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Picked up a small position in SBUX a few weeks ago on my brokers rec. He said SBUX expansion to China should bring the stock to the $70's by year end. Opinions?
Starbucks Announces Strong April Revenues
Wednesday May 4, 4:05 pm ET
Net Revenues Increase 23 Percent
Comparable Store Sales Increase Nine Percent
SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 4, 2005--Starbucks Corporation (Nasdaq:SBUX - News) today reported consolidated net revenues of $487 million for the four-week period ended May 1, 2005, an increase of 23 percent from consolidated net revenues of $396 million for the same four-week period in fiscal 2004. On a comparable store sales basis (stores open for at least 13 months), sales at Company-operated stores increased nine percent for the four weeks ended May 1, 2005, as compared to the same four-week period in fiscal 2004.
For the 30 weeks ended May 1, 2005, consolidated net revenues were $3.6 billion, an increase of 23 percent from consolidated net revenues of $2.9 billion for the same 30-week period in fiscal 2004. Comparable store sales increased nine percent for the 30 weeks ended May 1, 2005, as compared to the same 30-week period in fiscal 2004.
Newly,
Thanks, the exchange between choad does have an antagonistic undertone.
Advise noted,
TT
Choad:
I haven't missed a dividend in the last yera I've traded in and out a few times, reduced my risk with calls and exercised some calls to collect the dividend. There hasn't been an ex-dividend date since Dec. My current position is 5k shares established early in the year. (I'll pull out the trade statements for exact dates if you'll post some of your gains) I took a big gain last year and plan to hold this year and just collect the dividend which should be around $10 I estimate with specials. Ex-dividend date for the first payout will be announced 5/2.
Good luck and God Bless,
TT
Choad:
Just did some math on NFI. I've collected nearly $35,000 in div the last year from NFI on about a $170,000 investment. Can you point to some of your returns?
God Bless,
TT
Hi choad:
Yes choad it is time to buy SONS plus a lot of oversold stocks. Did you take my advise and look at NFI there is a divvy announcement on 5/2. Hope you pay attention this time around.
Good luck and God Bless,
TT
Zeev:
SSTI and ATML do you see them lower later in the year?
God Bless,
TT
Interesting ad in the Washington Post on Naked Shorting
http://www.nfi-info.net/Files/NCANS%20WPost%20Ad.pdf
Mercur:
No I'm not part of any law firm. Are you invested in a hedge fund?
OSTK comes to mind in regards to Naked Shorting.
That was what I was refering to with Zeev and HEC. I think Zeev brought that floorless issue to discussion and I thought there was also a connection to Naked Shorting.
TT
Choad:
With your permission I'd like to share your private response to me with the thread as I cannot respond to private messages.
Anyhow, I'm sorry you feel badly towards me.
Good Night,
TT
Choad,
Thanks for the response. God luck to you.
I don't mean to offend you with God Bless. It is a Mexican tradition that I have found very dear to my heart. Lots of Mexican parents bless their family, friends and relatives when they depart from one another. Really neat and personal. Vaya con Dios.
I hope you didn't think I was mocking you. I apologize.
TT
Sorry about my bad spelling.
"perceived wrongdoing"
Thank you,
TT
Zeev:
I only asked you to consider the effort. Someone emailed me and said you were an shareholder advocate once for holders of HEC. Was that during Bush's tenure there?
God Bless,
TT
Choad:
Why are you so angry?
Anger is an emotion or passion directed towards self or others in response to a real or percieved wrongdoing. Anger is emotional energy, and agression and sarcasm is it's physical expression brought on by guilt or shame.
Choad I will keep you in my prayers.
God Bless,
TT
Zeev: Would you consider promoting this effort?
http://www.nfi-info.net/coalition.htm
NCANS
National Coalition Against Naked Shorting
This page is dedicated to an advocacy group of concerned private investors who have banded together to create an organization committed to battling abuses of the financial system perpetrated by predatory market manipulators.
The charter of the group is simple:
That the systematic violation of the Regulation SHO rules against naked shorting poses an imminent threat to the credibility of the US financial system.
That our regulators are uninterested in enforcing the rules that have been on the books since the passage of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 by Congress.
That the existence of a Reg SHO Threshold list is a "list of shame" - a testament to our regulators not enforcing the rules against naked shorting. If they did, there wouldn't be a list.
