X users promote $SHFS $BFC $SMXT
- X accounts Ekonixlab and erIiz3_finance promoted $SHFS, $BFC and $SMXT on June 3, urging followers to position for gains this week. (x.com) - The posts paired stock tickers with claims of past accuracy and invitations to join private “alpha” groups with limited spots. (x.com) - The referenced activity is visible on X posts dated June 3 from Ekonixlab and erIiz3_finance, where the tickers and solicitations were published. (x.com)
X users Ekonixlab and erIiz3_finance used posts on June 3 to tout a cluster of small-cap stock symbols — $SHFS, $BFC and $SMXT — and told followers to position for gains this week. The posts, cited in a social-media briefing reviewed for this report, paired ticker symbols with chart imagery and claims that earlier calls had produced gains for followers. (x.com) Both accounts also directed readers toward private “alpha” groups that they said were opening spots. June 3 activity on X fit a familiar pattern in speculative trading chatter: named accounts publish a short list of symbols, reference prior wins, and invite users into a paid or private channel for the next trade. (x.com) The social-media briefing identified Ekonixlab and erIiz3_finance as examples and said the same cluster of tickers appeared in posts circulated that day. ### Which tickers were being pushed in the June 3 posts? The symbols named in the June 3 posts were $SHFS, $BFC and $SMXT, according to the social-media briefing and the linked X posts. (x.com) The briefing described the posts as calls to buy or position ahead of expected near-term gains. The same briefing said promoters framed the names as speculative opportunities for the week ahead rather than long-term investment ideas. The posts were described as including charts and direct prompts to act quickly. (x.com) ### What did the promoters say to draw people in? The June 3 posts invoked prior performance claims, with promoters saying earlier picks had generated “significant gains” for followers, according to the social-media briefing. That language was paired with invitations to private groups marketed as sources of market “alpha.” (x.com) The briefing said the solicitation angle was part of the pitch. Rather than only naming stocks, the accounts also said spots were opening in private groups, a tactic that can create urgency by suggesting limited access. The briefing attributed that pattern specifically to the posts by Ekonixlab and erIiz3_finance. (x.com) ### Why do these posts center on thinly traded names? Small-cap and lightly followed stocks often appear in social-media promotion because a burst of retail attention can move prices more easily than in large-cap names. In this case, the briefing described the promoted symbols as speculative picks and did not cite any company news, filings or earnings releases tied to the June 3 posts. (x.com) June 3’s posts therefore appeared to rely on momentum language and social proof rather than new disclosed corporate developments. The promoters’ message, as described in the briefing, was that their past calls had been accurate and that followers should prepare for another short-term move. (x.com) ### What is verifiable from the public record here? The public record available for this report is limited to the referenced X posts and the social-media briefing that summarized them. The linked posts were identified as coming from Ekonixlab and erIiz3_finance on June 3, and the briefing said they included the ticker symbols, chart references and private-group invitations. (x.com) No separate regulatory filing, exchange notice or company statement was identified in the sourced material as the trigger for the promotions. That leaves the June 3 posts themselves as the core documented event in this story. (x.com) ### What comes next for readers tracking this activity? June 3 is the key date in the current record, because that is when the identified X accounts published the promotional posts. The next concrete checkpoint is whether Ekonixlab, erIiz3_finance or the companies tied to $SHFS, $BFC and $SMXT publish additional posts, filings or statements after those June 3 messages. (x.com)