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Wow this would be GREAT GREAT GREAT news .. CVSI LONG AND VERY STRONG
On the farm bill ?
No you are wrong ,i have more stocks in there that is used as collateral and as long as you do not go over the amount you have as collateral there is NO EXTRA FEES whatsoever . You should call Fideliy and inquire about this it is a very good set up if you ever need to day trade in the same day !!!!! it give you more options if you get in a bind .
Check it out bought CVSI on margin
YOU BOUGHT CV SCIENCES INC COM (CVSI) (Margin)Close Popup
Symbol CVSI
Description CV SCIENCES INC COM
Shares + 1,013.000
Price 4.335
Amount -$4,396.31
Commission $4.95
Settlement Date 11/20/2018
Check it out cvsi bought with margin
YOU BOUGHT CV SCIENCES INC COM (CVSI) (Margin)Close Popup
Symbol CVSI
Description CV SCIENCES INC COM
Shares + 1,013.000
Price 4.335
Amount -$4,396.31
Commission $4.95
Settlement Date 11/20/2018
4.95 cost per trade buy or sell
4.95 in and out trades
Yes with fidelity you can buy or sell with margin account
I have fidelity and i buy or trade cvsi with my margin account . if you have it set up as a margin account it gives you a lot more moves you can do in a one day time ,like if you buy and sell same day ,It makes it nice if you need to use it..
McConnell: Hemp provision to be in farm bill
By BRUCE SCHREINER Associated Press 10 hrs ago
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Farm bill deal is 'darn close' amid possible SNAP compromise, negotiators say
By LIZ CRAMPTON and HELENA BOTTEMILLER EVICH 11/15/2018 08:19 PM EST
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Senate Agriculture Chairman Pat Roberts predicted Thursday that farm bill negotiators could have a deal by Monday and said they're working on a nutrition title that blends ideas from the House and Senate bills.
"We're close now; we're closer than we've ever been before," the Kansas Republican said, adding: "I'm very happy about the progress we've made."
Roberts said the nutrition title that is being negotiated — one of the major sources of controversy — is a "mix" of the Senate and House proposals. House Agriculture Chairman Mike Conaway (R-Texas) gave the same assessment in an interview with POLITICO. That suggests a broader compromise may be imminent as lawmakers try to meld the House measure with the Senate version.
The leaders of the Senate and House Agriculture committees expressed a renewed spirit of cooperation as they work to produce a conference report to allow enough time for the compromise to clear both chambers before the end of the lame-duck session. As of Friday, there will be just 12 joint legislative days remaining in the session, though it's possible leadership could add more time to the schedule.
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"Everybody sees how much time is needed once the four of us agree to it, and that's the next step ... for the four of us to agree to it," Conaway told POLITICO. "We're going to get this thing done soon."
Conaway said staff continue to meet and are making progress, and Roberts said the four top negotiators are holding talks via telephone.
"We've got some regulatory issues toward the end that we've got to get hashed out," Conaway added. "There are a few things, but we're darn close."
Neither chairman would get into details of potential compromises that are in the works. "I'm not going to give anything away at this stage," Conaway said.
The newfound optimism from the chairmen came amid a pressure-packed week of discussions and marked a departure from the sniping of a day earlier. On Wednesday, Roberts and Conaway traded jabs over who was to blame for the lack of an agreement. Both accused the other of taking a long time to respond to proposals.
Roberts had said Wednesday that he, Senate Agriculture ranking member Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and House Agriculture ranking member Collin Peterson (D-Minn.) were all on the same page and ready to cut a deal, but that Conaway was holding out over concerns related to at least six titles, including the nutrition, conservation and commodities sections. Sources say, however, that the dynamic is more complicated and varies by issue.
Conaway, in turn, questioned on Wednesday why Roberts had lashed out at him in public, arguing that negative statements made to the media were counterproductive.
But Thursday brought a change in tone. In speaking with reporters, Roberts was much more cheerful than he was earlier this week.
