Retired NYSE Broker & NASD Trader
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Enzolytics, Inc.
An organization with full indefinite licensing rights of the Irreversible Pepsin Fraction (IPF) peptide molecule for the specific treatment of the HIV/AIDS indication.
The Company is dedicated to the commercialization of these License rights of the IPF for the treatment of Aids and Hepatitis C as well as potential other treatments for life threatening diseases.
IPF is a peptide molecule that has a strong affinity to bind with the HIV virus’ peptide components identified as gp41 and gp120 antigens, rendering them as super antigens, and taking away from them their stealthiness and their capability to destroy the immune system.
In addition to this mechanism of action, IPF will also enhance and upgrade the immune system components and criteria, as such resulting in a double impact approach of both behaving as a novel fusion inhibition treatment as well as an immuno-modulator.
Enzolytics, Inc., in contrast to other biotech start-ups is based on a proven technological foundation and has scientifically demonstrated that its novel molecule IPF for the treatment of HIV/AIDS is a
viable alternative and complimentary treatment product.
ITV, produced by Enzolytics, Inc. is a brand-new specific protein
for the treatment of HIV and other viral infections.
For the first time a naturally occurring strong binding with gp41 HIV-1 envelop protein “in vitro” was demonstrated.
Current market sales indicate that the majority of products show annual sales of 100 plus million, with a significant number
ranging from 300 million up to 1 billion dollars in annual sales.
Many of the major drug companies, have entered into
partnership agreements with newcomers, or with companies in different stages of development in the research pipeline,
combining current ARVs with new drug families that impact the HIV/AIDS virus through different mechanisms of action.
Partnerships of this nature are a direct result of the major seven Pharmas -----who control a market with a potential of reaching
over $ 15 billion in year 2018,---- prevent their control and stake in the market share from sliding,
due to numerous issues, among which it is important to note,
#1 compliance to the drug regimen,
#2adverse reactions to their chemotherapeutic agents impacting the human organs,
#3 cost and eventual viral resistance.
In summation our product’s differentiation is based on:
1- Minimal and minor side effects
2- Zero toxicity issues
3- Tremendous cost savings
4- Short and limited treatment cycle
5- Easier Compliance adherence
6- Zero risk of viral resistance and mutation
Patent infringement!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!???????????????????????
Look at Activision Blizzard Inc-- ATVI--- and what they have done to Worlds Inc--WDDD by stealing their patents after being in partnership----the Infringement lawsuit is now over ten yrs old---its very political and the 2008-2016 regime placed their liberal favorites who favored infringement (they call it ""sharing ideas"" ) in the right govt slots ---
If China wants to steal the patent info---ain't nobody in our govt gonna help---to stop them!!
StocktonCA
Did you read this entire article you posted, down and thru the comments???
https://www.contracts-for-difference.com/borrowing-lending-shares.html
I started that bad habit in 1948---I also remember when the cigarette dispenser machine did not know how to make change---no computers or software back then--so my Herbert Taryton cigs cost .17 cents,, you put 2 dimes in the machine and your 3 cent change was 3 pennies inside the cigarette cellophane wrap----placed there at the factory where the cigs were packaged---
When playing ""Can you top this???""" that story is always the winner.
This is a very good post---thanks
I read it three times ---slowly--as that is what it takes for me to fully understand what's happening---
OK,, Gotcha---the wine country
Any where near Kino Springs?????
I am over here in the Tombstone and Bisbee / Naco area
Are talking about Green Valley---canoa golf course area
Highway 19 from Nogales to Tucson???
We Played golf over there--
Yeah,, sorta.. 5 active and 25 reserves---retired in 1990---outta the medical unit in Lubbock, Tx-----moved SV, AZ in 2000---live in Winterhaven, a gated adult (sometimes I wonder) community--of about 500 homes around a golf course---I help out at the Ft Huachuca golf course pro shop ,, which is where I play mostly--- with a bunch of retired military and snow birds from up North
My son just finished a Medical Contract in Boston at the Harvard hospital and slipped on the ice and broke 4 ribs---couldn't fly back to AZ and had to ride the Greyhound bus--We all live in AZ---Sierra Vista
I know there is a lot of "angst" here and frustration and desire to see this go up to the moon and stay there---
But,, please stop blaming everything on the MMs----I spent several years on that desk and surprise, surprise they do not manipulate like you are accusing-----they do their best to maintain an orderly market --- they can be fired too, you know-----
""CUTE""
Armstjo1
Besides what OTC said-------------
(The average cost to bring any pharmaceutical to market is approximately $1 BILLION)
There are ""POLITICS"" involved as there are many investors who made up that $BILLION,,, and they want a return---
So, if you were XYZ BIG PHARMA and were a Billion or two in the hole and your TREATMENT product was approved,, finally and on the market,, and Bobby Appleseed start-up down the street came up with a CURE--- not a treatment----but an absolute cure and that product made your treatment product obsolete---would you want to see it on the market ??? or would you prefer that it got delayed a few months/years so that you could prosper first??
