Penny stocks are shares of small companies that trade at low prices — typically below $1 in common usage, though some definitions extend to stocks below $5. They are often listed on Over-the-Counter (OTC) markets, Pink Sheets, or occasionally on major exchanges like NASDAQ or NYSE.
Key Characteristics of Penny Stocks
| Feature | Penny Stock | Blue-Chip Stock |
|---|---|---|
| Price Range | <$1 (typical) | $10–$10,000+ |
| Market Cap | Often <$50M | Billions to trillions |
| Trading Volume | Low to Very Low | High daily volume |
| Transparency | Minimal to None | High (SEC-regulated) |
| Risk Level | Extreme | Low to Medium |
| Analyst Coverage | Rarely covered | Extensive coverage |
| Financial Reporting | Optional (OTC) or none (Pink) | Mandatory quarterly reports |
Why Do Companies End Up as Penny Stocks?
Companies can become penny stocks for various reasons:
- Failed business model — the company's revenue declined as its core product or service became obsolete
- Excessive dilution — repeated issuance of new shares devalued existing shares
- Market sentiment — negative news cycles or sector downturns drove the price down
- Lack of investor interest — small companies struggle to attract institutional investors
- Delisting events — companies that fail exchange listing requirements move to OTC markets