Archer Aviation (ACHR) dropped 8.19% on July 7, with the stock opening at $4.93 — below both its 50-day moving average of $5.85 and its 200-day moving average of $6.63.
The sell-off came as traders zeroed in on the company’s ongoing cash burn and fresh reports of delays in key flight transition tests for its Midnight eVTOL aircraft.
A new prospectus to resell more than 5 million shares added fuel to the fire, raising concerns about further dilution at a time when investor patience with pre-revenue names is already thin.
That brings the stock’s year-to-date loss to 28.59%, leaving it not far above its 52-week low of $4.61. The 52-week high sits at $14.62.
The latest quarterly results didn’t help the mood. Archer posted a loss of $0.28 per share for Q1, missing the consensus estimate of $0.25. Revenue came in at $1.6 million, just short of the $1.66 million analysts expected.
A year ago, the loss was $0.17 per share — so the burn rate is moving in the wrong direction.
Analysts currently project a full-year loss of $1.47 per share.
SG Americas Securities cut its ACHR position by 80.5% in Q1, selling 1.59 million shares and reducing its holding to 385,121 worth roughly $1.99 million.
Institutional investors still own 59.34% of the stock overall, and some smaller funds actually added to positions in recent quarters.
On the insider side, CTO Thomas Paul Muniz sold 91,839 shares on May 18 at $5.95, totaling $546,442. CFO Priya Gupta also sold 9,860 shares the same day at the same price. Both sales were tied to tax withholding on vested equity awards, not discretionary moves.
Over the past 90 days, insiders have sold 250,743 shares worth around $1.5 million combined.
Despite the pressure, analyst ratings haven’t collapsed. Five analysts rate ACHR a Buy, two have a Hold, and one rates it a Sell.
Canaccord Genuity trimmed its price target from $13 to $12 but kept its Buy rating in May. The average target across analysts sits at $11.83 — more than double the current price.
Weiss Ratings, however, reiterated its “Sell (D-)” rating in April.
The company’s debt-to-equity ratio remains low at 0.06, and its quick ratio of 18.06 gives it a strong short-term liquidity position. That cushion buys time for certification and early commercialization work to continue.
Archer’s market cap currently stands at $3.78 billion, and the stock carries a beta of 3.19 — a reminder of just how volatile this name can be.
The next major catalyst will be progress on Midnight’s flight testing schedule.
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