FreeCast (CAST) exploded more than 100% on Friday after the company said it was expanding its DIRECTV relationship into both residential and Platform-as-a-Service channels. The stock traded as high as $1.93, and was last seen around $1.30–$1.59 depending on the snapshot, with nearly 148 million shares changing hands during the session.
FreeCast, Inc. Class A Common Stock, CAST
The move came a day after FreeCast announced it could now offer DIRECTV services through its direct-to-consumer residential business and its PaaS ecosystem — software infrastructure it sells to other companies and brands.
CEO William Mobley described the expanded deal as “more than a distribution agreement,” saying it could see DIRECTV added to FreeCast’s residential sales network and PaaS push across telecoms, broadband providers, wireless companies, property owners, hotels, cities, broadcasters, and large enterprise clients.
The company said the service is already live through its existing sales and distribution channels. That means no new development cycles required before monetization can begin, which is a big part of why investors reacted the way they did.
FreeCast’s platform handles live TV, FAST channels, premium streaming services, local content, ads, commerce, and subscriber management — all inside partner-branded environments. The DIRECTV expansion fits squarely into that pitch.
Despite Friday’s rally, the financials are hard to ignore. FreeCast reported revenue of just $92,909 for the quarter ended March 31, 2026. Net loss for that same quarter was $4.53 million, and losses across the first nine months of its fiscal year totalled $10.18 million.
Cash on hand as of March 31 stood at $119,302. In the same filing, management flagged “substantial doubt” about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern, citing recurring losses and the need to raise additional capital.
The stock is also still down 81.71% over the past 12 months and trades 54.9% below its 200-day moving average of $3.71. The DIRECTV news pushed it 72.6% above its 20-day SMA of 97 cents.
The session wasn’t smooth. CAST hit multiple LULD volatility halts throughout Friday, with the stock paused several times after sudden price spikes. The intraday range stretched from $0.5452 to $1.93.
Broker coverage remains thin. Only one analyst covers the name — Maxim Group initiated coverage seven weeks ago with a Buy rating and a $6 price target.
RSI coming into the day was 27.38, signaling the stock had been oversold. MACD had already crossed above its signal line in May, hinting that downside pressure had been easing before Friday’s catalyst.
FreeCast said more partnerships and integrations could follow, but its latest announcement did not include subscriber targets, deal terms, or partner deployment numbers.
The next financial results, covering the fiscal year ended June 30, will be the first real test of whether the DIRECTV expansion is generating actual revenue.
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