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IGSS FINRA deleted symbol:
http://otce.finra.org/DLDeletions
Lost my shirt on this one ( thanks to Micheal Mitton ).. Take a look at MXMI should be a big winner VERY SOON,check it out no crooks behind this on..
Toby..
thanks for the reply just curious...i see trading every once in a while and never any news or info...just curious
We can not find out any info, I believe its just dead
Anybody know anything about this thing...is it dead or what?
wow. $316.70
why do you watch this one ?
never asked you either, what's this 143 thing all about.
Got it...must be tax loss selling...ouch.
OMG did something just happen with IGSS?
Maybe just Maybe something might rise from the ashes....yet.
Anyone with any information regarding this issue please advice or update us shareholders.
Thank you
Are these the numbers you tried?
Contact:
Brass Bulls Corp.
Investor Relations
(866) 342.2700
or
Image Globe Solutions, Inc.
(905) 825-1200
Has anyone heard or know anything about the company? I found that their phone number has finally been disconnected and the web site is gone.
What would be nice is to hear they have sold the shell to some big ass money making company that would make everything all right once again.
Yes I know....I'm dreaming...lol
Hello?
Don't you hear an echo in here?
Did everyone in the company die?
Because the stock sure did..lol
I would guess the meeting excuse is good for another month or two...lol
I wish they would just sell the shell...take the half million bucks and let us hope a real company buys it.
There are some meetings going on this week to try to get it back up. Will report when i hear more. PGGG is set to make a move, may see a double from here from what I'm being told.
What irks me is that this shell is worth about a half a million dollars....you would think if the company isn't going to do anything,, at the least they would cash in on the opportunity to pull monies out of the shell.
Then maybe the exsisiting share holders would have something to look forward to other than an answering machine that does not return phone calls...or is it management that hides in the machine...I haven't figured that out yet...lol
I have'nt heard from Scott in the last week or so. All I know is that they are still working on getting it back up and trading.. Have any of you bought PGGG I mentioned back a few posts ago? If so you should be happy. still has a long way to go yet though.
Guess I got my answer today...lol
Calling all Image Globe Personel.....HELLO? HELLO? HELLO?
Is anybody HOME?
IGSS...does it still have a heartbeat or are we experiencing after death muscle spaz's?
Is it possible the trades will take it back to value then the MM's show up...or is that too much dreaming?
Is it Wake up Wake up my little darlin?
Or just roll over....its another bad dream.
Still waiting for exchange to turn it on. Lawyer and MM talking to them on a regular basis. In the mean time playing PGGG. Looks like its almost ready you may want to check it out.
IGSS come out come out where ever you are?
These guys are still hiding out somewhere.
It would be nice to see IGSS come out kicking butt and taking names...but first we gotta see if its real or not. The market ain't gonna be to crazy about it thats fer sure.
Thanks for the update
Talked to the Company Thursday they think any day now. Exchange has everything they required. Lets hope so, would like to move some of this one over to PGGG. Know the story and whats coming.
Well thats good...perhaps we might get a Christmas present out of it. Another 3 months I am sure won't hurt...LOL
Anyway whats the ole saying: "I'll believe it when I see it".
I got an email back from them yesterday saying everything is completed. Just waiting for nasd to give the ok. How long that will be is anyones guess.
If I could ever hear back from them I could...LOL
I actually really liked the business this company is involved in. When you described to me the remote control for disabling leased cars that hadn't been paid on time, I thought "wow, what a great twist for making money in the coming recession." I'd actually be interested in buying some of that technology and starting a small auto-lease company for the under-funded locally.
Tell me IGSS is the right company..
To the company: The gist of my last three posts are to point out that if you can't do business and can't get Market Maker representation, then perhaps you can market the shell and at least get something out of it and help your loyal shareholders in the same process.
A pink sheet shell used to sell for around 50 grand..now it appears its worth a lot more than that. The share structure makes this shell a perfect canidate for a handsome price.
Think about it or do something to make this stock start trading again. Phone calls to the company result in the ever mis-leading statement "We are working on it" or "We are almost there" or "Next week" or "We have filed our 211" or "We have a couple of MM's on board".
An answering machine is not the company and a dead web site isn't either.
How many weeks or months of this does it take to realize its not happening?
