InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 46
Posts 18602
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 02/21/2005

Re: None

Friday, 02/12/2016 11:44:46 AM

Friday, February 12, 2016 11:44:46 AM

Post# of 114438
Here is a fairly good explanation of a form T trade:

The most important factor here is that the only requirement of market makers by FINRA is that they must report all trades in a day. They are not required to do so when the actual trade occurs.

To avoid creating “an unbalanced market”, market makers often do not report certain trades during the day to the public and then use a T Trade not to “scare” investors into thinking a market for that stock is going in one direction or the other at the spurring of one large investor.

If a market maker wants to accumulate a large amount of a stock in one trading day, that market maker may actually not report any of the trades that occurred until the trading day has ended so as not to alert the market to the collection. This practice is completely legal under the FINRA rules of the OTC Markets so long as the trade is reported at the end of the day.

LONGS...are you ready for liftoff...????

Better make sure you are locked and loaded for the coming run!! Going to be EPIC. If you think you can accumulate shares during a classic bull run, of a stock like this with such a TINY float...well, good luck with that one. MM's will be front loading orders to accommodate each other...retail will go to the back of the line at each stop....and it will move like LIGHTNING. Been there, done that...ain't doing it again.

(and HEY, what's wrong with having a bi-p0lAr traDing group?...huH?
WE make em go up and make em go down...shoot we go up and down right along with em...we travel the hemisphere in a hearbeat...we get thousands of new members every day...we oWn the otC! Our non-disclosure private meeting with ECSL CEO Ron Mills that gave us MILLions of shares guarantees our succe$$...so back off)

loL...to my self

"If you don't know where you're going, you might not get there" - Yogi Berra