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Re: Fiddly post# 44243

Saturday, 08/05/2017 3:13:14 PM

Saturday, August 05, 2017 3:13:14 PM

Post# of 346459
You guys are confusing stock versus company.

"You want us to stay in OTC for now so that's what .18 to like a 1.00 range instead of being on NASDAQ 4.00$+ who would want to stay down here instead of having their shares worth 4.00+???? When we make it to NASDAQ my shares that i bought at .02 are worth freaking 4.00$!!!"

Your shares will be wroth $4 per share if we have a good COMPANY. There's no magical "if we go to NASDAQ my shres are worth $4". It's the other way around. If we make it to $4, we can go to NASDAQ.

If we open numerous stores, show good revenue income, show a solid net from that revenue, and show potential to keep growing, we shall go up in value. If we fail, the stock shall fail. But to think that which market we are on shall be the end all of our price? that's backwards. the market we are on REFLECTS the quality of the company, it doesn't MAKE the quality of the company. As an example - let me ask you this?

"Which would give you more profit? Being on the OTC at $1 per share, or being on the NASDAQ at $4 per share?"

Seems like a simple answer, right? yet, it is not. If we were at $1 per share with the current share structure (SS), your .02 shares are up 50 times value. If we did a 1 for 5 RS and you owned less shares, and we were priced at $4 per share, that is the same VALUE as $0.80 with the existing SS. See my point? It is not the price that matters the most. It is the market cap VALUE, or the price times the shares you have.

Reality is that $4 times 200 shares is $800. $1 times 1,000 shares is $1,000. So $1 CAN be worth more than $4. tricky? Yes, but also reality. (And $10 times 200 shares is $2,000, so yes I can dream big too) smile

the key is to have the company continue to do well, and if we get to a point where we go to NASDAQ, whether by split or growth, that is fine. I just don't want people to make going to the NASDAQ the goal of the company. Or of the stock. The goal and focus of the company needs to be on the business. the S&L locations. The MJ industry needs for our equipment. The stock price? I'd rather have $1,000 than $800, and if the NASDAQ gets us there, that is fine, but it is not of utmost importance to the company or to Roger. He needs to focus on the business.