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From PR..."Please feel free to contact the CEO, Patrick Herda directly with any questions at (202) 470-2664."
What's up with that? I thought he was sick of hearing from Stockholders...
Nsol,
Thanks for your comments. You may be right...or not. I don't know. AI does appear to have investments in other companies. Not all foreign money flows thru large organizations.
MLM, there ARE legit US companies that HAVE received funds from Dubai and China...many, many of them. Yet you focus on the negative...what a surprise! That lame excuse holds no water with me
Once again you raise fear and doubt on subjects that nobody can prove either for or against. Again, what a surprise!
Tom8oes, thanks for sharing your comments.
To the degree you can trust Herda and Romano, I think this will go thru.
Dubai money goes a long way to explain why theres no fancy offices or AI info...because there doesn't need to be.
However, it sure would be nice is there was a verifiable path to show the money is there. Will be interesting to read the TO
Good luck to you and the rest of NSOL shareholders
Riddle me this...
Why the hell would a private company announce that they were interested in buying a public company?
Why is it in their interest to do so?
Maybe this will go lower before the TO comes out. Based on history, I am counting on it.
The Buyout has made us all short term traders, like it or not.
Lets just hope when the music stops, theres a chair for you.
You only have someone's word that this is going thru...do you believe everything that people tell you?
So far there is no verifiable evidence of NSOL value or that IA has money...hence the price.
IMO the only way to reduce risk at this point is to trade NSOL as it goes up and down, seems many agree. We are all short-term stockholders now.
I guess you haven't bought back in yet
Apparently you trust what Mr. Romano says...
Are you saying investors don't get lied to when they "call the company"?
Where's the proof? Like an account with $110 Mil in it...
Disclosure: I am hoping the price will drop some more before the TO is announced. Bashers and Naysayers, where are you when I need you?...lol
Sorry, but you were making a point of how you were right and many of the long term investors were wrong. End of story.
Notice it didnt take multiple paragraphs of repeated dribble to make my point.
How's it feel to rub it in?
Yer right about the upside limit on price and not buying and holding. I suppose you deserve a round of applause...but yer too annoying for that.
Let me know when you buy back in or should I just wait until you stop posting negative repetitive comments?
Don't fret, I see NSOL After Hours is UP...lol
OT...There is No Credit Crisis, No Recession and That is Why Gold is Going to $1500 - Hard to Believe? - Read on Friends
Kenneth J. Gerbino
Archives
Kenneth J. Gerbino & Company
Jan 18, 2008
The U.S. Press and just about everyone from Main Street to Wall Street have bought into yet another massive misunderstood concept. Misunderstood concepts are very dangerous to your financial health.
The sub prime mortgage melt down and future ramifications are very real and the major financial institutions associated with all the second and third level repackaging of this toxic paper are in big trouble. But the "crisis" is a hoax. Some big institutions lost a lot of money in their investment portfolios but this is not a credit crises. If you ever got through Von Mises' great book, The Theory of Money and Credit, this would make sense.
Follow this simple example and you will understand why there is no credit crises and why a recession is probably not going to happen anytime soon and why this is astoundingly bullish for gold and silver.
Tom buys a house. Tom has no job, no credit, no savings and lied on his loan application. He is like a few million other people in the same boat. Some bank or financial institution lent him money. The house cost $300,000 and Tom was lent the entire amount, 100% financing - no down payment. When Tom was lent the $300,000 he gave it to George who was the owner of the house. George now has $300,000 and Tom now owns a house. So far so good.
Tom defaults. His bank cannot collect. His bank is in trouble. His bank has hundreds or thousands of similar loans. The bank has a crisis on its hands. But hold on, George has the $300,000. The $300,000 has not disappeared. George has this money in his bank or he bought a boat and the guy he bought the boat from has the $300,000. The money is still in circulation. It has not gone to money heaven. The banks and the big Wall Street firms actually have a crisis, but it is an investment crisis not a national credit crisis.
