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marketwatch showing .01
http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/crgp
And if the company is buying shares out of the market will the dividend be attached to them too?
The due bill documents are a contract that lays out a stock seller’s obligation to deliver the dividend to the stock buyer. For example, let’s say company XYZ is offering a special dividend that is worth 30% of the current share price. This dividend is tagged with a record date of March 1, a pay date of March 15, and an ex-dividend date of March 18. If an owner of stock from XYZ holds the asset through March 15, he would receive the dividend paid at that point. However, if he were to sell that stock on March 17, then the new owner of the asset on the ex-dividend date of March 18 would have the right to the dividend that the original owner has already pocketed. Therefore, the due bill attached to the stock is a promissory note mandating that the original owner passes on the dividend to the new owner
How do I know if the stock I just bought came from a seller who held the stock on the 26 and sold it to me with the dividend attached?
akbenhossen, thanks for the post. that explains the diy in simple terms. Now how does a shareholder who bought after June 30th find out if a due bill is attached to the stock he just purchased? It would seem that all the stock as of that day would have the bill attached especially with the company buying and retiring shares.
SummerMan,Also conciser yesterday and today the company could have taken off the table in the two days of trading apx 44,881,324 and 25,373,036 what would amount to 70,254,360 more shares at the 20% of the daily volume the last two days. hypothetically speaking of course. That would reduce the issued shares to 172,568,877.
You also have to consider that out of all the shares out there, there are only X amount that have the dividend attached to them as of June 30th.
If in the buy back, those shares went to the company and retired the divy need not be paid on them. It would be nice to know how many shareholders and shares where out at the close of June 30th.
It all sounds to good to be true, BUT if the company is not scamming, this is going to get very exiting around here the next few trading days IMO only
We defiantly need more information from the company.
Just my observation with what the company has told the investing public. Have a great weekend folks...;)
SummerMan, It's not ruined IF the company was to finish the buy back using the $1,088,000 let of the $1.5m authorized by BOD for the buy back. At the price this stock is trading at it would take $630k to repurchase the entire O/S.
I do agree that this company sounds to good to be true but stranger things have happened.
Re:
8:46 am ET June 1, 2015 (PR Newswire)
Calissio Resources Group Inc. (CRGP) ("Calissio" or the "Company") is pleased to announce today that its Board of Directors has authorized a share repurchase program of up to $1.5 million of the Company's outstanding common shares
PR Aug. 13, 2015 /PRNewswire/
Further to the share buy back program announced on June 01, 2015, that during the period from June 01, 2015 until August 12, 2015, Calissio purchased 95,750,000 of its shares at an average price of $0.0043 per share. The total number of shares repurchased under this program to date is 95,750,000 common shares for a total consideration of USD $411,725.00.
The retirement of this stock reduced the total issued to 242,823,237 shares, greatly increasing the ownership percentage of the Company's public shareholders," said Adam Carter, President and CEO.
$1,500,00-$411,725= $1,088,275
$1,088,275/242,823,237= 0.00448
242,823,237x .0026 (today's close) = $631,340.41
But like I said, sounds to good to be true but hypothetically the numbers will work. leaving $456,934 of the authorized 1.5M for buy back
A observation I posted yesterday, this could get very interesting in the next few weeks IMO,
theoretically speaking as to the PR dated June 1, 2015
LAS VEGAS, Jun. 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ --Calissio Resources Group Inc. (CRGP) ("Calissio" or the "Company") is pleased to announce today that its Board of Directors has authorized a share repurchase program of up to $1.5 million of the Company's outstanding common shares.
Now if you take into consideration today’s PR of
The total number of shares repurchased under this program to date is 95,750,000 common shares for a total consideration of USD$411,725.00.
That would leave $1,088,275 of authorized capital by BOD left to continue Share buy back. At the current PPS of lets say .0025 it would only take
$607,058.09 of the $1,088,275 to purchase the entire O/S (theoretically speaking) I would love to see a PR confirming the continuation of the buy back program at these levels. Would make for a interesting short cover.
The retirement of this stock reduced the total issued to 242,823,237 shares, greatly increasing the ownership percentage of the Company's public shareholders," said Adam Carter, President and CEO.