Good Post
Rather insightful of you, also
and the debt was toxic too,
Cheers
Hey Falon
Helluva post!!!
You mustuv stayed up all night putting it together!!!
Hey MODs--we to sticky Falon's post #67443
ASAP Please
OK--Let's go back another 40 years--to my time in Wall St--
The customer in Podunk, La calls his Broker and buys 100 sh of GM--broker writes it up on an order slip and walks it over to the office girl who wires it to the NY office--NY sends it to the NYSE floor to the Trading Specialist who is making a mkt in GM stock--He fills the order and sends the fill chit back to NY office , who sends it on to the broker , who calls his client and gives him the fill and cost--Client then mails his check in to the broker---
Except for the client who has 7 days to pay, the entire process took less than 5 minutes---which I found amazing---as I got to spend an entire afternoon on the NYSE Floor back in 1961---it was a fantastic experience for me --that was when a really big trading day was 250 thousand shares--
An OTC stock didn't even come close to getting a fill that fast!!!!!!!!!
It usually took one to two days to get a fill--as you had to call the MM's in that stock to get a firm price----
Pretty much correct
What years are you referring
Drog
There is a whole lot less manipulation going on by MMs than you think--it may appear to you outside the trading room to be manipulation, but it isn't---
I spent 5 yrs on the trading desk ---what looks to many as manipulation, it is just trying to make a viable, fluid and liquid mkt--
Granted .. today have we thousands of OTC and Pink stocks versus my Pink Sheet and White Sheet papers (The OTC) stocks were on the White Sheet--and we got the Sheets every Monday----Big board volume was less than 500k shares a day---and the OTC mkt was asleep most of the day cause you could not trade it---
So. with today's thousands of stocks and electronics it is amazing to me that we are as transparent as we are---cause back then there was NO transparency---
Ciao
error
Lawi
Actually it was a little repetitious, but I was a beginner and at that time (1961) it was very good---I liked Jesse Livermore's book better---
This is a FYI from Bernard Baruch---it is in his book on investing---
He started investing and after 8 years he found that his entire portfolio was in the RED---not one single investment was green---
He took stock of his method of investing and discovered why he had all losers----
He was selling his winners ---or ,,, taking his profits and then reinvesting------but, he discovered that three things are manifest after the selection---#1 it could down 2 it could go up 3 it could stay the same.
When it went up he sold,, when it went down he held on until it went up and then sold for a profit--- if it stayed the same he held until it went up and then sold---NOTHING WRONG IN TAKING A PROFIT,,,RIGHT!!!
This philosophy could not be successful over time----
He then sold his losers immediately and kept his winners using a trailing stop ------Long term, this made him millions and he wrote books and managed money for others ---
Cheers-
This is a FYI from Bernard Baruch---it is in his book on investing---
He started investing and after 8 years he found that his entire portfolio was in the RED---not one single investment was green---
He took stock of his method of investing and discovered why he had all losers----
He was selling his winners ---or ,,, taking his profits and then reinvesting------but, he discovered that three things are manifest after the selection---#1 it could down 2 it could go up 3 it could stay the same.
When it went up he sold,, when it went down he held on until it went up and then sold for a profit--- if it stayed the same he held until it went up and then sold---NOTHING WRONG IN TAKING A PROFIT,,,RIGHT!!!
This philosophy could not be successful over time----
He then sold his losers immediately and kept his winners using a trailing stop ------Long term, this made him millions and he wrote books and managed money for others ---
Cheers--
HEY Ironman---
One of my military golfing group sent it to me--he is a MAJOR REDNECK---but a gem of a person---
This in case you don't know how to look up your own DD
Control Block Transfer Agreement
In addition, on November 30, 2020, the Zhabilov Trust, the Company’s Controlling Shareholder, entered into a Control Block Transfer Agreement, under which the Zhabilov Trust has agreed to transfer 35,100,000 shares of Series A Preferred Stock and 231,000,000 shares of Common Stock to Charles S. Cotropia and otherBioclonetics Designees.