RECESSION POSTPONED
The Fed, the Treasury, the European Central Bank and the British National Bank are all pumping in hundreds of billions of new money to bail out the banks not the economy. But the economy will certainly get "stimulated" by all the new money.
Since the $300,000 is still in circulation (and you can multiply this by millions of other home loan examples) and the Central banks are adding even more money and credit to the economy, what is going to be the outcome of all this? It is going to be incredibly inflationary. It is also going to assure that the economy will avoid a recession because there is now so much money sloshing around the system that it will get spent or saved or used by someone else and therefore a recession will be postponed. The way a recession could happen is that if the economy actually has finally petered out and all the mal-investment of the last cycle (real estate being first on the list) is now creating dislocations that cannot be handled. But with all the new money being pumped into the system and with continuing low interest rates this recession has surely been postponed.
The dollar will continue to go down as the Fed has decided to save the banks and flood the country with as much money as is needed to handle their crisis (the banks).
Gold is going up because this "crisis" handling means inflation is going to come back, possibly at the highest levels we have ever seen in modern times.
A SLOW ECONOMY
The home building melt down is very real. Many homes were bought by unqualified borrowers and speculators who are now in trouble. With home building crashing (this is a key sector of the economy) how will this effect the U.S. economy? It, so far, has just slowed the economy down but because there is now so much more money in circulation some other areas of the economy appear to be taking up some of the slack.
My guess is that instead of a 4% growth economy like we had because of the "housing boom", we may have a 1.5% growth economy. With the dollar so low tourism will increase and foreigners will come in and buy our goods and services. Our real estate prices are not only going down but to someone with Euros our real estate is now at bargain prices. European yacht manufactures cannot now compete with U.S. boat builders and at the recent Fort Lauderdale Yacht Show (the largest in the world) U.S. yachts and boats were bargains if one owned Euros. Boeing Jets are also tempting to European airlines with Euros selling for a 30% discount (in Euros) from just a few years ago.
MONEY AND INVESTMENTS
If there is a credit crisis, why is MZM money supply up almost $1 trillion in the last year? Why are Aaa Corporates only at 5.3%? Why was Industrial Production up 1.5% year over year in December? Employment up 1%. These are not recession or crisis numbers. The Crisis is a smokescreen used to rationalize rescuing an investment management crisis for the banks. The big institutions are being bailed out and the guy in the street is going to pay for it.
In 1987 the U.S. stock market had its worse year since 1929 and 1974. Trillions of dollars of wealth was destroyed in stock and bond values in 1987. But we never had a recession. This was because the losses were investment losses. Money in circulation actually went up. Money, credit, and investments are three related but distinct animals.
In the present environment the banks investment portfolios are losing hundreds of billions and maybe as much as a trillion dollars eventually but the amount of money in circulation is increasing not decreasing. Therefore the so called "economy" will move on and the inflationary impact of all this new money on top of all the old money that has been shoved into the system will make inflation take off.
When Wall Street comes to its senses and realizes that the economy is now being flooded with money and none of the old money has disappeared and the Fed is indeed going to keep interest rates as low as possible, the U.S. stock market should not crash. The banking system will not collapse. Unfortunately what will happen is an explosion of inflation and that will be a crisis. Every lower and middle income earner in this country will pay for this bail out because their paychecks will now buy less and less in the future. Their standard of living will decrease. As usual the insidious paper money system will rob the poor and the lower and middle income earners (via inflation) and redistribute that wealth to the rich (the banks and the Wall Street firms that are being bailed out). There is no free lunch. But whenever one shows up, know that someone is paying.
The authorities have no choice but to inflate or have some major institutions go down. Eventually this will be an inflationary disaster. Gold will most likely go to $1500 within a few years. If one takes $850 gold and allows for only a 7% increase a year for 5 years - the price is $1200.
