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$PYGMF recent news/filings
bullish
bull flag
double bottom
## source: finance.yahoo.com
Sat, 18 Jul 2015 05:10:41 GMT ~ Online gambling firm 888 wins $1.4 bln battle for Bwin.party
read full: http://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/online-gambling-firm-888-wins-051021701.html
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Fri, 17 Jul 2015 21:17:38 GMT ~ Online gambling firm 888 wins $1.4 billion battle for Bwin.party
read full: http://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/online-gambling-firm-888-wins-130324423.html
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Fri, 17 Jul 2015 21:17:04 GMT ~ Online gambling firm 888 wins $1.4 billion battle for Bwin.party
read full: http://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/online-gambling-firm-888-clinches-054825922.html
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Fri, 17 Jul 2015 21:17:04 GMT ~ Online gambling firm 888 wins $1.4 billion battle for Bwin.party
read full: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/online-gambling-firm-888-clinches-054825287.html
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Fri, 17 Jul 2015 13:34:00 GMT ~ Gaming Company 888 Holdings Hits Jackpot With Bwin.party Purchase
read full: http://www.thestreet.com/story/13222259/1/gaming-company-888-holdings-hits-jackpot-with-bwinparty-purchase.html?puc=yahoo&cm_ven=YAHOO
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$PYGMF charts
basic chart ## source: stockcharts.com
basic chart ## source: stockscores.com
big daily chart ## source: stockcharts.com
big weekly chart ## source: stockcharts.com
$PYGMF company information
## source: otcmarkets.com
Link: http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/PYGMF/company-info
Ticker: $PYGMF
OTC Market Place: OTC Pink Current
CIK code: 0001507569
Company name: Bwin.Party Digital Entertainment PLC
Company website: http://www.bwinparty.com
Incorporated In: Gibraltar
Business Description: A leader in digital entertainment, we are also the world?s largest listed online gaming business.
$PYGMF share structure
## source: otcmarkets.com
Market Value: $1,389,378,972 a/o Jul 17, 2015
Shares Outstanding: 847,182,300 a/o Jun 30, 2011
Float: Not Available
Authorized Shares: Not Available
Par Value: No Par Value
$PYGMF extra dd links
Company name: Bwin.Party Digital Entertainment PLC
Company website: http://www.bwinparty.com
## STOCK DETAILS ##
After Hours Quote (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/after-hours
Option Chain (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/option-chain
Historical Prices (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=PYGMF+Historical+Prices
Company Profile (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/pr?s=PYGMF+Profile
Industry (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/in?s=PYGMF+Industry
## COMPANY NEWS ##
Market Stream (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/stream
Latest news (otcmarkets.com): http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/PYGMF/news - http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=PYGMF+Headlines
## STOCK ANALYSIS ##
Analyst Research (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/analyst-research
Guru Analysis (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/guru-analysis
Stock Report (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/stock-report
Competitors (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/competitors
Stock Consultant (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/stock-consultant
Stock Comparison (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/stock-comparison
Investopedia (investopedia.com): http://www.investopedia.com/markets/stocks/PYGMF/?wa=0
Research Reports (otcmarkets.com): http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/PYGMF/research
Basic Tech. Analysis (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ta?s=PYGMF+Basic+Tech.+Analysis
Barchart (barchart.com): http://www.barchart.com/quotes/stocks/PYGMF
DTCC (dtcc.com): http://search2.dtcc.com/?q=Bwin.Party+Digital+Entertainment+PLC&x=10&y=8&sp_p=all&sp_f=ISO-8859-1
Spoke company information (spoke.com): http://www.spoke.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=Bwin.Party+Digital+Entertainment+PLC
Corporation WIKI (corporationwiki.com): http://www.corporationwiki.com/search/results?term=Bwin.Party+Digital+Entertainment+PLC&x=0&y=0
WHOIS (domaintools.com): http://whois.domaintools.com/http://www.bwinparty.com
Alexa (alexa.com): http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/http://www.bwinparty.com#
Corporate website internet archive (archive.org): http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.bwinparty.com
## FUNDAMENTALS ##
Call Transcripts (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/call-transcripts
Annual Report (companyspotlight.com): http://www.companyspotlight.com/library/companies/keyword/PYGMF
Income Statement (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/financials?query=income-statement
Revenue/EPS (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/revenue-eps
SEC Filings (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/sec-filings
Edgar filings (sec.gov): http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001507569&owner=exclude&count=40
Latest filings (otcmarkets.com): http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/PYGMF/filings
Latest financials (otcmarkets.com): http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/PYGMF/financials
