It’s Time! 7 Pitiful Penny Stocks to Sell Right Now

It’s Time! 7 Pitiful Penny Stocks to Sell Right Now

So far this year, AI stocks are all the rage, and major indices like the S&P 500 are hitting new highs. However, things have been playing out differently in the world of penny stocks. This in turn highlights the need to know which penny stocks to sell.

Although the market is a whole lot more “risk on” than it was during 2022 and most of 2023, speculative stocks in “penny stock territory” ($5 per share or less), outside of AI penny stocks, have not come back into vogue.

For some stocks in this category, this may work in your favor. There are plenty of undervalued names that could, in time, deliver strong returns, whether via company-specific catalysts, or simply just via price discovery.

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Still, while there are some diamonds in the rough, there are plenty of situations where a low trading price is not indicative of good value or potential for a big payoff down the road.

That’s the situation at hand with these seven penny stocks to sell. Stay away from each one, even if it’s a long-shot “lottery ticket” type bet.

Canopy Growth (CGC)

The More CGC Stock Flounders, the Less Constellation Can Handle It
The More CGC Stock Flounders, the Less Constellation Can Handle It

Source: Shutterstock

Back in January, I discussed how regulatory uncertainty made cannabis stocks like Canopy Growth (NASDAQ:CGC) a bad bet for 2024.

However, that full legalization of marijuana on the U.S. Federal level remains (at best) years away is not the sole reason it’s best to stay away from this stock.

In fact, there’s a larger, more urgent reason you should sell/avoid CGC stock: dilution risk. While Canopy raised $35 million two months back through a private placement, this likely did not mark the end of its capital raising efforts.

Mainly, due to persistent losses/cash burn, as seen most recently in last quarter’s financial results. Shareholder dilution played a big role in the stock’s 99.32% drop over the past five years. Another big slide may occur, if the share count rises but operating performance fails to improve.

Fisker (FSR)

The Fisker (FSR) logo hangs on display at the November 2011 International Auto Show.
The Fisker (FSR) logo hangs on display at the November 2011 International Auto Show.

Source: Eric Broder Van Dyke / Shutterstock.com

Fisker (NYSE:FSR) first fell into “penny stock territory” last fall. Since then, it’s clearly been one of the top penny stocks to sell, with shares in the electric vehicle startup being in freefall mode, with FSR at one point falling to as low as 38 cents per share.

Still, some contrarians may want to believe that FSR stock is priced in a “heads I win big, tails I lose a little” type of situation. Unfortunately, there are not many signs pointing to this being the case.

With the company itself now doubting its chances of surviving as a going concern, Fisker’s survival may now hinge on whether Nissan (OTCMKTS:NSANY) proceeds with a deal to invest $400 million into the floundering EV company. This deal may help FSR avoid a total wipeout. However, the terms of the deal could limit upside for those buying into the stock today.