Do something with it or sell it...two options both are at the least a move in the right direction.
Enough said.
Cowboy
Reverse-mergers: Going Public Fast:
http://www.bizjournals.com/denver/stories/2004/08/09/story7.html?t=printable
Firm rides reverse-merger wave
The Denver Business Journal - August 6, 2004by Tom LockeDenver Business Journal
One Greenwood Village company is trying to bring a new level of professionalism and follow-through to the arena of reverse mergers, which is being flooded with demand from Chinese companies.
"There is a slew of Chinese companies lined up trying to go public in the U.S.," said Tim Keating, founder and CEO of reverse merger turnkey company Keating Investments LLC. The number is "certainly in the high 100s," he said.
The price for shell companies has doubled in the last 12 months, largely because of demand from Chinese companies, but also because of a stronger equity market coupled with a weak market for small-company initial public offerings, Keating said.
He ought to know. Keating Investments recently took one Chinese company, SORL Auto Parts Inc. (OTC BB: ECVL), public through a reverse merger.
A "shell company" is a public company with no business operations. A "reverse merger" occurs when a private company that wants to be public merges into the shell, typically getting 90 percent to 95 percent ownership of the new company while shell shareholders get the rest.
The reverse merger can be quicker and less expensive than going public through an IPO.
But on the downside, it also can mean little exposure to the investment community. A company can get forgotten among more than 3,200 Over the Counter Bulletin Board (OTCBB) stocks and more than 4,000 stocks on the "pink sheets," an electronic quotation system, run by Pink Sheets LLC. The pink sheets don't have the listing requirement for up-to-date financial reporting required by the OTCBB.
Keating helps overcome the exposure problem with a turnkey package that includes raising money for the newly merged company as well as acting as a "market maker" to buy and sell the shares, and keep its trading within a range of stability.
Shell companies trading on the OTCBB now cost about $300,000 to $500,000 for a controlling share of 75 percent or more, and a pink-sheet shell might cost half of that, Keating said. A Keating affiliated company has an inventory of five OTCBB shell companies.
Chinese companies see the U.S. public market as attractive partly because going public in China is an "extremely arduous process," Keating said.
A Chinese IPO can take three years, faces limitations on numbers of IPOs in a year -- with preference given to state-owned enterprises -- and founders can't trade their shares.
A U.S. IPO looks comparatively attractive because it might take a year, have a higher price-to-earnings ratio, and add prestige with U.S. clients. The Chinese companies typically use a Sino-foreign joint venture law to go public through holding companies in places such as Hong Kong, the British Virgin Islands or the Cayman Islands.
"The bottom line is these companies find it preferable and attractive to go public in the U.S. relative to going public in China," Keating said.
Reverse merger pluses vs. IPO
Keating recommends IPOs for companies that can launch them, but many small companies can't. It's hard to find underwriters for small ones, and IPOs can be expensive and time-consuming, easily taking a year versus 60 to 90 days for a typical reverse merger. For Chinese companies, it's even tougher because of hurdles such as translating documents. So they're opting for reverse mergers.
Brian Mandell-Rice, an audit partner with Denver-based accounting firm Hein & Associates, said he's seeing more demand for shell companies than in 15 years. He, too, thinks Chinese demand is a big factor.
Hein has been shy about doing reverse-merger business because some middlemen seem mainly focused on generating fees for themselves rather than helping owners of the merging entities, Mandell-Rice said.
But since Keating offers a turnkey approach that includes raising capital and making a market in a stock, it's not just going to collect its fee and bow out, according to Mandell-Rice.
On the plus side, going public through a reverse merger can ease access to capital and enable a company to use shares as currency to make acquisitions, he said.
On the other hand, without a market maker, a company could end up in "no-man's land" after a reverse merger, so that its stock doesn't move even if it's performing well. Higher costs of regulatory compliance and increased scrutiny under Sarbanes-Oxley federal legislation also are negatives, he said.
Why not raise venture capital instead of going public? Because it would typically be more expensive, Keating said. That's because a Keating study shows a public company is valued at higher multiple of sales, cash flow or net income than a private company.
For instance, the study shows a public company valued at two times net sales versus 0.6 times for a private company. So a VC firm investing in a lower-valued private company will demand a higher percentage ownership for the same dollar amount invested than for a public company.
