Toronto, April 28, 2026, 16:06 (EDT)
Akanda Corp. shot up again Tuesday, capping a wild stretch for the small Nasdaq-traded firm as trading churned the stock through another volatile day. AKAN finished at $17.18, a 41.98% jump, before slipping slightly in after-hours moves just minutes later, according to StockAnalysis data.
That’s notable, since there wasn’t any new company news out Tuesday to justify the surge in buying. According to MarketScreener, Akanda’s most recent press updates were an April 9 reverse split, the April 7 adjournment of a shareholder meeting, and a fiber-network announcement dated March 26.
That sets up a scenario where traders are left parsing price swings against a thin float dynamic. Data from Investing.com tracked Akanda moving anywhere from $11.03 to $29.51 on Tuesday, with the firm’s market cap sitting around $6.47 million—a level where wild intraday swings can quickly snowball.
Akanda’s share structure has taken the spotlight. The company pushed through articles of amendment for a 1-for-4.5 reverse stock split, kicking in April 13. A reverse split like this slashes the share count and bumps up the stock price, though it leaves the underlying business unchanged.
Governance questions remain in play. Akanda called off its March 31 special meeting after failing to reach a quorum—the minimum number of shareholders required to proceed. The company pushed the meeting to April 27 in Toronto. In the same statement, Akanda pointed to First Towers & Fiber as its core operating subsidiary handling Mexican telecom infrastructure.
Fiber has taken center stage alongside cannabis in Akanda’s latest strategy. Back in March, Akanda and its subsidiary First Towers & Fiber announced they’d tacked on roughly 200 kilometers of dark fiber—unused fiber-optic lines available to lease—bumping total network reach to around 900 kilometers through central Mexico. Chris Cooper, who heads FTF, called the acquisition “high-quality, contracted revenue with meaningful upside.” TMX Newsfile
AKAN doesn’t really track with the typical cannabis play here. Late Tuesday in the U.S., Tilray Brands and Canopy Growth—both bigger names on pot traders’ radar—slipped, suggesting the move was more about the stock itself than a sector-wide cannabis pop.
The risks, though, are hardly trivial. Akanda flagged in a prospectus that both past and any future reverse splits might still catch Nasdaq’s attention—potentially leading to delisting. Delisting, the company noted, would hit liquidity and hamper its capital-raising efforts. The same filing pointed out that Akanda’s financial position casts doubt on its ability to keep operating as a going concern.
At this point, Akanda is in the hot seat as a quick-moving micro-cap, its telecom ambitions stacked on top of old cannabis ties. The immediate hurdle: delivering real cash flow from those fiber deals and shareholder nods—something more durable than a one-off spike in trading.