ORDER MAKING FINDINGS AND REVOKING REGISTRATIONS BY DEFAULT
STRATEGIA CORP. (N/K/A CATTHAI CORP.),
Strategia Corp. (n/k/a Catthai Corp.), CIK No. 797221, is an inactive Kentucky corporation located in Tempe, Arizona, with a class of securities registered with the Commission pursuant to Exchange Act Section 12(g). The company is delinquent in its periodic filings with the Commission, having not filed any periodic reports since it filed a Form 10-QSB for the period ended September 30, 2000, which reported a net loss of $147,661 for the prior nine months. On June 11, 2008, the company changed its corporate domicile from Kentucky to Nevada by merging with a newly-formed Nevada corporation of the same name. During July and August 2008, the company changed its name in the State of Nevada and the Pink Sheets to Catthai Corp. None of these changes were properly reported to the Commission. As of September 17, 2009, the company’s common stock (symbol “CTHI”) was quoted on the Pink Sheets, had six market makers, and was eligible for the “piggyback” exception of Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11(f)(3)....
...IV. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
By failing to file required annual and quarterly reports, Respondents violated Exchange Act Section 13(a) and Rules 13a-1 and 13a-13.
V. SANCTION
Revocation of the registrations of the registered securities of Respondents will serve the public interest and the protection of investors, pursuant to Section 12(j) of the Exchange Act.
Revocation will help ensure that the corporate shell is not later put to an illicit use involving publicly traded securities manipulated to the detriment of market participants. Further, revocation accords with Commission sanction considerations set forth in Gateway Int’l Holdings, Inc., 88 SEC Docket 430, 438-39 (May 31, 2006) (citing Steadman v. SEC, 603 F.2d 1126, 1139-40 (5th Cir. 1979)), and with the sanctions imposed in similar cases in which corporations violated Exchange Act Section 13(a) and Rules 13a-1 and 13a-13 by failing to file required annual and quarterly reports. See Eagletech Commc’ns, Inc., 88 SEC Docket 1225 (July 5, 2006); Neurotech Dev. Corp., 84 SEC Docket 3938 (A.L.J. Mar. 1, 2005); Hamilton Bancorp, Inc., 79 SEC Docket 2680 (A.L.J. Feb. 24, 2003); WSF Corp., 77 SEC Docket 1831 (A.L.J. May 8, 2002). Respondents’ violations were recurrent, egregious, and deprived the investing public of current and accurate financial information on which to make informed decisions.
Failure to file periodic reports violates a crucial provision of the Exchange Act. The purpose of the periodic reporting requirements is to publicly disclose current, accurate financial information about an issuer so that investors may make informed decisions:
The reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 is the primary tool which Congress has fashioned for the protection of investors from negligent, careless, and deliberate misrepresentations in the sale of stock and securities. Congress has extended the reporting requirements even to companies which are “relatively unknown and insubstantial.”
SEC v. Beisinger Indus. Corp., 552 F.2d 15, 18 (1st Cir. 1977) (quoting legislative history); accord e-Smart Techs., Inc., 57 S.E.C. 964, 968-69 (2004). The Commission has warned that “many publicly traded companies that fail to file on a timely basis are ‘shell companies’ and, as such, attractive vehicles for fraudulent stock manipulation schemes.” e-Smart Techs., Inc., 57
S.E.C. at 968-69 n.14.
V. ORDER
the REGISTRATION of the registered securities of Strategia Corp. (n/k/a Catthai Corp.) is REVOKED;
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/2009/34-60820.pdf