Just something to pounder. Hummmmm
theoretically speaking as to the PR dated June 1, 2015
LAS VEGAS, Jun. 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ --Calissio Resources Group Inc. (CRGP) ("Calissio" or the "Company") is pleased to announce today that its Board of Directors has authorized a share repurchase program of up to $1.5 million of the Company's outstanding common shares.
Now if you take into consideration today’s PR of
The total number of shares repurchased under this program to date is 95,750,000 common shares for a total consideration of USD$411,725.00.
That would leave $1,088,275 of authorized capital by BOD left to continue Share buy back. At the current PPS of lets say .0025 it would only take
$607,058.09 of the $1,088,275 to purchase the entire O/S (theoretically speaking) I would love to see a PR confirming the continuation of the buy back program at these levels. Would make for a interesting short cover.
The retirement of this stock reduced the total issued to 242,823,237 shares, greatly increasing the ownership percentage of the Company's public shareholders," said Adam Carter, President and CEO.
Just something to pounder. Hummmmm
cj, the best part of my DD is I can not find any toxic loans in any filling. That is HUGE in it's self. If the company was to need capital I would rather see a form 4 verses the predatory lending that 90% of the otc get caught in. Up till now this company has done a great job keeping the float low and even retiring some 200+ million shares of the o/s a while back. When this stock runs it will be huge. IMO only GLTA
46M in the float and in the last 4 days up till now the float has traded roughly 103.8m shares. That is approximately 2.256x it's self without any significant price movement. I thought manipulation was illegal..
When this brakes out it will run hard.
GLTA
A CEO's legal responsibilities to his company's shareholders are broken down into three distinct fiduciary duties: the duty of care, the duty of loyalty and the duty of disclosure. The duty of care refers to the CEO's responsibility to consider all of the available information relevant to business decisions, including the advice of experts and employees. The duty of care also includes the responsibility to understand and evaluate the company's day to day operations and the terms of agreements. The duty of loyalty requires that a CEO always acts in the best interest of a business's shareholders, and that he places that interest above his own in business decisions. This includes the responsibility to avoid conflicts of interest. Finally, the fiduciary duty of disclosure mandates that a CEO fully inform both the board of directors and the shareholders about the major issues facing the business.
Dror seems to have failed miserably on his lawful duties to protect the shareholders (us) monetary interests.
St 1.5million.. going down with the ship... LOL
Have a great day.. see ya all in August..
Dror has definitely broke his fiduciary responsibilities to his shareholders. I will not be surprised to see a class action lawsuit and a appointed receiver taking over Vapor Group.
It will take a act of god for him to pull his ass out of this one...
ST
This has become more screwed up than a soup sandwich. Way to go Dror, you did have a good thing going but ya fked it up good for the long shareholders.THANKS 8 B I L L I O N????? WTF
ST 1.9m not for much longer
if it does not hold then I will be looking for .70 to .80. filled my first return buy at 1.42
50 day is at apx. 1.29 if it brakes that then it is very possible to see 1.00 down to .489
I'm giving you all the luck.... I stepped out but will be back.... out=up tick for you all.. GL
You will be surprised when a PR comes out.. Some do care...... if in doubt GET OUT/STAY OUT....LOL
Have a great weekend.
ST 1.85m
Rick, two of the most important parts of this article are,
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) introduced the Marijuana Tax Revenue Act, which would set up a federal excise tax for regulated marijuana.
&
With marijuana legalization supported by a majority of Americans, and a new wave of states considering loosening their marijuana laws over the next several years, it seems unlikely that the federal government would push back against the popular movement. But it's not completely out of the realm of possibility.
All the companies legit or not where naked shorted into the abyss and soon it will be time to pay... LOL
ST
Two House Bills Would End Federal Prohibition Of Marijuana
Posted: 02/20/2015 4:27 pm EST
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/20/marijuana-legalization-congress_n_6722686.html
Two congressmen filed separate House bills on Friday that together would legalize, regulate and tax marijuana at the federal level, effectively ending the U.S. government's decadeslong prohibition of the plant.
Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo.) introduced the Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol Act, which would remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act's schedules, transfer oversight of the substance from the Drug Enforcement Administration over to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and regulate marijuana in a way similar to how alcohol is currently regulated in the U.S.
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) introduced the Marijuana Tax Revenue Act, which would set up a federal excise tax for regulated marijuana.