Once such share issuances and transfers are completed, Charles S. Cotropia will be the Company’s new Control Block holder and majority shareholder, in addition to his role as Chief Executive Officer of Enzolytics, Inc., resulting in a Change of Control.
Nice to hear from you Stark---
Happy Prosperous New Year
Hey Jim---Great Post!!! and SO TRUE!!!
Been there and done that!!!!!!!
The following is sorta off topic--but it is also true to life
AUGUSTA, Ga. “We interrupt the pimento-cheese sandwiches, ball-skipping at the 16th and solemn walks around Amen Corner to pose a philosophical question: When finally after 46 years you meet the man to whom you owe all the happiness and joy you feel blessed to have enjoyed for most of your life, how long of a hug is long enough?
Clebe McClary wasn't sure, so as the embrace intensified, Billy Casper leaned in and whispered, Don't let go till you want to let go.
So right there in front of dozens of patrons, in the shadow of the iconic oak tree behind the Augusta National clubhouse, McClary and Casper hugged . . . and hugged . . . and hugged.
We hugged for five minutes, said Casper , who choked back tears. But McClary? He didn't even try to hold 'em back. He cried like a baby, which was not so conspicuous because as the scene played out, so, too, did the emotions of so many others let loose.
We all just cried our eyes out, said Julia Cervantes, one of Casper's 11 children
On any day, Casper is a wonderful story, a righteous man with a keen sense of human kindness. But on this cool, breezy Masters day, his story was even more wonderful thanks to a reunion with McClary, who told everyone how Casper had saved his life.
It was 1968, the height of the Vietnam War, and Casper , in the prime of his golf career, was off to Japan to play some offseason tournaments.
While he was there, did he want to visit some wounded American troops, who had been convalescing from Vietnam ? Casper said yes, because, well, that's his warm-hearted nature. I was recently asked by a man what I want to be remembered for, Casper said. I told him, ˜I want to be remembered for how I loved my fellow man.
That day at a hospital in Japan may have shown Casper at his warmest because when he looked over at a bed and saw a young man who had been wounded to a point where he could barely be recognized, the golfer moved closer. A doctor told him not to bother, that Marine 1st Lt. Patrick Cleburne "Clebe" McClary was ready to die, said Casper , but something made him approach the man.
I will never forget that day, said McClary, who on March 3, 1968 had been wounded during his 19th reconnaissance mission in Vietnam . McClary lost his left arm and his left eye and laid in that bed that day thinking one thing. I'd given up," he said. "I wanted to die, and I'd have died right there if not for him.
Casper , by 1968 a two-time U.S. Open champion and one of the most prolific winners on the PGA Tour, sensed McClary's hopelessness as he approached the man.
He put his arm around me, leaned in and said, ˜God could use you today. Don't give up", McClary said. Then he thanked me for what I had done for our country and said, ˜God bless you.
Somehow, McClary found the resolve to fight. Somehow, he survived, left that hospital in Japan , and settled in his native South Carolina , near Myrtle Beach . Years went by and he often wondered about this gentle golfer who had brought out the fight in him, but there was nothing more than that. I mean, I didn't know golf from polo, McClary said.
But one day more than a year ago, McClary was down at his beach house talking with a neighbor, a guy named Jay Haas , telling him his life story. The left arm and left eye had been lost in ' Nam , and his life should have been ended in a hospital in Japan , if not for him",, Haas said. He said, "Billy Casper". Do you know him?
Haas smiled, then made it his mission to reunite McClary and Casper . The Masters would offer the perfect opportunity. Casper , the 1970 champion, would never miss the pilgrimage Neither would Haas, who competed 22 times at the Masters and whose son Bill is a regular participant these years and whose uncle, the irrepressible Bob Goalby, won in 1968.
The first chance fell apart Monday when rain washed out the day's action at Augusta National, but on Tuesday the story unfolded to perfection. Haas met McClary up behind the clubhouse, found Goalby, who tracked down Casper and then well, it is said that Augusta National is a magical place, and here was proof positive that it is.
You never know what effect you're going to have on another human being, said Cervantes, who watched the emotions unfold alongside her mother, Shirley, other family members, Haas and Goalby.
When finally the long, emotional hug was over and the pictures were taken, Casper and McClary had so much to say to each other. Forty-six years is a long, long time, but the Marine told the golfer that he had thought of him often. The golfer nodded, because he felt similarly.
