CAN (CAN)
CAN is rated NEUTRAL because data is insufficient to support a decisive bullish or bearish call.
- Current price is $0.415 but no conventional valuation methods apply (no PE, PB, PS, or earnings yield spread available), making fundamental assessment impossible.
- Implied volatility is elevated at 88.92%, yet IV rank is neutral at 38.5%, indicating current option pricing is not extreme relative to its own history.
- The stock is deemed unsuitable for floor-based analysis (confidence low, zero valid floors), and there are no risk alerts, buy zone targets, or hot events to guide a directional view.
BUY-ZONE DECISION rule signal
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VALUATION
Floor Engine
YOUR WATCHLIST CONTEXT
○ anonymous· Your personal floor / golden price overlay on the live price
· Per-ticker rule alerts when this stock crosses your thresholds
· Position P&L overlay — what this ticker means inside your full portfolio
IMPLIED VOLATILITY
Earnings Reactions
| Date | Time | EPS | Surprise | Gap% | Day% | Week% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-05-19 | BMO | -0.13 | -85.7% | -15.11% | -13.66% | — |
| 2026-02-10 | BMO | -0.09 | -764.0% | -2.80% | -6.92% | -25.70% |
| 2025-08-14 | BMO | 0.03 | +139.4% | -4.29% | -4.54% | -19.02% |
| 2025-05-20 | BMO | -0.15 | -94.3% | -3.90% | -6.95% | -19.63% |
| 2025-03-26 | BMO | -0.26 | -139.6% | +0.00% | -12.96% | -16.85% |
| 2024-11-20 | BMO | -0.01 | +92.8% | +0.00% | +5.03% | +14.47% |
| 2024-08-15 | BMO | -0.01 | +58.0% | +3.37% | -0.36% | +16.23% |
Is CAN (CAN) overvalued right now?
Whether CAN (CAN) is overvalued depends on the lens you use: trailing P/E vs its own history, CAPE vs the broader market, earnings yield vs Treasury yields. We surface all three so you don't have to pick one in isolation.
CAN (CAN) — what's the SELL PUT risk profile?
Selling cash-secured puts on CAN (CAN) is a common income strategy, but the right strike depends on your floor price (the level you'd happily own at) and the option chain's buffer/APY tradeoff. The full ladder view (deferred to a future release) ranks candidates by buffer percentage first, then APY — see the option ladder methodology for why buffer matters more than yield in this strategy.
CAN (CAN) — which option strategy fits your view?
If you're bullish long-term but cautious near-term on CAN (CAN), SELL PUT into your floor zone collects premium while waiting for a better entry. If you already own it and are neutral-to-mildly-bullish, COVERED CALL caps upside but harvests time decay. The wrong strategy on the right ticker still loses money — match the trade to your view, not the other way around.
CAN (CAN) — is now a good entry?
Entry timing on CAN (CAN) is a function of your floor price (hard buy zone) and golden price (back-the-truck-up zone). Both are personal — set them in your watchlist and we'll alert you when the market hits either level.
FAQ
Why does CAN show different P/E numbers on different sites?
Different data providers use different earnings windows (TTM vs forward, GAAP vs adjusted) and update at different cadences. We surface trailing P/E with a 5-year percentile rank to give context — a P/E of 30 is hot for one stock and cold for another.
Does this page show CAN's implied volatility?
Not on this v0 page — the dedicated volatility tool covers IV with multi-source voting (IBKR + Polygon + yfinance). For pure IV lookup, use /tools/volatility. This page is for decision-stage queries that pull together valuation + portfolio context.
How is this different from Yahoo Finance or 雪球's CAN page?
Those sites are great for raw data discovery — last price, news, headline P/E. This page is built for the second look: you've already seen a single-dimension signal somewhere else, now you need multi-dimensional decision context (your floor, the valuation percentile, your portfolio overlay) in one view, not five tabs.