The bills would not force states to legalize marijuana, but a federal regulatory framework would be in place for those states that do decide to legalize it. To date, four states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreational marijuana (however, D.C.'s model continues to ban sales), 23 states have legalized marijuana for medical purposes and 11 other states have legalized the limited use of low-THC forms of marijuana for medical use.
"While President Obama and the Justice Department have allowed the will of voters in states like Colorado and 22 other jurisdictions to move forward, small business owners, medical marijuana patients, and others who follow state laws still live with the fear that a new administration -- or this one -- could reverse course and turn them into criminals," Polis said in a statement Friday. "It is time for us to replace the failed prohibition with a regulatory system that works and let states and municipalities decide for themselves if they want, or don't want, to have legal marijuana within their borders."
Despite the programs currently in place in Colorado and Washington state -- as well as those that will soon go into effect in Oregon, Alaska and D.C. -- the sale, possession, production and distribution of marijuana all remain illegal under federal law. The states that have legalized marijuana or softened penalties for possession have only been able to do so because of federal guidance urging prosecutors to refrain from targeting state-legal marijuana operations.
With marijuana legalization supported by a majority of Americans, and a new wave of states considering loosening their marijuana laws over the next several years, it seems unlikely that the federal government would push back against the popular movement. But it's not completely out of the realm of possibility.
Harvard economist Jeff Miron, a vocal supporter of marijuana policy reform, highlighted the precarious nature of state marijuana laws in a recent op-ed for CNN on why Congress needs to act now on federal marijuana policy.
"Despite the compelling case for legalization, and progress toward legalization at the state level, ultimate success is not assured," Miron wrote. "Federal law still prohibits marijuana, and existing jurisprudence (Gonzales v. Raich 2005) holds that federal law trumps state law when it comes to marijuana prohibition. So far, the federal government has mostly taken a hands-off approach to state medicalizations and legalizations, but in January 2017, the country will have a new president. That person could order the attorney general to enforce federal prohibition regardless of state law."
On Friday, Blumenauer called the federal prohibition of marijuana "a failure" that has wasted tax dollars and ruined lives. He also said it's time for the government to forge a new path ahead for the plant.
"As more states move to legalize marijuana as Oregon, Colorado, Washington and Alaska have done," Blumenauer said, "it's imperative the federal government become a full partner in building a workable and safe framework."
When this brakes the .0034 mark the skies will be blue back over a dime IMO. The potential here in the next few years is worth the small risk. It is hard to go wrong with commodities at times like this.
Have a great weekend
ST.
Broker says miners of the exotic minerals may profit as China moves to a more consumption based economy.
By
Goldman Sachs
Feb. 10, 2015 11:35 p.m. ET
We update our estimates and price targets non-ferrous stocks to factor in (1) Our global team’s updated pricing deck, with supply key to differentiate commodity performance; and preference for palladium, nickel and zinc, bearish on gold and copper; (2) Our updated China copper, zinc, rare earth and tungsten supply-demand models.
Overall, we are most bullish on heavy rare earths (RE) and zinc in 2015.
Rare earths: We expect an intensification of industry restructuring in 2015, driven by government initiatives, to boost RE prices. We estimate HRE (heavy rare earth) and PrNd (Praseodymium-Neodymium Oxide) to benefit from NdFeB (neodymium magnet) demand, and continue to outperform light RE.
China’s economy in transition: we favor “new materials”
With China’s economy in transition mode from a commodity intensive fixed asset investment (FAI) driven, to one more consumption and services based, we believe gross margins for new technology metals — those used in environmental applications, green vehicles, high-tech electronics — will remain more stable as demand continues to grow. We remain optimistic on NdFeB magnets and auto catalysts, which in turn should support rare earth demand. We forecast overall China rare earth demand to continue to grow at 3% yoy in 2015, and 4% yoy in 2016.
http://online.barrons.com/news/articles/SB51367578116875004693704580454662782890760
All of this is good news for us. IMO only
next week 15th
You have failed to mention the increased Q1,Q2,Q3 revenue in the millions that "she" collected and "she" is not done yet. You are going to be surprised.
Some people are just to fricking funny.
Have a great night.
ST 1.85
pinhead, rely?????
Gloomy the 45 min. is where Dror discusses the BB plan. Q4 is going to be very telling as to the future. I am the one that did not get my question answered at the end in reference to distribution deal.
http://hosts.blogtalkradio.com/stockradioonweed/2014/11/24/potstockradio-w-pot-queen-cheryl-shuman-dror-ceo-of-the-vapor-group
Have a great week.