That the grandfathering of all "fail to delivers" (naked short sales) prior to January 7, 2005 represents an effective "vacation from the rule of law", and amounts to a pardon for the criminals that have manipulated the system. This is akin to allowing bank robbers to keep the proceeds of their robberies prior to the beginning of the year, and is an afront to those who expect our system to protect us and enforce the rules designed to do so.
That the Administration's drive to privatize Social Security is untenable given the egregious violation of the public trust that our regulators' failure to enforce the rules represents.
Our first project is to raise the funds to run a full page advertisement in the Washington Post.
Our objective is to get the system to do its job, to protect the widows, and retirees, and small investors who have invested in the market believing that there was a level playing field. At present that conceit is a hollow one.
Our demands are straightforward and reasonable:
1) Make the SEC enforce the rules that were written and designed to protect investors from naked shorting. No exceptions, no back-room sweetheart deals, no looking the other way while America is fleeced.
2) Make the DTCC disclose the number of shares in violation for each company on the list, on a daily basis.
3) Eliminate the grandfathering "vacation from the rule of law" on an illegal abuse that has been ongoing. Enforce the buy-in provisions on ALL naked short positions, not just the latest violations. Don’t reward criminal behavior. Punish it.
4) Demand accountability for how this violation of the public trust in our regulators and our financial markets occurred, and fix it, rather than covering it up.
Contributions are being solicited. A law firm has offered their services in administering the escrow account. Their info is:
Wire Transfers:
WELLS FARGO BANK- Client Trust (Sadr & Barrera)
401 B Street, Suite 101
San Diego, CA 92101
ABA # 121000248
For Further Credit to SADR & BARRERA, APLC, ATTORNEY CLIENT TRUST, Account number 0430243675
Please email the firm at sadr@sadrbarrera.com and let them know how much you sent and when so that they can account for it.
Checks:
Checks may be sent to the lawfirm at the below address - Make the checks out to Sadr & Barrera, APLC - please reference on checks "For NCANS". Please Fed Ex if you can, as time is of the essence.
Sadr & Barrera, APLC
401 West A Street, Suite 1815
San Diego, CA 92101
(619)233-8460 Phone
(619)239-0575 Facsimile
Zeev:
Yes I'm not sure why he decided to sell out today either. I wasn't aware of the latest news on DRCT until untarheel posted the latest information. Talk about mixed messages?
Good night, and God Bless,
TT
Zeev:
I know I've been a cheerleader about NFI but I'd like to make the board aware of a NFI shareholder effort that plans on publicizing the issue of Naked Short Selling abuses through and ad in the Washington Post. The thread may find this interesting that a grassroots effort is being launched to encourage the SEC and NYSE to enforce their own laws.
Just a thought? Here's the link http://www.nfi-info.net/coalition.htm
God Bless,
TT
Zeev:
Thank you for your reply. My broker had a stop order in for me at $19 and I was sold out today. There was some insider selling last week by the company's general counsel?. at least I think that is what he said, which could have been part of the reason for the sell off today. Wow a $4000 haircut for me. Guess I deserved that from all my good luck of late. But, my broker called DRTC investor relations today and was told that the sale was some sort of planned selling required by insiders? or insiders can only sell in certain windows..or something like that?
FWIW my broker seems to think that re-establishing a position would be prudent in the near future.
I'll let you know.
Thanks for the reply and,
God Bless,
TT
Zeev:
I'd like to share with the thread three interesting stocks I hold in my portfolio two the thread already knows about that being SONS and NFI. Today I acquired a 5000 share stake in DRCT @ $19.80. I believe DRCT to be severely oversold and intend to hold until $25 for a $25,000 gain.
We'll see.
God Bless,
TT
OSTK Opinion from Bob O'Brian
1/27/2005
You're friend the market - the great threshing machine?
I watched the after hours action today on OSTK, and the whole thing looked suspiciously familiar - bashers flooding the boards, a company that was originally expected to have a negative earnings number came out with twelve cents a share earnings vs. an eight cent whisper number, and the stock was trampled in after hours trading.
Where have we seen this before?
Remember summer of 2003, when NFI beat all estimates, raised their dividend, raised guidance, and dropped like a rock?
The same players are short Overstock that are short NFI.
So if the tactics look familiar, understand that they have a cookie cutter approach to destroying the market caps of the companies they target, and the AH dump and morning walkdown on stellar earnings is a popular tactic. One wonders when the frivolous class action suits and bogus regulatory nonsense will start.
This was likely planned for weeks. Regardless of what the earnings numbers were. Wouldn't have mattered an iota. The trick is to create panic, invert logic, make up seem like down, black appear white, have cats dance with dogs. Great earnings? Doesn't matter. Blowout results? Whatever.
