ZDGE
Zedge, Inc.One customer — 50% of receivables (At July 31, 2025)
“At July 31, 2025, two customers represented 50% and 13% of our accounts receivable balance, respectively.”
One customer — 35% of revenue (the nine months ended April 30, 2026)
“In the nine months ended April 30, 2026 and 2025, we had only one large customer who represented 35% and 35% of our revenue respectively.”
One customer — 35% of receivables (At April 30, 2026)
“At April 30, 2026, three customers represented 35%, 17% and 15% of our accounts receivable balance, respectively.”
One customer — 35% of revenue (the nine months ended April 30, 2025)
“In the nine months ended April 30, 2026 and 2025, we had only one large customer who represented 35% and 35% of our revenue respectively.”
One customer — 17% of receivables (At April 30, 2026)
“At April 30, 2026, three customers represented 35%, 17% and 15% of our accounts receivable balance, respectively.”
One customer — 15% of receivables (At April 30, 2026)
“At April 30, 2026, three customers represented 35%, 17% and 15% of our accounts receivable balance, respectively.”
One customer — 13% of receivables (At July 31, 2025)
“At July 31, 2025, two customers represented 50% and 13% of our accounts receivable balance, respectively.”
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Theoretical estimateEstimate what a long-dated option on ZDGE could return if you hold it and the stock reaches a target price. Premiums are theoretical Black-Scholes-Merton values — tune the inputs to match your broker, then compare each strike's return against simply holding the shares.
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| Strike | Moneyness | Premium | Breakeven | Value at target | Return | Annualized | Max loss |
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Per share; one contract = 100 shares. Premiums are theoretical Black-Scholes-Merton estimates — real options are American-style and priced off an implied-volatility smile, so use your broker's quote for the actual premium. Not investment advice.