ST 1.85m
Tyler, I believe you and a lot of other people are fixing to be surprised by what Vapor Group is gearing up to accomplish. Other than the convertible loans, Vapor has done nothing but accelerate growth revenues and still is on a fast track to be debt free this year. IMO Only, I would say 2015 revenues will surpass the 15M dollar mark at the rate of growth so far. GLTY and others
When all loans are paid, it is nothing to start a buy back of shares that helped create a multimillion dollar business. Go listen to last interview again.
ST 1.85 sitting tight
Surgeon General Says Yes to Science, Admits Weed Has Medical Benefits
FINALLY
02.05.15
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/02/05/surgeon-general-says-yes-to-science-admits-weed-has-medical-benefits.html
Vivek Murthy says marijuana is ‘helpful’ for certain medical conditions. Could this be the tide-turner for legalization?
Surgeon General Vivek Murthy believes in science.
As he answered questions Wednesday about the measles outbreak that is turning into the year’s first public health emergency, the 37-year-old doctor assured Americans that vaccines are safe and that government policy is informed by sound data and scientific consensus. When CBS This Morning host Gayle King pivoted to ask Murthy for his views on marijuana, the country’s youngest ever surgeon general gave an answer that was at once historic and entirely consistent with his scientific approach.
“We have some preliminary data showing that for certain medical conditions and symptoms that marijuana can be helpful,” Murthy said. “We have to use that data to drive policy making.”
While a first for a surgeon general, this was not actually a risky statement. Murthy’s belief is in line with the positions of the American College of Physicians (PDF), the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Public Health Association, the American Nurses Association (PDF), the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (PDF), The California Medical Association (PDF), Dr. Sanjay Gupta, countless less famous but equally sincere physicians, and laws in 23 states and the District of Washington that permit the use of marijuana for medical conditions including multiple sclerosis, glaucoma, epilepsy, and a host of cancer-related symptoms.
But the statement also seemed to put the nation’s top health official in direct conflict with federal law. To the Department of Justice and its Drug Enforcement Agency, marijuana remains, along with heroin, a Schedule I narcotic, defined as “drugs with no currently accepted medical use.” Cocaine and crystal meth, on the other hand, are listed as Schedule II drugs, with “less abuse potential.”
This absurd policy has been inexplicable for so long, that the nation’s highest officials have given up trying to defend it.
“I don’t think it’s more dangerous than alcohol,” President Obama said to The New Yorker’s David Remnick about marijuana last year. Casual as his remark seemed, Obama rocked the drug reform movement. Just weeks after the president said what a sizable majority of Americans already agreed with, a group of 18 representatives from nine states took a stand on the issue and, in a gesture of bi-partisan consent, wrote a letter (PDF) that called on Obama to take executive action.
“We were encouraged by your recent comments in your interview with David Remnick,” the name-dropping representatives wrote. “Classifying marijuana as Schedule I at the federal level perpetuates an unjust and irrational system. We request that you instruct Attorney General Holder to delist or classify marijuana in a more appropriate was, at the very least eliminating it from Schedule I or II.”
This absurd policy has been inexplicable for so long, that the nation’s highest officials have given up trying to defend it.
Nine months later, in his exit interview with Katie Couric, Holder passed the buck right back.
“At the federal level marijuana is still classified in the same category as heroin,” Couric said. “In your view should that change?”
“I think that’s certainly a question that we need to ask ourselves,” Holder said, “whether or not marijuana is as serious a drug as is heroin.” Couric nodded and as Holder weighed the pros and cons, she pressed him on decriminalization. That, he said, is “something for Congress to decide.”
Congressional action might be Holder’s preference, but it is not actually mandated by the law.
“Eric Holder could initiate that process today if he wanted to,” said Tom Angell, chairman of Marijuana Majority, a decriminalization advocacy group, and pointed out that the 1970 Controlled Substances Act gives the attorney general sweeping power to define and classify the full schedule of illegal drugs. At the same time, Angell said, “Congress could pass a bill to move marijuana from Schedule I to a lesser one, or make it unscheduled, like alcohol or tobacco.”