Plus, the Keating strategy is to get the company off the OTCBB and onto the American Stock Exchange or Nasdaq Small Cap Market within a year or so.
"We're going to become the conductor. We're going to choreograph this whole thing," Keating said.
SORL has a market cap of $80 million. It had $33 million in sales last year and expects $46 million this year. Keating and its Chinese partner charged it $400,000 in fees and also got 4.5 percent of the newly merged company. The money for the shell, Enchanted Village Inc., came from Keating Reverse Merger Fund LLC, which was formed to invest in shells and also in private companies planning to reverse merge into the shells.
The reverse-merger market is large and fragmented, with "multiple hundreds of reverse mergers each year," Keating said. But his firm stands out because it's a broker dealer regulated by the NASD and SEC, he said.
One reason Keating got into the reverse-merger business is his belief he could establish a reputable firm in an industry that was not so reputable.
After managing the European Equity Trading Department at Bear Stearns International Ltd. in London, Keating founded Keating Investments in 1997, initially concentrating on helping small companies find financing.
He became interested in reverse mergers by accident in 2000, when he was asked by a friend to become the director of a public company with patented technology that it couldn't commercialize. It eventually shut down, and Keating searched for a private company to merge with, only to be confronted with questionable wheeler-dealers.
He thought he could do better by bringing a certain level of professionalism and integrity to the arena. "We're really trying to institutionalize and clean up the reverse-merger business," he said.
In part that means being selective. Keating calculates his firm gets 100 inquiries a month, but will do only six to eight reverse mergers this year.
It looks for businesses with $10 million to $100 million in annual revenue, and they generally should be profitable. To raise money for its clients, Keating turns to hedge funds, PIPE (private investment in public equity) funds and individuals.
Despite its efforts, the general environment hasn't changed a lot. "I'd say it's still largely sleazy," Keating said.
For instance, there are the "pump-and-dumpers." They get stock for arranging a reverse merger, hype the stock and sell it into an inflated price. Then they quit hyping and the stock falls, sometimes below its true value. That hurts the merged company in raising funds, because a lower stock price means issuing more shares to raise the same amount of money.
Keating Investments gets recommended by lawyers and accountants to their clients because "they know this is a dangerous area," Keating said. "You can get taken advantage of and abused."
He likes to work with entrepreneurs, and Chinese entrepreneurs in particular are knocking on his door. "I think we're probably going to do three or four Chinese companies this year alone," he said.
Clients like NASD pros, clean shells
Dennis Depenbusch, CEO and chairman of Fort Worth, Texas-based Catalyst Lighting Group Inc. (OTC BB: CYSL), said he probably researched more than 100 firms before selecting Keating to help with its reverse merger.
He picked Keating partly because of the registration of its employees with the NASD and because of their experience. "Keating was the only one that has good, pedigreed professionals that have registered with the NASD," he said. "You really need to do your homework, because the reverse-merger world has a bad reputation."
Keating's references checked out, and Depenbusch also liked its turnkey approach. "I have not run across a shop of integrated professionals like Keating. He's unique in that way," Depenbusch said.
Catalyst Lighting, which provides lighting support structures, needed $2 million to $3 million in financing, and opted for a reverse merger because it costs less than an IPO.
The 23-employee firm, which has about $20 million in annual revenue, raised part of what it needed, about $500,000, in a follow-on offering. The entire process is not an easy one, he said, but Keating has stuck with Catalyst "the entire way."
With Catalyst, Keating created a shell called a "blank check company" through SEC Rule 419. But Keating said that route is extremely complex and too time-consuming, and he now prefers to buy existing shells.
Catalyst hopes to relocate to the American Stock Exchange or the Nasdaq Small Cap Market within 24 months, Depenbusch said.
Raymond Zimmerman, chairman and CEO of Boca Raton, Fla.-based retailer 99 Cent Stuff Inc. (OTC BB: NNCT), said he chose Keating partly because it had the cleanest shell company. His company had a reverse merger with iVideoNow Inc. in September and that month filed a registration statement for a $3.8 million stock offering the SEC approved in February. The SEC approval took longer than he anticipated, Zimmerman said.
