taking the cautious answers and insinuating to not expect it to go to such and such price. So what do you guys think it'll spike up towards? I dont have a definite answer but I'm expecting an upside to atleast 5 dollars a share, idk about 10 but that'd be amazing. and AI claims its too rare for it to double, triple or quadruple even though I don't believe that is the case... So tell me, what are most of you guy's plans for this stock and what price are you guys most comfortable selling at? 🤔 And remember, Greed can kill us all
To anyone confused or highly doubtful of the potential for SRXH I personally advice you to watch this video as I believe it's one of the best explanations for who Eric Jackson is and what the merger is.