But as public opinion on the issue passes the super majority mark, neither branch of government has made a move. “In essence, the Justice Department and Congress are both begging each other to fix federal marijuana laws,” wrote Christopher Ingraham at the Washington Post. An aide to Senator Rand Paul told The Daily Beast that the Kentucky lawmaker is considering a bill this year that would reschedule the drug. “It’s a work in progress,” the aide said, but couldn’t offer any specifics.
In his interview with Couric, Holder left open the possibility that his department could one day endorse rescheduling marijuana. Whatever is decided, Holder said the government should let science be the guide. “Use science as the basis for that determination,” he said.
A Department of Justice spokesman said, “the Department supports research into potential medical uses of marijuana.” Surgeon General Murthy told the Daily Beast that “marijuana policy—and all public health policies—should be driven by science” and that “the Federal Government has and continues to fund research on possible health benefits of marijuana and its components.”
The problem with this, said Angell, is how difficult it is even for academic institutions to gain government approval for such studies. The American Medical Association (AMA), one of the most conservative organizations on marijuana decriminalization, changed its long-held position on classification in 2009. Marijuana’s ongoing schedule I classification “limits the access to cannabinols for even research,” said Edward L. Langston, MD, an AMA Board of Trustees member. “It is very difficult,” he told American Medical News, to legally research the substance. A report by the AMA Council on Science and Public Health that same year found that, “bureaucratic hurdles apply to cannabis research that do not impede other drug investigations.”
Evidence for the claim is not hard to find. At the University of Massachusetts, an agricultural professor has been trying for more than 15 years to gain approval to grow cannabis for research. In Kentucky, the DEA finally released a shipment of research-bound hemp seeds last May, but only after the state’s agricultural commissioner sued the agency in federal court.
The medical community and public opinion has come a long way in the 20 years since Dr. Jocelyn Elders, Surgeon General under President Bill Clinton, took flak for defending decriminalization. But even as a new surgeon general calls for more science, Angell said the research opportunities won’t change until the laws do, and that politicians are lagging behind most Americans on the issue.
“They don’t realize that a majority of Americans are ready for medical marijuana to be legalized,” he said. “They perceive it as dangerous when it is not.
Surgeon General Says Yes to Science, Admits Weed Has Medical Benefits
FINALLY
02.05.15
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/02/05/surgeon-general-says-yes-to-science-admits-weed-has-medical-benefits.html
Vivek Murthy says marijuana is ‘helpful’ for certain medical conditions. Could this be the tide-turner for legalization?
Surgeon General Vivek Murthy believes in science.
As he answered questions Wednesday about the measles outbreak that is turning into the year’s first public health emergency, the 37-year-old doctor assured Americans that vaccines are safe and that government policy is informed by sound data and scientific consensus. When CBS This Morning host Gayle King pivoted to ask Murthy for his views on marijuana, the country’s youngest ever surgeon general gave an answer that was at once historic and entirely consistent with his scientific approach.
“We have some preliminary data showing that for certain medical conditions and symptoms that marijuana can be helpful,” Murthy said. “We have to use that data to drive policy making.”
While a first for a surgeon general, this was not actually a risky statement. Murthy’s belief is in line with the positions of the American College of Physicians (PDF), the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Public Health Association, the American Nurses Association (PDF), the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (PDF), The California Medical Association (PDF), Dr. Sanjay Gupta, countless less famous but equally sincere physicians, and laws in 23 states and the District of Washington that permit the use of marijuana for medical conditions including multiple sclerosis, glaucoma, epilepsy, and a host of cancer-related symptoms.
But the statement also seemed to put the nation’s top health official in direct conflict with federal law. To the Department of Justice and its Drug Enforcement Agency, marijuana remains, along with heroin, a Schedule I narcotic, defined as “drugs with no currently accepted medical use.” Cocaine and crystal meth, on the other hand, are listed as Schedule II drugs, with “less abuse potential.”
This absurd policy has been inexplicable for so long, that the nation’s highest officials have given up trying to defend it.
“I don’t think it’s more dangerous than alcohol,” President Obama said to The New Yorker’s David Remnick about marijuana last year. Casual as his remark seemed, Obama rocked the drug reform movement. Just weeks after the president said what a sizable majority of Americans already agreed with, a group of 18 representatives from nine states took a stand on the issue and, in a gesture of bi-partisan consent, wrote a letter (PDF) that called on Obama to take executive action.