McClary told Casper that he was proud of his life. Not because of the Silver Star or Bronze Star or the three Purple Hearts that he had been presented. It wasn't for the book he had written, Living Proof, either. No, he was proud because he had heeded Casper's advice to stay strong and find faith in God.
But, make no mistake about it: You're the reason he's living. He was ready to die, one of McClary's friends said to Casper.
McClary, a motivational speaker who has given talks in all 50 states, smiled, wiped away tears, and nodded his head. My guardian angel,†he said, pointing to Casper .
As they stood side by side, Casper and McClary threw long, satisfied looks out over the greenest landscape known to man. A special, special place, but you need to see more of it, Casper said, and McClary nodded. He was going to walk Augusta National, but McClary had to have one more hug and a promise from Casper that if the Hall of Famer were ever in Pawleys Island, S.C., he had to stop in.
Casper agreed, then McClary started on his walk. But before he did, the former Marine reached into his pocket and handed his business card to someone standing nearby. It read: I'm just a nobody, that wants to tell everybody, about Somebody, that can save anybody.
Courtesy of Julia Cervantes
An EXCEPTIONAL golf story
If you haven't heard this story, it is well worth the read.
AUGUSTA, Ga. “We interrupt the pimento-cheese sandwiches, ball-skipping at the 16th and solemn walks around Amen Corner to pose a philosophical question: When finally after 46 years you meet the man to whom you owe all the happiness and joy you feel blessed to have enjoyed for most of your life, how long of a hug is long enough?
Clebe McClary wasn't sure, so as the embrace intensified, Billy Casper leaned in and whispered, Don't let go till you want to let go.
So right there in front of dozens of patrons, in the shadow of the iconic oak tree behind the Augusta National clubhouse, McClary and Casper hugged . . . and hugged . . . and hugged.
We hugged for five minutes, said Casper , who choked back tears. But McClary? He didn't even try to hold 'em back. He cried like a baby, which was not so conspicuous because as the scene played out, so, too, did the emotions of so many others let loose.
We all just cried our eyes out, said Julia Cervantes, one of Casper's 11 children
On any day, Casper is a wonderful story, a righteous man with a keen sense of human kindness. But on this cool, breezy Masters day, his story was even more wonderful thanks to a reunion with McClary, who told everyone how Casper had saved his life.
It was 1968, the height of the Vietnam War, and Casper , in the prime of his golf career, was off to Japan to play some offseason tournaments.
While he was there, did he want to visit some wounded American troops, who had been convalescing from Vietnam ? Casper said yes, because, well, that's his warm-hearted nature. I was recently asked by a man what I want to be remembered for, Casper said. I told him, ˜I want to be remembered for how I loved my fellow man.
That day at a hospital in Japan may have shown Casper at his warmest because when he looked over at a bed and saw a young man who had been wounded to a point where he could barely be recognized, the golfer moved closer. A doctor told him not to bother, that Marine 1st Lt. Patrick Cleburne "Clebe" McClary was ready to die, said Casper , but something made him approach the man.
I will never forget that day, said McClary, who on March 3, 1968 had been wounded during his 19th reconnaissance mission in Vietnam . McClary lost his left arm and his left eye and laid in that bed that day thinking one thing. I'd given up," he said. "I wanted to die, and I'd have died right there if not for him.
Casper , by 1968 a two-time U.S. Open champion and one of the most prolific winners on the PGA Tour, sensed McClary's hopelessness as he approached the man.
He put his arm around me, leaned in and said, ˜God could use you today. Don't give up", McClary said. Then he thanked me for what I had done for our country and said, ˜God bless you.
Somehow, McClary found the resolve to fight. Somehow, he survived, left that hospital in Japan , and settled in his native South Carolina , near Myrtle Beach . Years went by and he often wondered about this gentle golfer who had brought out the fight in him, but there was nothing more than that. I mean, I didn't know golf from polo, McClary said.
But one day more than a year ago, McClary was down at his beach house talking with a neighbor, a guy named Jay Haas , telling him his life story. The left arm and left eye had been lost in ' Nam , and his life should have been ended in a hospital in Japan , if not for him",, Haas said. He said, "Billy Casper". Do you know him?
Haas smiled, then made it his mission to reunite McClary and Casper . The Masters would offer the perfect opportunity. Casper , the 1970 champion, would never miss the pilgrimage Neither would Haas, who competed 22 times at the Masters and whose son Bill is a regular participant these years and whose uncle, the irrepressible Bob Goalby, won in 1968.