Bottom Line
The stock market already was overvalued and a 10-20% correction is expected. With all the money floating around some sectors will probably do OK. I do not like the stock market but do not feel a crash is coming. That happens when interest rates are high not low and when inflation returns forcing interest rates much higher. At that time the Fed won't be able to stop it. Then the market will crash.
a
A recession is most likely postponed because of all the money injected recently. How long is difficult to predict and we will have to see how the economic statistics unfold in the coming months to evaluate.
a
Gold and silver are obviously the safest and best investments in a world that has the authorities with only one option. Print money. They have to bail out the banks and Wall Street and they have to pay for trillions of promises to their citizens that they cannot keep. This is global not just in the U.S.
a
The money supply increases in India, China, Brazil and England are now almost beyond belief averaging 19% a year. These four countries are in the top 12 GDP countries in the world, contribute almost 30% of the world's goods and services and employ 47% of the world's work force. The future of gold and silver as an inflation hedge is definitely going global.
The future is like the past only more expensive.
For more articles on Gold, the Economy and the Stock Market visit our website: www.kengerbino.com
Ken Gerbino
Archives
Kenneth J. Gerbino & Company
Investment Management
9595 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 303
Beverly Hills, California 90212
Telephone (310) 550-6304
Fax (310) 550-0814
E-Mail: kjgco@att.net
Website: www.kengerbino.com
JohnBoy, if what you say is true, then I guess that will be our next press release.
Be interesting to see where this bottoms out before PR hits
place your bets...
Does anyone doubt there will be another confirming press release?
I think not...
If they let it get to the low 40s first, I will buy back with the shares sold today.
I hope to milk this before it milks me, so much for buy and hold...
What a crazy stock this has become, kinda sad because I am a big believer in CTL and alternative energy.
So you admit its possible they haven't sold?
Good!
Since we don't know anything for sure, its fun to raise doubt by posing other possiblities, right? Pile on the verbage! Lets "think outside the box"...lol
You didn't answer my other question btw
Instead, you ask more questions. I think you missed your calling...maybe you should have been a politician :)
Well, I will know when you have bought in again, the volume of your posts will go down
enjoy the ride...
Sorry, but I dont buy the logic that he (or anyone else) would buy $346,000 worth of NSOL stock on open market and put their OWN money at risk unless they firmly believed in the stock.
So far, there is no proof that Herda or other insiders you mentioned below have sold a single share.
Easy to ask questions that no one can answer. Trying to bash the price down again? What price are you coming back in at?
You sold at the end of Friday, right?
Anyway, good luck to you. At least you have admitted to what you are doing, more than I can say potentially for others.
Herda's $346,000 open market buys
I find it hard to believe that the CEO would buy 635,000 shares for a combined price of $346,000 on the open market as part of a pump n dump scheme (although I know some of you believe that)
Its interesting that six times in the last three months the price has bounced back from the low 40s (close to herda's last 45 buy) His average is 0.545 on these buys...hmmm
On the whole, if you look at the 3month chart above, I would say it looks more like accumulation and not your typical pump n dump chart. If the insiders truly felt there was no merit to this company the price would already be further down as there is no honor among thieves. Again, all my own opinion.
HERDA PATRICK: Declared Holdings
Company/Relationship Reported Shares Ownership
NUCLEAR SOLUTIONS
Officer
OTC BB:NSOL.OB
(historical quotes, profile, SEC, other insiders) 19-Sep-07 635,000 Direct
Insider & restricted shareholder transactions reported over the last two years
Date Shares Stock Transaction ADVERTISEMENT
19-Sep-07 50,000 NSOL.OB Purchase at $0.45 - $0.45 per share.
(Cost of about $23,000)
21-Jun-07 195,000 NSOL.OB Purchase at $0.53 - $0.53 per share.
(Cost of about $103,000)
20-Jun-07 290,000 NSOL.OB Purchase at $0.52 - $0.52 per share.
(Cost of about $151,000)
25-May-07 100,000 NSOL.OB Purchase at $0.69 - $0.69 per share.
(Cost of about $69,000)
If NSOL really has something, then my guess is the buyout price is too low. On the other hand, if NSOL doesn't then this will unravel at some point (ie hope you like playing musical chairs)
Since most of us (unless you're an insider) can only speculate, this becomes a lesson in risk management.