The reverse merger was smoother and faster than an IPO would have been, Zimmerman said. He hopes the company, which had $40 million in sales last year and employs 500 people, will be able to qualify for the Nasdaq Small Cap Market next year.
"Reverse mergers today are very much accepted," Zimmerman said. "It's so much easier to do. There's a lot of them being done."
He said he is "absolutely" happy with the job Keating did. "There was never a harsh word," Zimmerman said. "They're probably the most honorable of all the people I've ever dealt with."
Reverse Merger: Make $$ like an IPO!
FYI, the cost of a clean OTCBB "shell" is currently $500,000 - $1,000,000.00
http://www.shellstockreview.com/ssr-Home.html
What is WallStreet's best kept secret? ... Shell Stocks!
Why invest in Shell Stocks? The potential return of a Shell Stock can be enormous! Imagine buying a tiny $.0312 Shell Stock that traded as high $50 six weeks later! A $1000 investment would have been worth $1,600,000 at its high! For more information, see The anatomy of a Shell Stock - SXML.
Or how about a Shell Stock that went from $.10 to $11.20 in two days. For more information, see Elvis Presley and American Idol merged into SPEA Shell Stock.
What is a Shell Stock? A Shell Stock is synonymous with an IPO. Most investors are familiar with the success of today's hot IPOs (Initial Public Offerings). But it is extremely rare for the average investor to purchase shares of an IPO at the offering price. ENTER SHELL STOCKS. Shell Stocks are an alternative way for a company to go public. With a technique called a "reverse merger," a Shell Stock becomes an instant IPO. The best news about Shell Stocks is that the average investor can purchase shares before the company goes public . . . sometimes at a fraction of what the post-merged company shares begin trading at! For more information, see What is a Shell Stock....(see link)
http://www.gopublic.com/reversemerger.html
What is a Reverse Merger with a Public Shell?
A Reverse Merger is a transaction where by the private company shareholders may gain control of a public company by merging it in with their private company. The private company shareholders receive a substantial majority of the shares of the public company (normally 85% to 90% or more) and the control of the board of directors. The transaction can be accomplished in as little as two weeks, resulting in the private company becoming a public company. The transaction does not go through a review process with state and federal regulators because the public company has already completed the process. The transaction involves the private and shell company exchanging information on each other, negotiating the merger terms, and signing a share exchange agreement. At the closing the public shell company issues a substantial majority of its shares and the board control to the shareholders of the private company. The private company shareholders pay for the shell and contribute their private company shares to the shell company and the private company is now public.
Upon completion of the reverse merger, the name of the shell company is usually changed to the name of the private company. If the shell company has a trading symbol it is changed to reflect the name change. An information statement, called an 8-K, must be filed within 4 days of the closing. The 8-K describes the newly combined company, stock issued, information of new officers and directors, a full description of the business, and financial statements audited to US GAAP standards. The 8-K must disclose the same type of information that it would be required to provide in registering a class of securities under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
(See Sec Final Rule 33-8587, pdf file)
If the shell company is listed on the Bulletin board, the registered or “free trade” shares can continue to trade. The company can do a private placement immediately. To trade new shares offered by the public the newly combined public company must first register the shares with the SEC. This process takes three to four months and normally requires filing a Registration statement with the SEC under Reg. SB-2 or SB-1.
If the shell company does not have a symbol, an application for a symbol is usually made to the NASDAQ Bulletin Board. The application for a symbol requires filing a Form 211 by a market maker that is a member of the NASD. The Bulletin Board has no financial requirements. A listing will be granted if the affairs of the company are in order and the company answers the questions posed by NASDAQ.
Top of page.
Advantages of Going Public Through a
Reverse Merger or a Public Shell Purchase
Increased Valuation: Typically publicly traded companies enjoy substantially higher valuations than private companies.
Capital Formation: Raising capital is usually easier because of the added liquidity for the investors, and it often takes less time and expense to complete an offering.
Acquisitions: Making acquisitions with public stock is often easier and less expensive.
Incentives: Stock options or stock incentives can be useful in attracting management and retaining valuable employees.
Financial Planning: Public company stock is often easier to use in estate planning for the principals. Public stock can provide a long term exit strategy for the founders.
Reduced Costs: The costs are significantly less than the costs required for an initial public offering.
Reduced Time: The time frame requisite to securing public listing is considerably less than that for an IPO.