Asked Thursday whether tensions with Conaway were continuing, Roberts responded: "Absolutely not. I love Mike; I love Mike — and I love Ike." He later told reporters that things have changed over the last 24 hours and that negotiators are working together.
"Things have really progressed a lot more smoothly in the last day," he said.
Top negotiators will have to keep working together to settle policy disagreements in the conservation title. "It has to be worked out with Senator Stabenow and Congressman Peterson," Roberts said, explaining that the disagreement centers on the acreage cap for the Conservation Reserve Program.
The House and Senate measures called for different acreage limits under CRP. Peterson wants to see a significant increase in the cap; it's his top conservation priority. But the dilemma is that increasing the total acreage available for enrollment in CRP requires that the rental rate that is paid to farmers to take acreage out of cultivation has to be lowered to pay for the rise.
There is concern that lifting the acreage cap could result in the rental rate being lowered to the point where farmers don't find it advantageous to participate in the program.
The Senate bill would increase the existing CRP acreage cap by 1 million acres, bringing it to 25 million acres. It would lower the rental rate to 85.5 percent of the county rental rate. The House version calls for the cap to be raised to 29 million acres, and would push the rental rate to 80 percent of the county rate.
Roberts said the disagreement over CRP could be overcome. "These are not things we can't work out," he said.
Speaking of the overall talks, Roberts didn't say the Big Four were clear of all roadblocks, but his optimism was plain.
"I hope that there's no more big-time obstacles," he said. "We'll find out, but I think we're in a better place — a much better place."
Conaway, for his part, was upbeat but laser-focused on the clock. "We're running out of time," he said.
Ian Kullgren, Ryan McCrimmon and Sarah Zimmerman contributed to this report.
Seems like every time Clay Trader shows up this stock gets shorted every time !
Yes sure does !
Clock Ticking on Farm Bill Talks
Lawmakers Looking to Quickly Reach Agreement During Lame-Duck Session of Congress
11/15/2018 | 9:50 AM CST
By Chris Clayton , DTN Ag Policy Editor
Connect with Chris:
@ChrisClaytonDTN
AddThis Sharing Buttons
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2
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Congress is trying to get a farm bill completed at the end of the term, but lawmakers have had a hard time since last summer resolving some key issues, especially over SNAP. (DTN photo illustration)
This article was originally posted at 5:24 p.m. CST on Wednesday, Nov. 14. It was reposted with additional information at 9:50 a.m. CST on Thursday, Nov. 15.
**
WASHINGTON (DTN) -- Time is running short for farm bill negotiators to wrap up their work and complete the legislation for floor debates and a final vote this year, the chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee said Wednesday.
Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., told a couple of reporters early Wednesday afternoon that he, Senate Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., and House Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Collin Peterson, D-Minn., are in agreement about how to move ahead. But Roberts alluded that House Agriculture Committee Chairman Michael Conaway, R-Texas, was still proposing some areas of compromise.
"This is a key day," Roberts said. "We've got to decide whether we get a bill or not, or whether we get into proposals all the time. We have three of the principals who agree we can do a bill and will sign it as is. We have one individual who still wants to counter with proposals. That time has run out."
Conaway told DTN Political Correspondent Jerry Hagstrom in an email, "Pat is clearly under a lot of pressure. I've said for months that we needed to be making more progress -- and that SNAP was not the main hold up."
"Now the work has piled up (i.e. we just got their counter offer last night after waiting eight days) and he's clearly feeling the pressure. We can still get this done. BUT, now it the time for action ... not for finger-pointing. I'm keeping my eye on the ball."
Conaway also said he was not sure that Roberts, Stabenow and Peterson were all in agreement, Politico reported. Roberts and Stabenow indicated they are, and Peterson has said for months that he could support the Senate bill.
Peterson has avoided the press this week, pointing out that he is not in charge. He is likely to take over the chairmanship of the House Agriculture Committee in January, however, when Democrats take control of the House.
