IMO, this is all quite meaningless. Stock prices these days are rarely reflective of the health of the company - witness Gamestop. Kodak dropped 11% a couple days ago, but then partially recovered, and the drop was largely based on investor speculation after it reported 2020 earnings. Yes, they dropped, but so did many companies in what was a far from normal year. They announced that they have $196 million in cash on had, and had secured access to additional capital - hardly doom and gloom. Hell, things have improved markedly since this time last year: Kodak closed today at 8.32, while a year ago it closed at 1.67. That's just shy of a 500% increase in share price YTD!