Today: 24 June 2026
Sky Quarry Stock Pulls Back After Monday’s 62% Jump Ahead of Nevada Refinery Test
23 June 2026
2 mins read

Sky Quarry Stock Pulls Back After Monday’s 62% Jump Ahead of Nevada Refinery Test

New York, June 23, 2026, 10:04 EDT

  • Sky Quarry dropped roughly 12.6% to $1.66 at the open Tuesday, after soaring 62.4% the previous session.
  • The company said its Nevada refinery is gearing up to start production, with operations slated to begin in July.
  • The rally is now about execution—feedstock, margins, cash, and if the refinery keeps running without more trouble.

Sky Quarry Inc. shares dropped Tuesday morning, retreating after a sharp rally the day before when the micro-cap refiner announced its Nevada refinery was starting production. The stock last changed hands at $1.66, off 24 cents from Monday, having moved between $1.58 and $1.815 so far.

Sky Quarry shares fell after Monday’s surge, when the stock jumped 62.4% to finish at $1.90 with roughly 221.4 million shares traded. The spike came after Sky Quarry said repairs finished at the Eagle Springs (Foreland) refinery, with operations set to start in July.

Sky Quarry’s timeline is shifting. It’s moved past raising money and fixing up the facility. Now the focus is on whether it can operate the refinery and actually sell product. According to the June 22 filing, the company reported about 10,000 barrels of crude and in-process inventory at the refinery, with storage capacity topping 100,000 barrels.

Marcus Laun, interim chief executive at Sky Quarry, said the firm is in the “final stages” of getting the refinery ready. He said Sky Quarry will be judged on “production, customer deliveries, operating margins, and cash flow generation.” Operating margin is the money after feedstock, labor and other expenses. SEC

Sky Quarry is making headlines with claims about the Foreland refinery in Ely, Nevada. The company says the plant turns out diesel, vacuum gas oil, naphtha and asphalt for buyers in the western U.S. region. Vacuum gas oil is used as feed for more refining.

Sky Quarry’s latest filing lays out the numbers. The company posted net sales of only $383 in the first quarter, way down from $6.3 million last year. Sky Quarry said refinery revenue was missing in the period because repairs were still underway, but those wrapped up after the quarter.

U.S. refining stocks moved sideways to slightly down early Tuesday. PBF Energy slipped 0.3%, HF Sinclair dropped 1.1%, and Marathon Petroleum fell 0.5%. The action points to Sky Quarry trading on its own story, not following the group.

There’s a risk the refinery’s July launch won’t bring steady volumes, or that crude supply and product prices shift against Sky Quarry. The company itself, in its release, called out risks from starting up and running the plant, price moves in crude and products, sourcing feedstock, rivals, and regulatory costs.

Balance-sheet troubles are in play, too. In the annual report, Sky Quarry said it has recurring operating losses that raise “substantial doubt” about its ability to keep going as a business. The report used “going concern,” meaning the company might need more funding to keep running. Sky Quarry also listed about $7.6 million in overdue debt by the report date. SEC

Traders so far are looking at a possible refinery restart soon, but Foreland’s balance sheet is tight. July is looking like a major test, to see if the company can bring the plant online and actually ship fuel, getting some sales going and starting to draw down storage for cash.

Mateusz Kaczmarek is a financial and technology journalist at TS2.tech, covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global market developments. A graduate of the Poznań University of Economics and Business, he previously worked in financial analysis before moving into business journalism. His reporting focuses on technology companies, market trends and the forces shaping global investment markets.

Stock Market Today

  • Stocks Gain Ahead of Micron Earnings on AI Demand and Oil Price Drop
    June 24, 2026, 12:25 PM EDT. U.S. stock indexes climbed, with the S&P 500 up 0.12%, as investors anticipated Micron Technology's earnings amid strong demand for artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure. Micron's stock has surged over 260% this year, reflecting heavy investment in AI chip production. South Korea's Kospi jumped 3% after SK Hynix announced a $29 billion U.S. listing to expand chip capacity. Lower crude oil prices, hitting a 3.5-month low due to increased tanker movements in the Strait of Hormuz, pressured mining stocks but boosted sectors like airlines and builders. The 10-year Treasury note yield dropped 7 basis points to 4.42%, easing inflation concerns and supporting equities. U.S. mortgage applications rose 1%, while the current account deficit widened to $225.8 billion. Markets price a 34% chance of a 25 basis points Federal Reserve rate hike in late July.
Ondas stock slips with investors watching drone-defense orders and Lockheed tie-up

Ondas stock slips with investors watching drone-defense orders and Lockheed tie-up

24 June 2026
Ondas shares plunged 6.7% to $7.96 despite announcing over $40 million in June defense orders and a Lockheed Martin counter-drone partnership, as heavy trading followed news that selling stockholders may offload more than 3.1 million shares, raising risks for investors even as the company boosted its 2026 revenue target to at least $390 million.
Uber shares climb as Eats retail push, robotaxi deals stay in focus

Uber shares climb as Eats retail push, robotaxi deals stay in focus

24 June 2026
Uber shares surged 7.2% to $74.70 after adding major retailers like Kiehl’s and FedEx Office to Uber Eats, as investors weighed strong delivery growth against ongoing risks from robotaxi rollout timing and safety lawsuits; Wall Street consensus price target stands at $108.35.
Social Security payment set for June 24, next month’s schedule moves

Social Security payment set for June 24, next month’s schedule moves

24 June 2026
Social Security’s Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund is projected to pay full benefits only until Q4 2032, after which income would cover just 78% of scheduled payments, trustees said; the combined funds face a similar shortfall by 2034, raising long-term risks for beneficiaries and investors.
Oriental Rise Soars on Reverse Split, Nasdaq Issue Remains
Previous Story

Oriental Rise Soars on Reverse Split, Nasdaq Issue Remains

Alphabet rout dents Nasdaq, oil slide gives Dow a lift
Next Story

Nasdaq Drops as AI Stocks Sell Off, Dow Still Positive

Go toTop