Reduced Risk: Additional risk is involved in an IPO in that the IPO may be withdrawn due to an unstable market condition even after most of the up front costs have been expended.
Reduced Management Time: Traditional IPOs generally require greater attention from senior management.
Reduced Business Requirements: While an IPO requires a relatively long and stable earnings history, the lack of an earnings history does not normally keep a privately held company from completing a reverse merger.
Reduced Dilution: There is less dilution of ownership control, compared to a traditional IPO.
Reduced Underwriter Requirements: No underwriter is needed: (a significant factor to consider given the difficulty companies face in attracting an investment banking firm to commit to an offering.)
Disadvantages of being Public
either via a Reverse Merger or an IPO
Less Confidentiality – complete financial disclosure is required to become publicly held.
More Public Reporting – Reporting expense is greater because of the need for full disclosure.
Ownership Dilution – Owners give up some equity percent.
Greater Time Involvement – Management must devote additional time to public company operations.
Greater Liability – More company visibility brings a higher level of liability exposure.
Increased Expense – Higher costs of regulatory compliance for audit, legal and investor relations.
Preparation for a
Reverse Merger or Public Shell Merger
Locate a Suitable Public Shell - Public shells can often be found by consulting with securities law firms or CPA - Audit firms that deal with public companies. Go Public Institute owns a number of public companies available for merger. Please contact us for more information.
It is important to start with a clean shell: Due diligence on the public shell cannot be over emphasized, advice from your securities counsel, auditors, and a financial consultant should be utilized. As was mentioned, many shells are created for the express purpose of merging with a private company. These shells have no predecessor entities, and, as a result, little baggage in the way of a business failure or other skeletons in the closets.
Comprehensive Business Plan – Potential investors, public shareholders, auditors, securities counsel, brokers and market makers will want to see a well documented business plan.
Strong Management Team – Public investors demand strong management teams.
Convincing Marketing Plan – Public companies need the ability to show good sales and earning growth.
Product or Service – Public companies should be able to develop strong or dominant position in their business segment.
Financial Audits – SEC qualified audited financial statements for your last two fiscal years.
Experienced Securities Counsel – Your attorney must be qualified to deal with regulatory compliance, and the ongoing reporting requirements of all public companies.
Have Public Company Experience:
Your company should have at least one person in senior management that has significant public company experience. Financing consultants, such as Go Public Institute, can often assist management in the complex issues of being a public company and maintaining a good relationship with the financial community. In fact, many actually have a couple of shell corporations and, upon request, can manufacture a clean public shell.
A made-to-order shell without the baggage of a business failure in its background can sometimes be the way to go, but there's often a cost involved. You will most likely end up with the financing consultants as minority shareholders in the new company, holding between 2 percent and 5 percent. However, in almost any reverse merger transaction, the principals of the shell company keep a small equity position in the company going forward. Therefore, this surrender of equity is simply a cost of doing business.
Devise your financing strategy: A reverse merger is an indirect route to raising capital. Entrepreneurs must first consider how additional capital will be raised after the deal is done. An experienced financial consultant, like Go Public Institute, can be very beneficial in this area.
Requirements Necessary to
Close a Reverse Merger or Public Shell Merger
Business plan of merger partner. Sufficient information to complete and file the required 8-K with the SEC.
Management information, including completion of the "Officer and Director Questionnaire," for all Officers and Directors designated by the private company merger partner.
Agreement on structure and terms of merger.
Letter of intent with escrow payment made to public company or its principal shareholders. (This must happen for the public company to cease negotiations with other merger prospects.)
Audited Financial Statement, conformed to US, GAAP for the private merger partner. The audit statements of the private company have to be consolidated with the public company's financial statements.
Agreed merger fee in escrow with the securities attorney representing the merger partner.
Consent from the majority, preferably 100%, of existing shareholders of the private company to merge or exchange their shares for shares of the public company.
Agreement for the Officers and Directors of the public shell to be replaced with the Officers and directors designated by the private company merger partner.
List of all shareholders in the private company that will make the share exchange.
Number of shares to be outstanding “post merger”, and a complete breakdown of share ownership post merger. Note: It is often necessary for the public shell to do a reverse split and/or cancel shares owned by the affiliates of the public share prior to completing the merger.