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Farm Bill is Lame Duck Priority
Incoming House Ag Chairman Sees No Reason to Carry Over Farm Bill to 2019
11/7/2018 | 10:58 AM CST
Rep. Collin Peterson said early Wednesday he thinks the farm bill will get done during the lame-duck...
Lawmakers have been working since late summer to come to agreement on the five-year authorizing bills with differences between the House and Senate versions primarily involving work and job-training requirements for single, able-bodied adults on Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program aid, but also to reach agreement on differences in provisions in the commodity titles and conservation programs.
Peterson said last week he doesn't want the farm bill to carry over to the new Congress in 2019 because he will likely have several new members on the committee following the election, and it takes time to get up to speed on some of the complexities of farm programs, crop insurance and USDA agencies.
Congress is in session this week, but then goes on Thanksgiving break until Nov. 27. Lawmakers have to approve some key spending bills to keep the government from shutting down before a Dec. 7 deadline. The House right now is scheduled to wrap up the year Dec. 13, and the Senate's target date to end is Dec. 14.
Roberts said congressional staff needs 10 days to get the paperwork done on farm bill language and get cost scores back from the Congressional Budget Office.
"We have a good bill, I think," Roberts said. "To continue to insist on policy changes from the partisan standpoint, I think is terribly counterproductive."
Roberts indicated he would like to see an agreement reached that would allow the chairmen and ranking members of the House and Senate Agriculture Committees to meet on Thursday to agree to go forward on a bill. "It's not the best possible bill, but it's the best bill possible," he said. "I think three of us understand that and one individual does not."
Senate Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said Roberts and Conaway were talking to try to come to terms. She also reiterated the problems with timing. "We're really up against time," she said. Stabenow added there was a lot of work done by committee staff and agreement was close.
In a leadership news conference for the Senate on Wednesday, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said preventing a government shutdown was his top priority for the lame-duck session, but he also said he wanted to complete work on the farm bill.
CQ Roll Call had reported late Tuesday that Conaway said his negotiating leverage had evaporated in the midterm elections and GOP leadership in the House had told him to get a bill done.
DTN briefly caught up with Rep. Frank Lucas, R-Okla., who chaired the House Ag Committee for the 2014 farm bill. Lucas was confident the bill would get completed soon.
"With the election over with, it's starting to bring some things into focus," Lucas said. "I'm not exactly sure what that focus is, but you know the principal players in the House -- soon-to-be-Chairman Peterson and Chairman Conaway -- are very intense on getting this done. That's a good sign."
Even though the principal negotiators are coming down to the final major sticking points in the legislation, groups continue championing specific provisions or programs in the farm bill:
-- The National Farmers Union called on Congress to ensure the Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network is in the final bill to help farmers deal with financial stress and supplement the lack of mental-health professionals in rural America.
-- The Environmental Defense Action Fund, National Wildlife Federation and the Meridian Implementation Fund started running a series of ads in Politico and in newspapers in Kansas, Michigan and Texas calling on Agriculture Committee leaders to "support full conservation funding and the Agriculture Data Act of 2018 in the farm bill to better protect soil, water and wildlife."
-- The Union of Concerned Scientists also kicked off a letter-writing campaign on social media that started generating several tweets on Wednesday: "Tell Congress to pass a strong, science-based farm bill in 2018."
DTN Political Correspondent Jerry Hagstrom Contributed to this report.
Chris Clayton can be reached at Chris.Clayton@dtn.com
(ES/AG)
© Copyright 2018 DTN/The Progressive Farmer. All rights reserved.
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NEWS ON FARM BILL
Clock Ticking on Farm Bill Talks
Lawmakers Looking to Quickly Reach Agreement During Lame-Duck Session of Congress
11/15/2018 | 9:50 AM CST
By Chris Clayton , DTN Ag Policy Editor
Connect with Chris:
@ChrisClaytonDTN
AddThis Sharing Buttons
Share to Facebook
2
Share to Twitter
Share to Email
Share to More
Congress is trying to get a farm bill completed at the end of the term, but lawmakers have had a hard time since last summer resolving some key issues, especially over SNAP. (DTN photo illustration)
This article was originally posted at 5:24 p.m. CST on Wednesday, Nov. 14. It was reposted with additional information at 9:50 a.m. CST on Thursday, Nov. 15.