The reason that these guys are successful, when they are successful, is because they understand psychology, and they understand that they need to kill any dreams for the future, eliminate the possibility of hope from the scenario. It is a religion of fear that they preach, an empty promise from a bully pulpit, the sermon carefully contrived to create maximum damage to the companies involved and the shareholders thereof.
The problem with NFI shareholders is that you become desensitized over time to the attacks - it's almost expected that evil will reign supreme in the market for short bursts. We've seen the bad man, multiple times, and we don't really flinch when someone screams boo.
It'll be interesting to see how OSTK performs tomorrow. With a float of only about 4 million, and the rest owned by solid institutions and insiders, they really don't have much to work with - so one wonders how much naked shorting is being done to achieve the result.
The reason I mention all of this is because it's becoming apparent that the MO is consistent from company to company.
Just another day on the street.
Zeev, sorry you missed your CCMP call """Never a dull moment, CCMP got downgraded here, and got caught with third at $31.20.... I still think they come with a very good report later this week.""" http://investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=5205223
I know how you feel....NFI has been disappointing lately but at least they pay a dividend.
Hope you didn't lose too much.
Sorry,
TT
On SHO RULE and Naked Shorting
1/25/2005
If I wasn't Laughing I'd be Crying
It's a strange and fascinating time we live in. Apparently the NYSE and the DTC and most importantly the SEC have elected to give hall passes to everyone involved in the failing to delivers that are the basis of the Reg SHO Threshold list.
It's really akin to letting the robbers keep their illegally gotten gains from past robberies, even though robbery has been illegal since 1934 and the SEC Act's passing. But THIS TIME they REALLY have to promise not to do it anymore.
That's the essence of the Reg SHO grandfathering provisions.
The hedge funds and market manipulators that have enjoyed billions and billions of dollars of illegally gotten gains from selling shares they don't own, haven't borrowed, and have no intentions of borrowing, get to keep it all - those shares failed to deliver prior to January 7 don't count.
You are reading this correctly.
Even though our forefathers had enough understanding of the manipulative capabilities of unrestricted short selling to pass a comprehensive set of rules in the 1934 Act, which have been systematically ignored by our regulators for at least the last 20 years, while the DTC, a private entity chartered under the NY banking laws, went about the lucrative business of creating an electronic printing press for the issuance of shares to cover for those who didn't ever get around to complying with the affirmative determination rules and actually borrow the shares they were supposed to. Even though there shouldn't be ANY Reg SHO companies on ANY list if the laws were being enforced, they are going to just allow all the historical fails to be regulated by the old rules, not the SHO rules, essentially allowing them to benefit from the rampant violations that have made Reg SHO Lists possible in the first place.
Am I the only one that feels like this is the old boy network covering their cronies' behinds while the American investing public and thousands of small cap companies are fleeced blind? Am I along in my sense of rage over an ongoing farce of supposed regulation, that, when exposed and targeted, results in yet more farcical regulation?
The game continues.
We watched NFI get manipulated today like it was going out of style. Every complaint to the NYSE has met with assurances that it is all good, that all is well, never you worry.
Why, after listening to the Reg SHO Q & A, am I more worried than ever?
Today an email was sent to the SEC and the NYSE predicting more illegal manipulation tomorrow and Thursday. They have been put on notice, and several other regulars have joined in sending emails. Let's see if they do anything, or if they allow one of the most egregious abuses of the system I've ever seen continue unabated.
Should be interesting.
MUST READ..NAKED SHORT SELLING
http://www.investors.com/breakingnews.asp?journalid=25005536&brk=1
Regulation SHO Threshold List Gets Confuser and Confuser As Listings 'Disappear'
Jan 18, 2005 (financialwire.net via COMTEX) -- (FinancialWire) Is it a bird, or a plane? Regulation SHO seems anything but Superman as it is confusingly played out at the NASDAQ (NDAQ) trader site, whose latest oddity is the sudden and inexplicable disappearance of all but one Pink Sheets listed Company, MPTV Inc (MPTT), and all but nine companies listed on the OTC Bulletin Board on its widely publicized "threshold list."
Some companies, such as Isonics (ISON) and Taser International (TASR) might have expected to be listed on the now almost decimated list of only 110 securities, but the sudden disappearances are surprising, especially as most observers of naked short selling expected the list to be many times what it has been so far, and have no idea what happened to companies representing the largest trading platforms, widely expected to contain hundreds if not thousands of "failed trades."