The first chance fell apart Monday when rain washed out the day's action at Augusta National, but on Tuesday the story unfolded to perfection. Haas met McClary up behind the clubhouse, found Goalby, who tracked down Casper and then well, it is said that Augusta National is a magical place, and here was proof positive that it is.
You never know what effect you're going to have on another human being, said Cervantes, who watched the emotions unfold alongside her mother, Shirley, other family members, Haas and Goalby.
When finally the long, emotional hug was over and the pictures were taken, Casper and McClary had so much to say to each other. Forty-six years is a long, long time, but the Marine told the golfer that he had thought of him often. The golfer nodded, because he felt similarly.
McClary told Casper that he was proud of his life. Not because of the Silver Star or Bronze Star or the three Purple Hearts that he had been presented. It wasn't for the book he had written, Living Proof, either. No, he was proud because he had heeded Casper's advice to stay strong and find faith in God.
But, make no mistake about it: You're the reason he's living. He was ready to die, one of McClary's friends said to Casper.
McClary, a motivational speaker who has given talks in all 50 states, smiled, wiped away tears, and nodded his head. My guardian angel,†he said, pointing to Casper .
As they stood side by side, Casper and McClary threw long, satisfied looks out over the greenest landscape known to man. A special, special place, but you need to see more of it, Casper said, and McClary nodded. He was going to walk Augusta National, but McClary had to have one more hug and a promise from Casper that if the Hall of Famer were ever in Pawleys Island, S.C., he had to stop in.
Casper agreed, then McClary started on his walk. But before he did, the former Marine reached into his pocket and handed his business card to someone standing nearby. It read: I'm just a nobody, that wants to tell everybody, about Somebody, that can save anybody.
Courtesy of Julia Cervantes
GEEZ, Jim
Excuse me while a strap on my Russian 44s to respond---
Wes Hardin!!!!!!!!!!!!-I read about him and saw the movies also!!!!
I like this part--((For you New Yorkers )) just how did you know my father's side of the family is New York,,,,---did you see his monstrosity of a home on Cape Cod?? or his bank on Wall Street in Manhattan that says built by the Marvin Safe Co or the piece of real estate that Grandad sold to this slick salesman who in turn brokered it to the builders of the Holland Tunnel---don't you just love America---back then,, I mean-----anything was fair---Capitalism is buyer beware!!!!---and Jesse Livermore---cheeze, what a trader---absolutely loved his book---
My son just told me about that stock I gave him,, CELH,,(( Celsius Holdings, Inc. develops, markets, distributes, and sells functional calorie-burning fitness beverages in the United States and internationally.)) …He bought it when it was trips---he bot 20,000 shares at .0003 and sold at 18 cents--it closed today at $65--and change today----see ,, it pays to be patient---CELH took several years to bring about full reward..
Methinks that ENZC might just give that stock a run for its money!!!
Given the right catalysts at the right times---and have patience
\
\cheers
Hey there ""Hicks from the Sticks""
That wouldn't be Oklahoma,,?? would it???
I grew up in Seminole and Wewoka----went to OU first---then followed my parents to west tx after a stint in the Army--used the Korean GI Bill at tex tech---where I argued economics and charged the Dems that they were already preaching socialism----LBJ was the leader
My Capitalism started in the 10th grade---got three paper routes and hired a ninth grader to "throw" two of them and I did all the collecting---the newspaper was a nickel a day or 30 cents a week, monthly it was a $1.25---so I converted everybody to monthly---less work,,, same profit----my first job outta high school was a summer gig at General Tire---mounting new tires and fixing flats---.40 cents an hour---Henry had been there over a yr, was married and earned .60 cents an hour--
Methinks the MIC of deletion is on a long coffee break---
\
MIC = Mod In Charge
This is the best and most well written post that I have seen to date.
Let me be clear, I AM NOT a Biden fan. I think he is corrupt, a liar, and probably suffering from dementia. He has done nothing to improve anything in his 47-year political career. But what has Trump done in the past 4 years?
The "arrogant" SOB in the White House, brokered two Middle East Peace Accords, something that 71 years of political intervention and endless war failed to produce.
The "buffoon" in the White House, is the first president that has NOT engaged us in a foreign war since Eisenhower.
The "racist" in the White House, has had the greatest impact on the economy, bringing jobs, and lowering unemployment to the Black and Latino population of ANY other president. EVER!.
The "liar" in the White House, has exposed the deep, widespread, and long-standing corruption in the FBI, the CIA, NSA, and the Republican and Democratic parties.
