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Thursday, 03/10/2016 1:21:05 PM

Thursday, March 10, 2016 1:21:05 PM

Post# of 106841
Bid at 15 CENTS, uh oh????

Gawd, looks like this POS is going to new ALL, ALL, ALL TIME LOWS AGAIN today on mega high volumes (it's making new all, all time lows practically every week lately). Wow.

So I guess that ole 100 plus page 10-K annual report just released a day or two ago didn't "do it" in the enthusiasm or "positive news" department?

https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1388319/000118518516003859/usstemcell10k123115.htm

Making LOWER LOWS and LOWER HIGHS, big time. Volume is extremely high today, already trading 122K shares and it's only 1 PM or so Eastern.

0.17 / 0.2349 (23000 x 10000)

SOLID RED, DOWN 43% today.

0.170, -.1298 (-43.30%)


Shares just hit 17 CENTS, a new ALL, ALL, ALL TIME LOW (aka .00017 split corrected for the recent massive 1000 to 1 R/S reverse split done in Nov of 2015)

The Level II stack shows the Bid loaded now all the way down to 10 CENTS, with share blocks at 15 CENTS, 14 CENTS and then 10 CENTS.

https://www.accesswire.com/viewarticle.aspx?id=433259

Bid actually hit 15 CENTS as I was posting this and now just popped back up to 17 whopping CENTS.

Just seems to be going from bad to worse. Looks to me like the effects of never ending, massive amounts of common share dilution (most likely these Magna financing deals IMO, see the recent released 10-K and how much convertible debt they borrowed from Magna, as recent as Feb or so of 2016). Seemingly, just never ending use of convertible debt, aka floorless, "toxic" convertible debt as the SEC and other official commentators call it.

https://www.sec.gov/answers/convertibles.htm

Quote from thee SEC website:

"By contrast, in less conventional convertible security financings, the conversion ratio may be based on fluctuating market prices to determine the number of shares of common stock to be issued on conversion. A market price based conversion formula protects the holders of the convertibles against price declines, while subjecting both the company and the holders of its common stock to certain risks. Because a market price based conversion formula can lead to dramatic stock price reductions and corresponding negative effects on both the company and its shareholders, convertible security financings with market price based conversion ratios have colloquially been called "floorless", "toxic," "death spiral," and "ratchet" convertibles."


I don't see what's possibly gonna reverse this massive down-trend now? The common shares have been in a solid, un-broken downtrend for well over a year now, losing over 95% of their value during just that time period. Just a massive wipe-out. Not looking good here IMO.

Posts are only my amateur opinions, personal views and thoughts. They are not any type of investment advice. Do one's own due diligence.