For the naysayers, I say you sold too early.
For the long term NSOL holders, I say you need to let some of your shares go at some point soon.
But again, this is my opinion only and anything is posssible with this crazy roller coaster stock.
Good luck to all, especially to the long term stock holders
PS... just because you talk to someone on the phone, doesnt make what they say true
Tom8oes, congrads, you called it right
Guys, keep talking, price is going up
NSOL gapped higher on a traditionally slow day
Normally that would be a good thing.
But this is NSOL where nobody knows for sure (or do they?) where the price will go short term...
Have fun traders!
well, now that you have cashed out
I guess we can expect more repetitive posts from you reminding us of the NSOL negatives
I noticed you didnt post much while you held stock ;)
That name is too specific to be two different people
This does not look good.
I would love to know who sold after the press release and if they had anything to do with same press release.
ie pump n dump
...starting to get pissed in a big way.
Does Inter-Americas have $110M cash?
If available cash can be verified, then you will see the stock price rise.
As they say, money talks and ...
Since theres virtually no public information on Inter-Americas, Inc. beyond its own website, it doesn't surprise me that we are down.
Vegas anyone?
Totally agree with you, enthaply
My guess is this Inter-Americas doesnt understand that fact and what do they have to lose by trying? At least we have another datapoint if this company is legit.
Perhaps Inter-Americas sees the same thing and is looking for a quick kill? That would explain the rush to PR. Maybe making it public was to put pressure on NSOL thru its stockholders to sell?
All my spectulation and I have been wrong before...
Lots of questions with no answers
If its real, we are building a nice base to spring from, if its not, then let NSOL be honest and say so and gain some positive market attention.
I find the timing of this all very strange..
Notice the stock price tanked Dec 20, day before this "letter" went to NSOL
Why release a PR the day after Christmas when many are on vacation?
BTW there is no management listed on their website. I google their president...he is only mentioned in reference to this PR
I would imagine a clarifying PR from NSOL might be in order
Better yet check out one of their "consortium" companies, "Full Circle Energy" mentioned in the PR..
http://fullcircleenergy.net/
Whats the benefit in Inter-Americas publicly announcing that they want to purchase NSOL?
Why don't they silently negotiate with NSOL and buy stock on the open market?
Is Inter-Americas a real company? Or is this a pump n dump scheme of theirs?...I hope not...
tom8oes, to publicly imply you have information and yet not to share it speaks to your character, regardless of where the price goes.
Good luck to the long term NSOL shareholders and Happy Holidays.
“Not CO2, but water vapor is the most important greenhouse gas"
Hmmm...I wonder how Al Gore intends to reduce our water vapor footprint...lol
Belgium: Climate scientist Luc Debontridder of the Belgium Weather Institute’s Royal Meteorological Institute (RMI) co-authored a study in August 2007 which dismissed a decisive role of CO2 in global warming: "CO2 is not the big bogeyman of climate change and global warming. “Not CO2, but water vapor is the most important greenhouse gas. It is responsible for at least 75 % of the greenhouse effect. This is a simple scientific fact, but Al Gore's movie has hyped CO2 so much that nobody seems to take note of it.”
If NSOL closes higher...what else needs to be said about price support?
damn, looks like you were the smart one
I couldnt pull the trigger...lol
On CNBC Squak, they were poo-pooing corn ethanol in favor of clean coal...that the US was the "Saudia Arabia" of coal and thats really the direction we should go in.
I actually was expecting an INCREASE on NSOL price based on the above, so this morning was quite the suprise
At least the dip wasnt as bad as the below .20 price (so far and knock-on-wood)
Well, with no other news out there, it had to be the energy bill news. Perhaps those that didn't know we were no longer in the ethanol biz sold?
never a dull moment here...
The energy bill signing is the only news I know of
Maybe because its pro-ethanol and we aren't ethanol players anymore?