#1 Most Undervalued Stock on NASDAQ? Acquisition News TODAY & Price has not reacted yet. 22% growth in 1 PR
Trading at 4x Forward Earnings vs 15-20x for Peers. Zero Debt, Cash Pile Nearly Majority of Market Cap, CEO Buying Hard, Sitting Right at the 200MA Buy Zone. No Red Flags - Prove Me Wrong
**$HMR - Uber of Shipping -** Position from 80–95c, not sold a share. Treat this as a fresh post: today's PR adds another piece of proof that the thesis is playing out.
Heidmar completed the acquisition of Q-Shipping B.V. for about $0.2M cash, adding nine vessels to the managed fleet plus operating presence in the Netherlands and Türkiye and a crewing platform in Ukraine. Management said the deal is immediately accretive to fee revenue. They charge 100-500k per voyage they service…
That matters because HMR owns zero ships and earns service fees. You get the upside of shipping activity without the usual debt, leverage, asset-value and down-market exposure that hits traditional ship owners.
**Why this looks undervalued**
HMR still trades around roughly 4x forward earnings in the thesis framing, while comparable platform or shipping-related names are often discussed closer to 15–20x. That gap alone is why the market cap still looks far too low for what this business is becoming.
Market cap is still around $68M while cash was about $27.6M at Q1. Back out the cash and the operating business is being valued absurdly cheaply for a profitable, growing, 40-year-old platform.
This acquisition adds more fee-generating vessels for only about $200k. If earnings rise and the market keeps the same low multiple, fair value should still rise. If the multiple also re-rates upward, the upside compounds fast.
**Why today's PR matters**
Nine new managed vessels for about $200k is exactly the kind of capital-light expansion bulls were expecting.
This isn't a small tuck-in either. Before this deal Heidmar had roughly 41 vessels under commercial management. Adding nine is close to a **22% increase** in the commercially managed fleet in a single transaction, done for about $200k. On the total managed fleet (commercial plus technical), that's still roughly a **16% increase** overall.
Based on management's previously discussed fee math and the type of vessels HMR manages, it is reasonable speculation that each added vessel could contribute roughly $100k–$500k in fees per voyage depending on vessel size and route. That is not company guidance, but it shows why a tiny acquisition price can still add meaningful earnings power.
More important than the exact number is the model: minimal cash outlay, immediate accretion, wider footprint, more mandates, more earnings. Acquisitions can continue from here.
**Stock setup**
Price is still sitting around the 200-day moving average buy zone.
All meaningful moves up have come on large volume, while pullbacks have happened on low volume. That usually means buyers are stepping in hard while holders are not really distributing.
Volume is still low enough that most of the market has not discovered this yet. The price drop despite strong news says more about lack of awareness than broken fundamentals.
**Checklist**
Forward PE around 4x in the thesis framing, versus peer talk closer to 15–20x
Market cap around $68M with about $27.6M cash
Zero debt / zero long-term bank debt
Zero ships owned; service-fee model instead of leverage-heavy asset ownership
Q1 revenue up 217% year over year
Q1 net income flipped to about +$2.8M GAAP profit
Operating cash flow more than doubled year over year
55%+ gross margins
CEO owns about 45% personally and has been buying in the open market, with zero sales flagged in the thesis
One of the tightest floats on Nasdaq in the thesis framing, around a sub-6M share float / roughly 10% float dynamic
Tight float means limited real selling and the potential for explosive upside if new buyers arrive; existing information alone could justify a much higher move even before fully pricing in new news
Hormuz is a bonus, not the thesis. Even after any deal, Japan and other importers are expected to diversify routes, meaning longer voyages, more ton-miles, and potentially more fee revenue for HMR
New acquisition completed for about $200k, adding nine vessels and expanding into the Netherlands, Türkiye and Ukraine
That's roughly a 22% increase in the commercially managed fleet, and about 16% growth in the total managed fleet, from a single \~$200k deal
Management says the transaction is immediately accretive to fee revenue
**How I am playing it**
Still holding the 80–95c position, not sold a share
200MA area still looks like the add zone to me
Q2 is still the next major catalyst, and this acquisition just adds another leg to the story before that print even arrives - CEO hinted on their YouTube will be bigger than Q1
What red flag am I still missing? Drop it below
Video for those who don’t know the name well - [https://youtu.be/Bl1rIe\_JxwI?si=\_F5C3XochDpKCoDh](https://youtu.be/Bl1rIe_JxwI?si=_F5C3XochDpKCoDh)
*Not financial advice. Do your own due diligence.*