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Sky Quarry stock surges after US-Iran talks fail: is the rally sustainable?

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Sky Quarry (NASDAQ: SKYQ) opened more than 50% higher on April 13th after high-level ceasefire negotiations between the US and Iran collapsed without an agreement.

The stock’s dramatic surge was fueled by the immediate US Navy announcement of a blockade on all Iranian ports, sending global oil prices past the $100-per-barrel mark.

Year-to-date, the US-Iran conflict has transformed SKYQ from a “micro-cap” struggling under $3 in early January to a triple-digit gainer, with its most explosive growth occurring in early April.  

Following a 1-for-8 reverse stock split in mid-March to maintain a Nasdaq listing, Sky Quarry shares have defied gravity as the “war premium” on domestic refining assets intensifies.

How does Sky Quarry stock benefit from the US-Iran conflict?

SKYQ stock is uniquely positioned to benefit from the US-Iran conflict through its two-pronged industrial approach.

First, the Utah-headquartered firm’s proprietary tech recycles waste asphalt shingles – typically a landfill burden – into high-value energy products like oil and asphalt.

In a high-price environment, the “tipping fees” Sky Quarry receives to take this waste, combined with the rising market value of the extracted hydrocarbons, create a massive margin buffer.

Secondly, the company operates Nevada’s only refinery in Foreland. As the Navy blockade chokes off Iranian exports, global supply chains are tightening, and regional refined products like diesel are seeing unprecedented demand.

And since Sky Quarry refines heavy crude into diesel and other petroleum products domestically, it captures the “crack spread” – the difference between the price of crude oil and refined products – which often widens rapidly during geopolitical shocks.

Is it worth chasing the momentum in SKYQ shares?

For investors, the question is whether this vertical climb is a “buy the rumour, sell the news” event or the start of a structural revaluation.

SKYQ’s strategic location in Nevada is a significant “competitive moat” – especially as California continues to shutter its own refining capacity.

The company recently reported a surprise profit of $0.08 per share, signaling it’s finally translating its green-energy tech into bottom-line results.

However, chasing a stock that has more than tripled in recent trading sessions carries extreme risk; Sky Quarry stock’s current valuation is heavily contingent on oil staying above $100 and the US-Iran naval standoff remaining unresolved.

If a back-channel diplomatic breakthrough occurs or if the US releases “strategic reserves” to cool the market, the speculative premium built into SKYQ may evaporate just as quickly as it appeared.

Sky Quarry Inc to remain in focus moving forward

All in all, Sky Quarry has moved from being a speculative environmental play to a “critical” piece of Western US energy infrastructure.

The recent collapse of peace talks in Pakistan has highlighted the fragility of global fuel supplies, making SKYQ’s ability to produce diesel from both waste and domestic heavy oil super valuable.

While the stock’s parabolic move makes it a “battleground” ticker for day traders, the underlying business is benefiting from a “perfect storm” of high oil prices and restricted regional competition.

For the rally to be sustainable, the Nasdaq-listed firm must prove it can scale its asphalt recycling units beyond Nevada to maintain growth even if the “war premium” fades.

For now, SKYQ shares remain the ultimate proxy for Middle Eastern tensions, and as long as the Strait of Hormuz remains a flashpoint, this small-cap refiner is likely to remain in the spotlight.

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