Short Interest (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/short-interest
Dividend History (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/dividend-history
RegSho (regsho.com): http://www.regsho.com/tools/symbol_stats.php?sym=PYGMF&search=search
OTC Short Report (otcshortreport.com): http://otcshortreport.com/index.php?index=PYGMF
Short Sales (otcmarkets.com): http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/PYGMF/short-sales
Key Statistics (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=PYGMF+Key+Statistics
Insider Roster (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ir?s=PYGMF+Insider+Roster
Income Statement (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/is?s=PYGMF
Balance Sheet (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bs?s=PYGMF
Cash Flow (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/cf?s=PYGMF+Cash+Flow&annual
## HOLDINGS ##
Major holdings (cnbc.com): http://data.cnbc.com/quotes/PYGMF/tab/8.1
Insider transactions (yahoo.com): http://finance.yahoo.com/q/it?s=PYGMF+Insider+Transactions
Insider transactions (secform4.com): http://www.secform4.com/insider-trading/PYGMF.htm
Insider transactions (insidercrow.com): http://www.insidercow.com/history/company.jsp?company=PYGMF
Ownership Summary (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/ownership-summary
Institutional Holdings (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/institutional-holdings
Insiders (SEC Form 4) (nasdaq.com): http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/PYGMF/insider-trades
Insider Disclosure (otcmarkets.com): http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/PYGMF/insider-transactions
## SOCIAL MEDIA AND OTHER VARIOUS SOURCES ##
PST (pennystocktweets.com): http://www.pennystocktweets.com/stocks/profile/PYGMF
Market Watch (marketwatch.com): http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/PYGMF
Bloomberg (bloomberg.com): http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/PYGMF:US
Morningstar (morningstar.com): http://quotes.morningstar.com/stock/s?t=PYGMF
Bussinessweek (businessweek.com): http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot_article.asp?ticker=PYGMF
$PYGMF DD Notes ~ http://www.ddnotesmaker.com/PYGMF
There are none, most are privately held. In all their grand wisdom, the Federal and State Governments have made online gambling illegal in the USA. Guess here the platform providers and such in this space will come for? Abroad. We developed our software and will soon launch in Southeast Asia, the United States is a waste of time.
Where are the U.S. online gambling company startups?
( I own shares in 888 holdings )
"Reportedly, two British companies—888 Holdings and Bwin,Party Digital Entertainment—both have deals in place to service the industry in New Jersey and stocks for both soared Friday on the news."
NJ...
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100447150
in.
Do you mean 98 cents??? when was this 98 dollars?
Whatever happened to the English guy who got arrested for internet gaming?
Neither does alphatrade......
Scottrade doesn't show a bid or ask on the stock.
published: 2 days ago
Surprise Testimony at Online Gambling Bill Hearing
Two Witnesses With Ties to Problem Gambling Support Bill
A hearing concerning a bill that would tax and regulate online gambling took place today for the benefit of the House Financial Services Committee. The Committee controls the fate of Rep. Barney Frank’s Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act of 2007, which was introduced in April.
The most compelling testimony in favor of legalizing online gambling didn’t come from the mouths of members of the online gambling industry, but from those who deal with problem gamblers everyday.
Both Andrew Poole, of Online Services for GamCare, a charitable organization that addresses the social impact of gambling, and Keith Whyte, Executive Director of the National Council on Problem Gambling, pointed out how the proposed legislation would provide protection for both minors and problem gamblers.
“We are satisfied that if the move towards more responsible operation continues to gather pace, as is increasingly observed across Europe and the rest of the world, that the continued legitimate development of the industry need not be off-set against significant increases in problematic gambling,” Poole said. “Robust, formal regulatory frameworks undoubtedly represent the best opportunity for achieving this."
Whyte told the committee, which is made up of more than 70 members of Congress, that Internet allows for certain controls that are beneficial is helping compulsive gamblers that can’t be found in regular casinos.
“Problem gambling is a serious and even life-threatening mental health disorder," said Whyte. "However, the graphical and interactive structure of the Internet provides a revolutionary opportunity to create informed consumers with access to a variety of information designed to encourage safe choices and discourage unsafe behavior.
He also testified that technology now exists to limit and prohibit people who are compulsive gamblers, as well as minors, in ways that’s impossible to do at a brick and mortar casino.
“The technology also exists, unlike for other forms of gambling, to allow players and operators to set limits on limits on time, wagers, deposits, as well as to exclude themselves,” Whyte said. “Clearly gambling on the Internet raises some difficult issues, but it provides theoretical opportunities for operators to deliver responsible gaming programs that meet or exceed current standards in the 'bricks and mortar' gaming industry.”