“We were encouraged by your recent comments in your interview with David Remnick,” the name-dropping representatives wrote. “Classifying marijuana as Schedule I at the federal level perpetuates an unjust and irrational system. We request that you instruct Attorney General Holder to delist or classify marijuana in a more appropriate was, at the very least eliminating it from Schedule I or II.”
This absurd policy has been inexplicable for so long, that the nation’s highest officials have given up trying to defend it.
Nine months later, in his exit interview with Katie Couric, Holder passed the buck right back.
“At the federal level marijuana is still classified in the same category as heroin,” Couric said. “In your view should that change?”
“I think that’s certainly a question that we need to ask ourselves,” Holder said, “whether or not marijuana is as serious a drug as is heroin.” Couric nodded and as Holder weighed the pros and cons, she pressed him on decriminalization. That, he said, is “something for Congress to decide.”
Congressional action might be Holder’s preference, but it is not actually mandated by the law.
“Eric Holder could initiate that process today if he wanted to,” said Tom Angell, chairman of Marijuana Majority, a decriminalization advocacy group, and pointed out that the 1970 Controlled Substances Act gives the attorney general sweeping power to define and classify the full schedule of illegal drugs. At the same time, Angell said, “Congress could pass a bill to move marijuana from Schedule I to a lesser one, or make it unscheduled, like alcohol or tobacco.”
But as public opinion on the issue passes the super majority mark, neither branch of government has made a move. “In essence, the Justice Department and Congress are both begging each other to fix federal marijuana laws,” wrote Christopher Ingraham at the Washington Post. An aide to Senator Rand Paul told The Daily Beast that the Kentucky lawmaker is considering a bill this year that would reschedule the drug. “It’s a work in progress,” the aide said, but couldn’t offer any specifics.
In his interview with Couric, Holder left open the possibility that his department could one day endorse rescheduling marijuana. Whatever is decided, Holder said the government should let science be the guide. “Use science as the basis for that determination,” he said.
A Department of Justice spokesman said, “the Department supports research into potential medical uses of marijuana.” Surgeon General Murthy told the Daily Beast that “marijuana policy—and all public health policies—should be driven by science” and that “the Federal Government has and continues to fund research on possible health benefits of marijuana and its components.”
The problem with this, said Angell, is how difficult it is even for academic institutions to gain government approval for such studies. The American Medical Association (AMA), one of the most conservative organizations on marijuana decriminalization, changed its long-held position on classification in 2009. Marijuana’s ongoing schedule I classification “limits the access to cannabinols for even research,” said Edward L. Langston, MD, an AMA Board of Trustees member. “It is very difficult,” he told American Medical News, to legally research the substance. A report by the AMA Council on Science and Public Health that same year found that, “bureaucratic hurdles apply to cannabis research that do not impede other drug investigations.”
Evidence for the claim is not hard to find. At the University of Massachusetts, an agricultural professor has been trying for more than 15 years to gain approval to grow cannabis for research. In Kentucky, the DEA finally released a shipment of research-bound hemp seeds last May, but only after the state’s agricultural commissioner sued the agency in federal court.
The medical community and public opinion has come a long way in the 20 years since Dr. Jocelyn Elders, Surgeon General under President Bill Clinton, took flak for defending decriminalization. But even as a new surgeon general calls for more science, Angell said the research opportunities won’t change until the laws do, and that politicians are lagging behind most Americans on the issue.
“They don’t realize that a majority of Americans are ready for medical marijuana to be legalized,” he said. “They perceive it as dangerous when it is not.”
What'ch ya talking about Willis? Buyout plan?
ST 1.85
very quiet and slow consolidation.
Watch what is fixing to happen in the commodity world, especially with (W).
A must have for any developing country. That is why china will not give it away any more. They need it for there self’s.
Going to get interesting around here. 208m held tight. All IMO and DD.
Quote:love your neighbor Member Level Sunday, 11/16/14 02:05:29 PM
Re: None
Post # of 47891
The convenience store/distribution co. list who was most likely at the convention. LOL it's coming. I'm waiting for the PR.