Agreement on state the company will be domiciled in post merger.
Satisfaction of warranties and representations between public shell and merger partner.
Designation of securities attorneys and SEC qualified auditors that will represent the private merger partner.
Preparation of the share exchange agreement, stock purchase agreement, definitive merger agreement, and all other documents necessary to complete the merger.
Final preparation of the 8K that is required to be filed with the SEC within 4 days of closing the merger. The 8-K must disclose the same type of information that it would be required to provide in registering a class of securities under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
(See Sec Final Rule 33-8587, pdf file)
It has been our experience that the private company's ability to deal with all these issues is instrumental in determining the timing in closing the merger, and the long term success after closing a reverse merger or public shell purchase.
Top of page
Examples of Successful
Reverse Mergers with Public Shells
Armand Hammer, world-renowned oil magnate and industrialist, is generally credited with having invented the “Reverse Merger”.
In the 1950s, Hammer invested in a shell company into which he merged multi decade winner Occidental Petroleum.
In 1970 Ted Turner completed a reverse merger with Rice Broadcasting, which went on to become Turner Broadcasting.
In 1996, Muriel Siebert, renown as the first woman member of the New York Stock Exchange, took her brokerage firm public by reverse merging with J. Michaels, a defunct Brooklyn Furniture company.
One of the Dot Com fallen angels, Rare Medium (RRRR), merged with a lackluster refrigeration company and changed the entire business. This was a $2 stock in 1998, which found its way over $90 in 2000.
Acclaim Entertainment (AKLM) merged into non-operating Tele-Communications in 1994.
Filing a Form 211 to Receive a Trading Symbol
Rule 15c211 was designed to allow non-reporting public company’s securities to be quoted on the National Association of Securities Dealers’ (“NASD”) Over-the-Counter Bulletin Board (“OTCBB”) by filing some simple disclosures.
Now, companies seeking to obtain a quote on the NASD OTC/BB are required to file reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), under Section 15D of the Securities Exchange Act of 1933 (the “Act”), as amended, or section 12G of the 1934 SEC Act.
A company who has filed a registration statement with the SEC using an SB-1, SB-2, or Form 10, will become a reporting company when the SEC declares the registration statement effective. Once the company is reporting, it is eligible to have a market maker file a Form 211 with the NASD. The 211 must be approved by the NASD, which normally takes 3 to 6 months, before the company can trade its stock on the OTC/BB. The NASD will require 40 to 50 shareholders and sufficient public float to approve the 211 application.
If you need assistance in having a Form 211 filed with the NASD so that your company can trade on the OTCBB, we can help prepare that paperwork and introduce you to a market maker. Contact us for more information.
Well after seeing some trades on my screen yesterday it makes me wonder if there still is some life in this issue or it was just an anomaly.......nothing to get excited about.
Called IR yesterday and the bastards won't even return my calls. Now I will hound them
Well the web site is down and out now....wonder when the company is gonna give up some information and let stockholders to just move on, give up or hang in there......
this from the link on the web site:
Notice: This domain name expired on 06/20/06 and is pending renewal or deletion
Not really...had a message they are lining up some Market Maker sponsorship...but thats what they needed in the first place...its always next week...so what can I tell you...its next week....but maybe not...LOL
Its a Wimpy situation at best,, meaning the second Tuesday of next week.
I really don't know what to tell you pardner..other than hey yer stuck with it until it wishes to be unstuck to you.
Any further updates on this one? <IGSS>
Just curious what the hell is up with this stock...I cant seem to find much in the way of news anywhere? anyone have any input for me...it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Heard IGSS mighta got some sponsorship...we will see...as always...next week.
I'm getting a real blimpy complex here...ya know the second Tuesday of next week...LOL
It easier to just eat the damned hamburger.
From Image Globe web site: Currently under construction
http://www.i-globesolutions.com/
Nope sorry...I have left several messages on Image Globes answering mach for a call back and haven't recieved any yet.
I guess its time to start getting nasty.
As anyone got any updates? Seems to be dragging on forever.
Where the heck is our market?
Comon folks either we are in business or out...make up yer minds.
are you showing 0 on bid and ask
I'm guessing someone mistyped their order and meant to buy some for $0.01 but accidently entered $0.10 instead. but maybe not. : )
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