Sky Quarry (SKYQ) has been one of the most eye-catching movers of early April. The stock has climbed more than 200% in a matter of days, fueled by a mix of geopolitical headlines and renewed interest in its Nevada refinery assets.
Sky Quarry Inc., SKYQ
On Friday, SKYQ was up 7.96% in premarket trading, sitting at $7.87.
The rally has been building since earlier in the week, and Friday’s move extends what has become a multi-day run. The catalyst isn’t a single event — it’s a combination of factors converging at the same time.
At the heart of the story is Sky Quarry’s Foreland Refinery in Nevada. Regional fuel capacity has been tightening, and that has drawn fresh attention to the asset. The company previously disclosed talks with local crude producers aimed at increasing output.
Those discussions are now looking more relevant than they did a few weeks ago.
On Friday morning, President Trump posted on Truth Social accusing Iran of not holding up its end of a ceasefire-related agreement regarding the Strait of Hormuz.
The comments moved markets. Crude oil futures jumped 2.31% to around $100.13 per barrel in early New York trading.
That kind of headline tends to boost small-cap energy names quickly, and SKYQ has been in the right place at the right time.
From a technical standpoint, SKYQ is running hot. The stock is trading 114% above its 20-day simple moving average and 155.9% above its 100-day SMA.
The RSI hit 77.79, having entered overbought territory on Wednesday. Key resistance sits at $9.00, with support down at $3.50.
But the fundamentals paint a very different picture.
Sky Quarry’s EBIT margin stands at -72.3%, and gross margins are negative at -24.8%. The company reported a net loss of $28.65 million and generated just $281,620 in standalone income against heavy overhead costs.
Total assets are $19.2 million, but liabilities total $16.03 million. Cash on hand sits at just $35,370.
The debt-to-equity ratio is 3.57, and the current ratio is 0.1 — a number that signals a serious short-term liquidity problem.
Return on equity is -37.36%. Cash flow from operations is negative, meaning the company continues to lean on external financing to keep the lights on.
Analyst sentiment on SKYQ is negative. The stock’s move is being treated by most observers as speculative momentum trading rather than a fundamental re-rating.
The weekly range tells the story of that speculation: SKYQ opened the week at $5.32, hit a high of $13.49, and has seen daily swings between $4.90 and $12.52.
As of Friday premarket, SKYQ was trading at $7.87, up 7.96% on the session.
The post Sky Quarry (SKYQ) Stock Up 200% in April as Hormuz Tensions Lift Crude appeared first on CoinCentral.