Some detractors have just thrown up their hands, calling the whole thing a "charade," planned from the beginning, especially since the original listings just ignored the claimed millions of over-the-threshold "fails" that pre-existed.
"The pre-existing fails were just so far out of control to be beyond comprehension," said one, "perhaps enough to bankrupt the entire financial industry, so it is not surprising the regulators just 'grandfathered' those into the system, in effect wiping them out and starting fresh."
Others believe the lists and everything associated with them should have been and should be fully transparent. David Simon, chair of Smart Chip Technologies (SCTN) said his company's appearance, before it was among those that mysteriously vanished, on the threshold list, was "expected" but wanted to know how the company could "find out the amount of naked shorts outstanding?"
" Trading securities without ever settling is the selling of counterfeit stocks," said David Patch, editor of Stockgate Today electronic newsletter. "General Electric's (GE) CNBC reporter Ron Insana called this manipulation on his Friday Street Signs show."
According to Patch, Regulation SHO requires the release of "threshold securities" by each market center based on a simple calculation. Failed trades are calculated as a percentage of totals outstanding and if the percentage exceeded .5% of the outstanding for 5 consecutive trading days your company was required to be listed. The list, by SHO, is required to be published daily and those companies on the list would remain there until such time as the fails are brought below abusive levels for a similar 5 consecutive trading days. The data used to create the list comes from the industries central settlement system itself the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC).
The threshold list has been published since January 10, and there have been questions about the list since it began. Hundreds of companies that were listed on FinancialWire after they claimed over the past year or two that their trading reflected patterns suspected of being illegal naked short sales, and none of the companies sued by the O'Quinn law firm that has sued the Depository Trust Corporation (DTCC).
According to Patch, the listings so far have been unsatisfactory and even not believable. For instance, pink sheets companies that were non-reporting were supposed to be omitted from the list, but he said as many as six that had been delisted by the SEC for failing to maintain proper finings, such as Infotopia and Dr. Koop, were mysteriously included. So were companies that had ceased trading altogether.
Says Patch: "When the SEC de-listed Infotopia, Dr. Koop, and some 80 other Pink Sheet Companies over these past few months they were notified of the possibility that these companies were driven into financial ruins by illegal trading of counterfeit securities. Wall Street was overselling these securities and driving the stocks into oblivion. They oversold without and cause or concern for settling trades because the SEC was going to assist them by shutting these companies down. Wall Street was ignoring their obligations, under the Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934 to properly seek out and obtain a certified share for the investor and the de-listings would create the virtual impossibility to settle the trades. The data would be captured forever that illegal shares were sold. With the recent publication of the NASDAQ's list, the NASDAQ disclosed the fraud."
Patch also wants to know if the companies with extended fails that persisted prior to the implementation of Regulation SHO will ever have to be settled. "For how long will the SEC allow these fails to stay on the books because the members refuse to seek out real shares in the open market to settle what they sold?"
Prior to the mysterious vanishings, the list at http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/aspx/regsho.aspx , initially included 374 stocks on the NASDAQ list, including 96 on the exchange, 29 OTCBB and 254 on the Pink Sheets.
General Electric's (GE) "Dateline" is said to be on the verge of a major expose that will reportedly touch on possible collusion between brokerages that are purportedly impossibly behind in their fails to deliver certificates, the Depository Trust Corporation, whose "Stock Borrow Program" reportedly garners it almost a billion dollars a year in fees for what detractors call "counterfeit trades," and even the vaunted U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission itself, which makes a fee on every stock transaction, whether legitimate or not.
The recent Securities Industry of America symposium on Regulation SHO, which was supposed to curtail illegal naked short selling, only further deepened the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission divide as a dramatic ' some say startling ' new 22-page working paper, "Strategic Delivery Failures in U.S. Equity Markets," was published.
The referenced working paper by University of New Mexico Professor Leslie Boni was initiated while the author was visiting financial economist at the SEC.
She termed the "failures to deliver," which litigants have called "counterfeiting," as being "pervasive."
The professor said that a whopping 42% of listed stocks at the New York Stock Exchange, NASDAQ and AMEX, and 47% of unlisted stocks in the OTCBB and Pink Sheets had persistent fails of 5 days or more with 4% being above the SEC's threshold limits for failures.
The economist pointed to a study conducted by Evans, Geczy, Musto, and Reed in 2003 that provided evidence that while the SRO's have buy-in requirements, such buy-ins almost never occur. She noted that an audit of one market maker showed that all or a portion of shares in 69,063 transactions during 1998-1999 were "fails to deliver."