Witnesses also addressed questions about the safety of deposits, fraud and money laundering. These witnesses, who all were from the payment processing industry, told lawmakers that technology now exists to provide complete regulation and feel that regulation is best for both the consumer and the government.
“Within the United States vast amounts of credit card transactions take place on a daily basis,” said Clive Hawkswood, Chief Executive of the Remote Gambling Association. “The system is well established and well policed in order to counteract fraudulent and criminal transactions. The only circumstance in which crime can flourish is if the activity is unregulated.”
The Remote Gambling Association is a trade organization representing remote gambling operators. The organization also promotes socially responsible gambling among its members.
Jon Prideaux, Chief Executive of Asterion Payments and a former senior executive at Visa, encouraged Government involvement with online gambling for the protection of the American consumer.
“We owe it to people who have experienced problems with Internet gambling in the past to introduce a regulated environment where the proper protection can be provided to the vulnerable,” Prideaux said.
The next step for this bill will be decided by the House Financial Services Committee. A vote will soon take place on whether the bill should move forward or not. If it moves forward, it may the House of Representatives sometime this summer.
98$..........Whata fall....thats whats up....
Glad i shorted this when it was $98.HAHA KNEW THIS SCAM WOULD END.
Your right......my thoughts too.....
Until I get a clear cut answer from the gov on legalizing this.....I won't buy the stock because it is dead money until they legalize it. However, I will watch it =)
Sounds like you lost money playing...lol...relax princess...it's not a scam because I have a few freinds who won and BIG and now are playing in Vegas trying to go on TV for millions.
Great article.......I found this one on another board......
Posted by: mjm2005
In reply to: toad ws who wrote msg# 3
Date:6/10/2007 5:23:07 PM
Post #of 16
Legalizing Net gambling? There's a chance
By Declan McCullagh
http://news.com.com/Legalizing+Net+gambling+Theres+a+chance/2100-1028_3-6189857.html
Story last modified Fri Jun 08 18:01:16 PDT 2007
Opponents of a federal ban on Internet gambling said during a congressional hearing Friday that it would be wiser to legalize and regulate betting than prohibit it.
"In the end, adults ought to be able to decide for themselves how they spend the money they earn themselves," said Rep. Barney Frank, the Democratic chairman of the House Financial Services committee and primary backer of the legalization effort.
Friday's hearing included witnesses from companies that process online payments. In general, they echoed the arguments once used in favor of ending alcohol prohibition and that are now being invoked to decriminalize marijuana: It's better to legalize, tax and carefully regulate an industry than let it flourish with far less oversight in the black market.
Some countries already do just that. In the United Kingdom, for instance, Internet gambling is legal and strictly regulated. Some of the larger online casino operators are publicly traded on the London Stock Exchange.
"On the basis of my experience I can unequivocally state that Internet gambling can be regulated, and that abuses can be effectively regulated and controlled," said Jon Prideaux, a consultant who until last year was the head of Visa Europe's Internet arm.
A law that President Bush signed last year tried to eliminate many forms of online gambling by targeting Internet service providers and financial intermediaries, namely banks and credit card companies that process payments to offshore Web sites. The bill never received a formal vote in the entire Congress but instead was glued onto an unrelated port security bill that the Senate unanimously approved.
Now the pro-legalization forces are trying to marshal a counterattack. Frank introduced a bill in April that would replace the current broad prohibition with strict regulations--including criminal background checks and financial disclosure--imposed on companies that offer legal Internet gambling. (It's called the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act.)
Texas Rep. Ron Paul, a 2008 Republican presidential contender who topped CNET News.com's technology scorecard last year, said adults should be allowed to make up their own minds about whether to gamble. He said he was a strong supporter of Frank's bill "to restore the rights of Americans to decide for themselves whether to gamble online."
Now on News.com
It's not TV--or HBO. It's the Internet Photos: The greatest arcade games of the '80s Week in review: Cell phone hang-up Extra: Church of England calls Sony game 'sick'
Gerald Kitchen, the chief executive of U.K.-based SecureTrading Group, said his company is a payment service provider that processes a wide variety of financial transactions, including ones related to online gambling. He said SecureTrading's system has been reviewed by banks including Barclays, Lloyds and the Royal Bank of Scotland, and provides protections against money laundering, underage gambling and compulsive gambling.
"There are ways to protect against these exact harms and ills that the opponents of Internet gambling regularly cite as reasons to prohibit Internet gambling," Kitchen said.
But it's too early to say whether the bill will receive a favorable committee vote. For one thing, the top Republican on the panel, Rep. Spencer Bachus from Alabama, offered an impassioned defense of criminalization.