**
WASHINGTON (DTN) -- Time is running short for farm bill negotiators to wrap up their work and complete the legislation for floor debates and a final vote this year, the chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee said Wednesday.
Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., told a couple of reporters early Wednesday afternoon that he, Senate Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., and House Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Collin Peterson, D-Minn., are in agreement about how to move ahead. But Roberts alluded that House Agriculture Committee Chairman Michael Conaway, R-Texas, was still proposing some areas of compromise.
"This is a key day," Roberts said. "We've got to decide whether we get a bill or not, or whether we get into proposals all the time. We have three of the principals who agree we can do a bill and will sign it as is. We have one individual who still wants to counter with proposals. That time has run out."
Conaway told DTN Political Correspondent Jerry Hagstrom in an email, "Pat is clearly under a lot of pressure. I've said for months that we needed to be making more progress -- and that SNAP was not the main hold up."
"Now the work has piled up (i.e. we just got their counter offer last night after waiting eight days) and he's clearly feeling the pressure. We can still get this done. BUT, now it the time for action ... not for finger-pointing. I'm keeping my eye on the ball."
Conaway also said he was not sure that Roberts, Stabenow and Peterson were all in agreement, Politico reported. Roberts and Stabenow indicated they are, and Peterson has said for months that he could support the Senate bill.
Peterson has avoided the press this week, pointing out that he is not in charge. He is likely to take over the chairmanship of the House Agriculture Committee in January, however, when Democrats take control of the House.
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11/7/2018 | 10:58 AM CST
Rep. Collin Peterson said early Wednesday he thinks the farm bill will get done during the lame-duck...
Lawmakers have been working since late summer to come to agreement on the five-year authorizing bills with differences between the House and Senate versions primarily involving work and job-training requirements for single, able-bodied adults on Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program aid, but also to reach agreement on differences in provisions in the commodity titles and conservation programs.
Peterson said last week he doesn't want the farm bill to carry over to the new Congress in 2019 because he will likely have several new members on the committee following the election, and it takes time to get up to speed on some of the complexities of farm programs, crop insurance and USDA agencies.
Congress is in session this week, but then goes on Thanksgiving break until Nov. 27. Lawmakers have to approve some key spending bills to keep the government from shutting down before a Dec. 7 deadline. The House right now is scheduled to wrap up the year Dec. 13, and the Senate's target date to end is Dec. 14.
Roberts said congressional staff needs 10 days to get the paperwork done on farm bill language and get cost scores back from the Congressional Budget Office.
"We have a good bill, I think," Roberts said. "To continue to insist on policy changes from the partisan standpoint, I think is terribly counterproductive."
Roberts indicated he would like to see an agreement reached that would allow the chairmen and ranking members of the House and Senate Agriculture Committees to meet on Thursday to agree to go forward on a bill. "It's not the best possible bill, but it's the best bill possible," he said. "I think three of us understand that and one individual does not."
Senate Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said Roberts and Conaway were talking to try to come to terms. She also reiterated the problems with timing. "We're really up against time," she said. Stabenow added there was a lot of work done by committee staff and agreement was close.
In a leadership news conference for the Senate on Wednesday, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said preventing a government shutdown was his top priority for the lame-duck session, but he also said he wanted to complete work on the farm bill.
CQ Roll Call had reported late Tuesday that Conaway said his negotiating leverage had evaporated in the midterm elections and GOP leadership in the House had told him to get a bill done.
DTN briefly caught up with Rep. Frank Lucas, R-Okla., who chaired the House Ag Committee for the 2014 farm bill. Lucas was confident the bill would get completed soon.
"With the election over with, it's starting to bring some things into focus," Lucas said. "I'm not exactly sure what that focus is, but you know the principal players in the House -- soon-to-be-Chairman Peterson and Chairman Conaway -- are very intense on getting this done. That's a good sign."