The "buffoon" in the White House, turned NATO around and had them start paying their dues. The "fool" in the White House, neutralized the North Koreans and stopped them sending missiles toward Japan and threatening the West Coast of the US.
The "xenophobe" in the White House, turned our relationship with the Chinese around, brought hundreds of business back to the US, and revived the economy. Hello?????
The "clown" in the White House, has accomplished the appointing of three Supreme Court Justices, who believe in the rights of the unborn, and close to 300 Federal Judges.
This same clown lowered your taxes, increased the standard deduction on your IRS return from $12,500 to $24,400 for married couples and caused the stock market to rise to record levels, positively impacting the retirement accounts of tens of millions of citizens.
The “clown” in the White House, fast-tracked the development of a COVID Vaccine, which was just approved and is being shipped out as we speak and yet we still don't have a vaccine for SARS, Bird Flu, Ebola, or a host of diseases that arose during previous administrations???
The “clown” in the White House rebuilt our military, which the Obama administration crippled, and fired 214 key generals and admirals, in his first year of office.
I get it, you don't like him. Many of you utterly hate and despise him. How special of you. He is serving you and ALL the American people. And might I add, he’s doing it for FREE.. What are you doing besides calling him names and laughing about him for catching the China virus?? Some of you were even hoping that COVID would be the cause of his demise??
Please educate me again as to what Biden has accomplished for America in his 47 years in office, besides making the whole Biden family richer??? By the way, where is Hunter? Oh, and when asked by the media about HUNTER, BIDEN has no response?
I’ll take the ‘clown’ any day, versus a fork tongued, smooth talking, hypocritical, corrupt liar. I want a strong leader who isn’t afraid to kick some ass when needed. I don’t need a fatherly figure. I don’t need a liar. That's what Hollywood, CNN, MSNBC, ABC, NBC, CBS and the New York Times are for.
God bless Donald Trump - the most unappreciated President in U.S. history.
Hi Bonnie
I have no idea how they will go,,, but, if you want "safe" money with modest return you keep the debt instrument , with its protection -----
But, if your not concerned with that and can accept the risk,, take the shares, as many as you can get-----get the best "trade-in" terms you can get and hope or success in the company being profitable and look forward to having forward stock splits that increase your position in size---
I don't know how many shares could be converted from these ENZC debt holders,, but with this company , I would not be concerned--- The AS and OS are not terrible as in some company's that did toxic financing---I don't fear the dreaded RS here----because Charles knows better,,, IMHO.
Cheeres
I see your point---but
Charles is going ask "What do you want for your $10 million???
Then he might say---"No, thank you ,, we are doing fine -- I don't want to DILUTE all my shareholders value-----but , I will see if there is an investor who has a 10 milly share block he wants to sell ......
I spent many a year as a broker/trader ---it's
just that it all occurred between 1960 and 1980----and NASDAQ was just getting started-----but , I did several Secondarys--- and heard the complaints from share holders---cause they were given first crack at the new shares
FYI
A secondary, or follow-on offering is when a company issues new shares, but after it has already completed its IPO.
Raising capital to finance debt or making growth acquisitions are some of the reasons that companies undertake secondary offerings.
Dilutive offerings result in lower earnings per share since the number of shares in circulation increases.
Non-dilutive offerings result in an unchanged EPS because they do not involve bringing new shares to the market.
Here is a better more detailed answer
A secondary offering is the sale of new or closely held shares by a company that has already made an initial public offering (IPO). There are two types of secondary offerings. A non-dilutive secondary offering is a sale of securities in which one or more major stockholders in a company sell all or a large portion of their holdings.
The proceeds from this sale are paid to the stockholders that sell their shares. Meanwhile, a dilutive secondary offering involves creating new shares and offering them for public sale.
Secondary offerings are sometimes referred to as follow-on offerings or follow-on public offers (FPOs).
A secondary offering is the sale of new or closely held shares by a company that has already made an initial public offering (IPO). There are two types of secondary offerings. A non-dilutive secondary offering is a sale of securities in which one or more major stockholders in a company sell all or a large portion of their holdings.
The proceeds from this sale are paid to the stockholders that sell their shares. Meanwhile, a dilutive secondary offering involves creating new shares and offering them for public sale.
Secondary offerings are sometimes referred to as follow-on offerings or follow-on public offers (FPOs).
In other words you want to see your value diluted---
I have been involved in a number of Secondary offerings and that is not what we want---but,, you are certainly entitled to your opinion
cheers