"Some people claim that illegal Internet gambling's a victimless crime," Bachus said. In reality, he warned, it's a "mushrooming epidemic leaving in its wake suicides, crime, family tragedies."
Copyright ©1995-2007 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.
June 8, 2007
New Deal For Online Gambling?
By Roy Mark
Place your bets, please.
From the courtroom to Congress, opponents of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 (UIGEA) this week began playing their hands to undo the controversial legislation. UIGEA bars credit card companies and other online payment systems from processing transactions with Internet gambling sites.
UIGEA specifically exempts online horse racing and lotteries from the law.
The new law does not specifically ban Internet gambling, but combined with existing statutes and a major crackdown on online wagering by the Department of Justice, a number of gambling sites have withdrawn from the U.S. market. UIGEA has also drawn criticism for being attached to an unrelated port security bill on the last day of the 109th Congress with no floor debate.
On Tuesday, a new trade group called the Interactive Media Entertainment & Gaming Association (iMEGA) filed a lawsuit in New Jersey against U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Reserve. The lawsuit seeks to halt enforcement of UIGEA. The lawsuit also asks the court for a temporary restraining order.
"In general, the law infringes on the right of free speech, freedom of association and calls into question equal protection under the law," Edward Leyden, a Washington attorney who is serving as the director of iMEGA. "[UIGEA] will have a chilling effect on legitimate streams of e-commerce and the Internet as a whole."
On Capitol Hill, Rep. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) filed legislation to exempt online poker, Mah-jong, chess and bridge from the provisions of UIGEA. Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) dropped a bill in the hopper to serve as companion legislation to Rep. Barney Frank's (D-Mass.) bill to legalize and license online gambling in the United States.
Frank's Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act of 2007 would establish a federal regulatory and law enforcement scheme to license companies to accept online wagers from individuals in the U.S. According to Frank (D-Mass.), the licenses would require protections against underage and compulsive gambling, money laundering and fraud.
McDermott's bill would establish the process to collect online gambling revenue online by state and federal authorities if Frank's legislation is successful. "If we decide as a nation to enable gambling online, the billions of dollars flowing out of this country should remain here to help us fund schools and bridges and a host of social programs that need more than luck to succeed," McDermott said Thursday in floor remarks.
Wexler's Skill Game Act would amend UIGEA to allow poker players and other game participants to legally compete against each other on the Internet. "If you want to bet online on horse racing today, it's perfectly legal," Wexler said at a Friday hearing on Frank's bill. "It's perfectly legal to bet through online state lotteries. We have an uneven state of the law here."
In a press statement, Wexler called poker a "great American pastime. Poker is a game, not a crime." According to Wexler, the difference between poker and sports wagering is that poker players are wagering against each other and not the "house."
It doesn't look good for now....but gonna keep it on watch...
Bill to legalize online gambling is off the table
Saturday, June 09, 2007
Sabrina Eaton
Plain Dealer Bureau
Washington- A bill that would legalize and regulate many forms of Internet gambling will be put on hold while its author, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, attempts to draw a better political hand.
"There are more votes for my position now than there were a year ago, but there aren't yet enough," Frank said after a hear ing at which Barberton minister Greg Hogan Sr. described how his son, Greg Jr., robbed a bank to pay Internet poker debts.
Frank, who believes the current ban on Internet gambling interferes with Americans' personal freedoms, says he won't push the bill through his committee until he thinks it could pass the full House of Representatives.
Financial experts at the hearing delivered conflicting reports on whether gambling Web sites can weed out patrons who are underage or live in states where gambling is illegal. Republican legislators who attended, including Steve LaTourette of Concord Township, expressed opposition to the bill.
Hogan, who lives in Hudson, listed his son's achievements, which included playing at Carnegie Hall piano recitals and being elected president of Lehigh University's sophomore class, before describing his descent into addiction and the Hogan family's futile efforts to stop it. Greg Jr. is now serving a 22-month prison sentence.
"Because Greg fell victim to Internet gambling's illusions of quick riches and a shortcut to his dreams, his dreams are in ashes today," Hogan told the committee. "Please refuse this bill, because if we open the door to any type of Internet gambling, we are allowing our college and high school students to play Russian roulette."
Not yet.....I just know that if they lift the Online gambling law.....this will be golden.....if not....well it probally stays the same.....
I watched a special and it said the goverment would stand to make 25 billion dollars a year in taxing online gaming companies......they couldn't do that before......
I just gotta find out the time table on when the bill will be presented......
What have you heard lately about it? I would love to see the ban lifted I wanna play poker!!! lol
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