"The market maker was bought-in on only 86 of these positions," she stated.
Dave Patch, editor of "Stockgate Today," said that his own review of the Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934 finds no reference to "strategic failures." In fact, he said, Section 17a of the 1934 act "mandates prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of trades, and the admission of Strategic Failures is also in direct violation of Rule 15c6-1."
Rule 15c6-1 defines the settlement cycle for trades executed and states that no Broker Dealer may enter into a contract for the sale of a security whereby the payment for that security and the delivery of that security is greater than 3 business days. For market making activities there is a slight exemption from the delivery in a Bona Fide Market Making activity but as the SEC and SRO's have repeatedly stated, Bona Fide Market making is not simply supporting the best offer in a naked short sale without also representing the best bid or near best bid in a long trade. They must be actively making a market on both sides of trading to use the exemption, noted Patch.
Robert Shapiro, chair of Sonecon LLC, an economic advisory firm and former Under Secretary of Commerce from 1998 to 2001 and principal economic advisor to President William Clinton in his 1992 campaign, has expressed "serious concerns about the impact of the final version of Regulation SHO regarding short sales on the equity and transparency of our equity markets."
Shapiro holds a Ph.D. from Harvard University and has been a Fellow of the National Bureau
of Economic Research, the Brookings Institution, and Harvard University.
Shapiro said the SEC is correct to broaden the terms of regulation of short sales, and applauded the section directing broker dealers to mark all equity orders as "long," "short" or "short exempt." More important, he said, the new "locate and delivery" requirements could substantially reduce stock manipulation carried out through naked short sales -- but only if those requirements are
widely applied and strictly enforced.
"Unfortunately, Regulation SHO does not meet either of these two standards. The troubling result is that the Regulation, in effect, establishes an official level of tolerance for unsettled or naked short sales," Shapiro charged.
Shapiro said he strongly concurs with the comments of the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) on the draft rule, which said NASAA was "unable to determine why the Commission proposes to permit significant settlement failures at all. While there are instances when settlement may be legitimately delayed, existing regulations provide for extensions for settlement. If the Commission continues to allow settlement failures, it may well facilitate the harm that the proposal is designed to remedy."
"Until Regulation SHO, this economic counterfeiting has been facilitated by electronic record keeping and the apparent practice of the DTCC and its subsidiary National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) of often disregarding persistent unsettled short positions. With Regulation SHO, the SEC has provided its implicit imprimatur for the same practice in cases covering the vast majority of public companies and billions of dollars."
Shapiro urged the SEC to "reconsider the provisions of Regulations SHO and, at a minimum, apply the 'locate and delivery' requirements for threshold securities to all short sale transactions, and adopt a zero-tolerance policy for significant settlement failures. American investors should feel confident that the SEC will ensure the integrity of every equity transaction they undertake and fully protect their right to receive what they have paid for."
Twenty civil cases have now been filed by O'Quinn, Laminack & Pirtle, Christian Smith & Jewell, and Heard, Robins, Cloud, Lubel & Greenwood, LLP, all of Houston, Texas. The consortium of law firms, famed for the giant awards they obtained suing tobacco companies. The group recently brought suit against the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. for allegedly participating in the short-selling conspiracy through its "stock borrow" program which the attorneys say is nothing more than an illegal electronic printing press for stock certificates.
Lead counsel John O'Quinn said: "We are committed to the relentless pursuit of justice."
In comments to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, C. Austin Burrell, who is providing litigation support and research for the law firms, said that StockGate is more massive than anyone may have imagined. "Illegal Naked Short Selling has stripped hundreds of billions, if not TRILLIONS, of dollars from American investors," and have resulted in over 7,000 public companies having been "shorted out of existence over the past six years." Burrell said some experts believe as much as $1 trillion to $3 trillion has been lost to this practice.
He stated that the restrictions on short selling were deliberately put into the Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934 because of the first-hand evidence then available that the "sheer scale of the crashes was a direct result of intentional manipulation of US markets through abusive short selling by a massive conspiracy."
Burrell noted that the 65-lawyer team presided over by lead lawyers Wes Christian and John O'Quinn has uncovered more than 1,200 hedge fund and offshore accounts working through more than 150 broker-dealers and market makers in a joint cooperative effort to strip small and medium size public companies of their value.
According to lawyer Christian, et.al., the DTC is at the very heart of the problem, and has almost a billion dollars a year at stake in keeping the problem.