LOOK closely,
Have a great day of DD should be BIG IMO
PR http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=64209292
DD http://mrcheckout.net/top-25-convenience-store-distributors/
-1 -2 3 -4 -5 -6 -7
10/29/2014 DAVIE, FL, United States, via ETELIGIS INC.,
.Vapor Group, Inc. (OTCQB: VPOR), (the "Company"), announced today that it had successfully launched its new, state-of-the art vaporizers for dry herb and liquid applications ("2 in 1"), at the National Association of Convenience Stores Annual Meeting and Expo (the "NACS Show") in Las Vegas, October 7-10. The new lines, including a "smile-generating" blister-carded, pen-sized vaporizer named the "Stealthpen", http://goo.gl/QD1z2W, are designed to be sold to customers seeking low price points. Distributors interviewed said that the products are perfect to be sold in convenience stores of all types. Already broker and distributor interest in the new vaporizers is high, and pre-orders are flowing in as distributors position themselves to get ahead of their competition.
Dror Svorai, President and CEO, said, "This is a 'game changer' for an exploding, national marketplace for such devices. We have brokers and distributors throughout the country, and particularly in California and Colorado, excited about getting their supply of our new vaporizers, which we should have available for immediate shipment in about 10 days. For the convenience store marketplace, we had strategically designed this line to take down the traditional high purchase price of such devices and, as a result, Vapor Group expects a large increase in vaporizer sales for this holiday season and throughout 2015. Moreover, once the expanded market emerges here in Florida, we plan on rapidly expanding our vaporizer product sales in our backyard."
He added, "We're also excited to be able to say that we'll have additional new product announcements in the coming few weeks."
They are well stocked and ready to move as I see it, let's hope for some big news soon.
200 day (MA) .018
50 day (MA) .0014
20 day (MA) .0013
MACD starting up trend
RSI at 46.47 plenty of room upwards
coming off the 52 week low of .0007 52 week hi .095
China restricting production of out put/exports which is huge
The potential here is extremely high with such a low float and O/S
Any news of a buy out from any other major player will crush any short positions here.
Have a great week all and will bring more DD as it becomes available.
GLTA
Tungsten Corp. seems to be in the right place at the right time; the demand for Tungsten is growing fast and China and Russia currently control 80% of the supply. With China tightening their grip on the precious element TUNG U.S. mines become all the more relevant.
Going to be a great year here. IMO
JAPANESE manufacturing giants Mitsubishi and Sumitomo are eyeing investment in a $1 billion tungsten mine near Cairns as they seek to reduce their reliance on China for the metal.
The Watershed mine located 130km northwest of Cairns is being developed by Western Australian-based Vital Metals in partnership with the Japanese Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation (JOGMEC). Production is expected to start in 2016.
JOGMEC is a government agency responsible for ensuring Japan has access to a steady flow of key natural resources, including tungsten. It often acts as a go-between for mine developers seeking investment from Japanese companies.
Vital Metals managing director Mark Strizek said JOGMEC had helped fund a feasibility study into the mine and, with that completed the path was clear for investment by Japanese companies. Watershed is one of the 10 largest undeveloped tungsten deposits in the world.
Production of tungsten, used in machine tools, munitions and defence equipment, is currently dominated by China which currently has restrictions on the export of tungsten. Tungsten is also a critical component in touchscreens for smart phones and tablets.
Mr Strizek said given the sometimes tumultuous relationship between Tokyo and Beijing, Japanese companies were seeking to reduce their reliance on exports from China.
“The Japanese do not want to put all their eggs in one basket and are looking at this investment in Australia to be long term,” Mr Strizek said.
He said prospective Japanese investment in the mine was expected to be between $50 million and $100 million in the form of debt and project financing.
Breakaway Research analyst Mark Gordon said China’s restrictions on exports of the metal had driven the development of tungsten mines as manufacturing countries such as Japan sought to diversify their supply.
Mr Gordon said Vital was one of a number of ASX-listed tungsten developers but was one of the most advanced with its project.
The Watershed mine, which is expected to have a lifespan of 10 years, will produce between 4000 and 6000 tonnes a year. Tungsten concentrates sells for around $32,000 a tonne.
Mr Strizek said the mine was expected to employ as many as 300 workers in the construction phase and about 150 when operational.
The tungsten ore would be refined into concentrate at the mine before being bagged and shipped out of either Cairns or Townsville ports.
He said the opening of the mine would underscore the resurgence of the Australian tungsten industry. “Prior to World War I, Australia used to be the number one producer of tungsten in the world,” Mr Strizek said.
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