American Shared Hospital Services (NYSEAMERICAN:AMS) Sees Significant Decrease in Short Interest

by · The Cerbat Gem

American Shared Hospital Services (NYSEAMERICAN:AMSGet Free Report) saw a large drop in short interest in January. As of January 15th, there was short interest totaling 1,094 shares, a drop of 92.0% from the December 31st total of 13,651 shares. Currently, 0.0% of the shares of the company are sold short. Based on an average daily volume of 7,940 shares, the short-interest ratio is currently 0.1 days. Based on an average daily volume of 7,940 shares, the short-interest ratio is currently 0.1 days. Currently, 0.0% of the shares of the company are sold short.

American Shared Hospital Services Stock Performance

Shares of AMS traded down $0.03 during midday trading on Thursday, hitting $2.11. 1,971 shares of the stock were exchanged, compared to its average volume of 6,351. The firm has a market cap of $13.80 million, a P/E ratio of -6.21 and a beta of 0.12. American Shared Hospital Services has a 52-week low of $2.01 and a 52-week high of $3.21. The stock has a fifty day simple moving average of $2.11 and a 200 day simple moving average of $2.32.

About American Shared Hospital Services

(Get Free Report)

American Shared Hospital Services operates as a specialized healthcare services company focused on delivering diagnostic imaging solutions to community and rural hospitals across the United States. Through strategic joint ventures and management agreements, the company collaborates with hospital partners to develop and operate outpatient imaging centers that provide advanced modalities while sharing the capital and operating costs. By partnering directly with hospitals, American Shared Hospital Services enables facility owners to offer in-house diagnostic capabilities without the burden of full operational oversight and significant equipment investment.

The company’s service portfolio encompasses a wide range of imaging technologies, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT), mammography, ultrasound, bone densitometry (DEXA) and nuclear medicine.

Recommended Stories