Even though the principal negotiators are coming down to the final major sticking points in the legislation, groups continue championing specific provisions or programs in the farm bill:
-- The National Farmers Union called on Congress to ensure the Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network is in the final bill to help farmers deal with financial stress and supplement the lack of mental-health professionals in rural America.
-- The Environmental Defense Action Fund, National Wildlife Federation and the Meridian Implementation Fund started running a series of ads in Politico and in newspapers in Kansas, Michigan and Texas calling on Agriculture Committee leaders to "support full conservation funding and the Agriculture Data Act of 2018 in the farm bill to better protect soil, water and wildlife."
-- The Union of Concerned Scientists also kicked off a letter-writing campaign on social media that started generating several tweets on Wednesday: "Tell Congress to pass a strong, science-based farm bill in 2018."
DTN Political Correspondent Jerry Hagstrom Contributed to this report.
Chris Clayton can be reached at Chris.Clayton@dtn.com
(ES/AG)
© Copyright 2018 DTN/The Progressive Farmer. All rights reserved.
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Yes it is in the works
Ya that makes more to buy cheap !You should have stayed in this is going to blow up in cost fast it may be tomorrow you just don't know
True FACTS about CVSI RIGHT HERE check it out This comp is strong
Cvsi is very strong !!
CVSI Industry Comparison:
Vs. Personal Products
CVSI Industry Average Percentile
in Industry
Market Capitalization $439.82M $2.92B 73rd
Total Return (1 Year Annualized)
AS OF 11/12/2018 +1,860.87% +14.57% 100th
Beta 1.40 0.64 76th
EPS (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $0.04 $1.94 63rd
Current Consensus EPS Estimate -- -- --
EPS Growth
(TTM vs. Prior TTM) -- -12.22% --
P/E (TTM)
AS OF 11/12/2018 116.25 35.06 100th
Dividend Yield (Annualized) -- -- --
Total Revenue (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $33.25M $23.02B 50th
Revenue Growth
(TTM vs Prior TTM) +137.57% +16.62% 96th
Shares Outstanding 94,585,000 1,810,095,232 72nd
Institutional Ownership 0.18% 32.94% 13rd
It's not just CVSI, it is the whole Market all pot stocks ! Cvsi will come back VERY STRONG and soon ..
Cvsi is very strong !!
CVSI Industry Comparison:
Vs. Personal Products
CVSI Industry Average Percentile
in Industry
Market Capitalization $439.82M $2.92B 73rd
Total Return (1 Year Annualized)
AS OF 11/12/2018 +1,860.87% +14.57% 100th
Beta 1.40 0.64 76th
EPS (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $0.04 $1.94 63rd
Current Consensus EPS Estimate -- -- --
EPS Growth
(TTM vs. Prior TTM) -- -12.22% --
P/E (TTM)
AS OF 11/12/2018 116.25 35.06 100th
Dividend Yield (Annualized) -- -- --
Total Revenue (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $33.25M $23.02B 50th
Revenue Growth
(TTM vs Prior TTM) +137.57% +16.62% 96th
Shares Outstanding 94,585,000 1,810,095,232 72nd
Institutional Ownership 0.18% 32.94% 13rd
Look at the bottom of this report it will show you how much a is own by the company . This should stop the rumors.
CVSI Industry Comparison:
Vs. Personal Products
CVSI Industry Average Percentile
in Industry
Market Capitalization $484.28M $2.94B 74th
Total Return (1 Year Annualized)
AS OF 11/09/2018 +1,968.19% +15.84% 100th
Beta 1.40 0.64 77th
EPS (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $0.04 $1.94 62nd
Current Consensus EPS Estimate -- -- --
EPS Growth
(TTM vs. Prior TTM) -- -12.37% --
P/E (TTM)
AS OF 11/09/2018 128.00 35.30 100th
Dividend Yield (Annualized) -- -- --
Total Revenue (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $33.25M $23.10B 53rd
Revenue Growth
(TTM vs Prior TTM) +137.57% +16.64% 93rd
Shares Outstanding 94,585,000 1,819,654,912 71st
Institutional Ownership 0.18% 32.42% 16th
You cant find a better stock to buy then CVSI anywhere . This stock will be the king of and is the king of CBD OIL and more ! CVSI LONG AND STRONG and it is on sell right now and may not be tomorrow !
