TMC Inc. (NASDAQ: TMC), a metals and critical-minerals company, saw its shares tumble 10.5% on Friday, Dec. 26, in a holiday-thin trading session that amplified volatility.
The stock ended the day at $6.82 after swinging between $6.61 and $7.68, before ticking slightly higher to around $6.90 in extended trading. Trading volume surged to 11.5 million shares, well above the usual levels for year-end sessions.
As markets remain closed for the weekend, investors are looking to Monday for potential catalysts, particularly regulatory developments surrounding deep-sea mining and analyst guidance.
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Friday’s selloff did not stem from a single operational update. Rather, it reflected the market’s sensitivity to thin liquidity and seasonal dynamics.
Analysts have noted that low-volume periods often exaggerate swings, particularly in high-volatility stocks like TMC. Earlier in the week, TMC closed at $7.62 on Wednesday as investors reacted to perceived progress on deep-sea mining reviews, only to see those gains erased by Friday’s retreat.
“The two-step of pop on narrative and drop on positioning is not unusual for TMC,” said one market strategist. Investors treat the stock as an event-driven trade rather than a set-and-forget investment.
The most concrete near-term catalyst for TMC is the U.S. regulatory pathway for deep-sea mining. NOAA’s public comment period runs from Dec. 23, 2025, to Feb. 23, 2026, with virtual hearings scheduled for Jan. 27–28, 2026.
Registration for the hearings closes on Jan. 21. The timeline provides investors with a structured set of milestones that could trigger both bullish and bearish reactions depending on outcomes and media coverage.
Wall Street analysts remain cautiously optimistic on TMC. MarketBeat shows a 12-month average target of $7.42, implying roughly 8.75% upside from current levels, while TipRanks lists an average target of $8.33, labeling the stock a “Strong Buy.”
However, target ranges are wide, from $3.75 to $11, highlighting the stock’s dependence on regulatory approvals, commodity cycles, and financing conditions.
Investors are reminded that TMC is a “path-dependent” stock: price swings will closely follow developments in permits, technology execution, and broader macroeconomic trends.
TMC’s trading dynamics are amplified by significant short interest, elevated call activity, and its pre-revenue status. As of mid-December, about 9.44% of TMC’s float was sold short, leaving 2.9 days to cover.
Combined with year-end positioning and macro volatility, these factors make TMC a stock prone to sudden gaps up or down.
The broader metals market provides both tailwinds and caution. Copper prices recently reached record levels, yet economists warn of potential demand weakness in China in 2026. TMC, tied to future metal supply rather than current production, sits at the intersection of these risks
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