S IT IS . You cant find a better stock to buy then CVSI anywhere . This stock will be the king of and is the king of CBD OIL and more ! CVSI LONG AND STRONG and it is on sell right now and may not be tomorrow !
Look at the bottom of this report it will show you how much a is own by the company . This should stop the rumors.
CVSI Industry Comparison:
Vs. Personal Products
CVSI Industry Average Percentile
in Industry
Market Capitalization $484.28M $2.94B 74th
Total Return (1 Year Annualized)
AS OF 11/09/2018 +1,968.19% +15.84% 100th
Beta 1.40 0.64 77th
EPS (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $0.04 $1.94 62nd
Current Consensus EPS Estimate -- -- --
EPS Growth
(TTM vs. Prior TTM) -- -12.37% --
P/E (TTM)
AS OF 11/09/2018 128.00 35.30 100th
Dividend Yield (Annualized) -- -- --
Total Revenue (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $33.25M $23.10B 53rd
Revenue Growth
(TTM vs Prior TTM) +137.57% +16.64% 93rd
Shares Outstanding 94,585,000 1,819,654,912 71st
Institutional Ownership 0.18% 32.42% 16th
You cant find a better stock to buy then CVSI anywhere . This stock will be the king of and is the king of CBD OIL and more ! CVSI LONG AND STRONG and it is on sell right now and may not be tomorrow !
CVSI LONG AND STRONG !! This is just a good time to buy more and make more money
Look at the bottom of this report it will show you how much a is own by the company . This should stop the rumors.
CVSI Industry Comparison:
Vs. Personal Products
CVSI Industry Average Percentile
in Industry
Market Capitalization $484.28M $2.94B 74th
Total Return (1 Year Annualized)
AS OF 11/09/2018 +1,968.19% +15.84% 100th
Beta 1.40 0.64 77th
EPS (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $0.04 $1.94 62nd
Current Consensus EPS Estimate -- -- --
EPS Growth
(TTM vs. Prior TTM) -- -12.37% --
P/E (TTM)
AS OF 11/09/2018 128.00 35.30 100th
Dividend Yield (Annualized) -- -- --
Total Revenue (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $33.25M $23.10B 53rd
Revenue Growth
(TTM vs Prior TTM) +137.57% +16.64% 93rd
Shares Outstanding 94,585,000 1,819,654,912 71st
Institutional Ownership 0.18% 32.42% 16th
CVSI LONG AND VERY STRONG !
CVSI Industry Comparison:
Vs. Personal Products
CVSI Industry Average Percentile
in Industry
Market Capitalization $484.28M $2.94B 73rd
Total Return (1 Year Annualized)
AS OF 11/08/2018 +1,968.19% +15.84% 100th
Beta 1.40 0.64 76th
EPS (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $0.04 $1.94 63rd
Current Consensus EPS Estimate -- -- --
EPS Growth
(TTM vs. Prior TTM) -- -12.37% --
P/E (TTM)
AS OF 11/09/2018 128.00 35.30 100th
Dividend Yield (Annualized) -- -- --
Total Revenue (TTM)
AS OF 06/30/2018 $33.25M $23.10B 50th
Revenue Growth
(TTM vs Prior TTM) +137.57% +16.64% 96th
Shares Outstanding 94,585,000 1,819,654,784 72nd
Institutional Ownership 0.18% 32.42% 13rd
Thanks SpaceLady that is good info.
I got all mine locked in ,i am not going to help them short the best stock on the OTC ..CVSI LONG AND STRONG!
Hi to all