The Depository Trust Company (DTC) is a member of the U.S. Federal Reserve System, a limited-purpose trust company under New York State banking law and a registered clearing agency with the SEC. The depository supposedly brings efficiency to the securities industry by retaining custody of some 2 million securities issues, effectively "dematerializing" most of them so that they exist only as electronic files rather than as countless pieces of paper. The depository also provides the services necessary for the maintenance of the securities it has in "custody."
According to the suit, the DTCC has an enormous pecuniary and conflicted interest in the entire short selling scandal through the huge income stream they were realizing from it every day. They have made literally billions of dollars lending individual real shares, in most cases over and over, getting a fee each time they made a journal entry in the "Stock Borrow Program."
The Stock Borrow Program was purportedly set up to facilitate expedited clearance of stock trades. Somewhere along the line, the DTCC became aware that if it could lend a single share an unlimited number of times, it could collect a fee each time, according to Burrell. "There are numerous cases of a single share being lent ten or many more times," giving rise to the complaint that the DTCC has been electronically counterfeiting just as was done via printed certificates before the Crash.
"Such re-hypothecation has in effect made the potential 'float' in a single company's shares virtually unlimited and the term 'float' meaningless. Shares could be electronically created/counterfeited/kited without a registration statement being filed, and without the underlying company having any knowledge such shares are being sold or even in existence." Burrell said the Christian/O'Quinn lawsuits will seek to show that the "counterfeiting/creation of unregistered shares is a specific violation of the Securities Act of 1933, barring the 'Sale of Unregistered Securities'."
One lawsuit alleges that the DTC has a colossal disincentive to stop the "stock borrow" program, booking revenues from services of $425,416,000 and similarly, the NSCC deriving revenues of $293,133,000.
Further, the suit alleges that "open positions" resulting from this activity at the close of business on December 31, 2003, "approximated $3,025,467,000" due to NSCC, and $2,303,717,000 due by NSCC, and unsettled positions of $721,750,000 for securities borrowed through the NSCC's "Stock Borrow Program." The largely unregulated DTC has become something of a defacto Czar presiding over the entire U.S. markets system, wielding more day-to-day influence and control than the SEC, the NASD and NASDAQ combined.
The Depository Trust and Clearing Corp.'s two preferred shareholders are the New York Stock Exchange and the NASD, a regulatory agency that also owns the NASDAQ (NDAQ) and the embattled American Stock Exchange.
In their comments to the SEC regarding Regulation SHO in January, 2004, the 50 state regulators, through their association, the North American Association of Securities Administrators (NASAA) issued what many consider to be a strong warning that if the DTC is not dealt with in the final regulations, state regulators such as New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer may step to the plate.
In what many considered to have been explosive comments, Ralph Lambiase, NASAA president and Director of the Connecticut Division of Securities, warned "NASAA urges the Commission to reconsider its stance regarding the role of the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (the DTC). As a threshold matter, NASAA believes that the Commission should explicitly prohibit the DTC from lending more shares of a security than it actually holds. The ability of the overall proposed rule would be severely impared unless the Commission undertakes to implement such a prohibition."
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STOCK GATE!...MORE INFO
The early reviews on Regulation SHO are in, and they are not favorable. According to some of the reviews I have read in the media recently, Regulation SHO seems to be turning into Regulation SHO What- meaning the SEC is just playing lip service to the many companies and shareholders who have been bitterly complaining about the widespread practice of illegal naked short selling. Read the January 4th edition for some background if you are not familiar with the issue.
According to David Patch who edits the "StockGate" electronic newsletter, there were originally 374 stocks on the Threshold list. Inexplicably, the vast majority simply disappeared. 110 are now left. Click Here to view the most current version of the list. Nearly every microcap company on the Bulletin Board and in the Pink Sheets that was originally on the list has now mysteriously disappeared.
Lending credibility to the entire issue was a paper recently published by University of New Mexico Professor Leslie Boni, which was initiated while the author was visiting financial economist at the SEC.
According to Professor Boni's findings, 42% of listed stocks at the New York Stock Exchange, NASDAQ and AMEX, and 47% of unlisted stocks in the OTCBB and Pink Sheets had persistent fails of 5 days or more with 4% being above the SEC's threshold limits for failures.
The media is calling the growing evidence of widespread abuse within the system as "StockGate", and some heavy legal entities are throwing their weight into the fight.
A consortium of law firms has now filed over 20 civil cases. The law firms include O'Quinn, Laminack & Pirtle, Christian Smith & Jewell, and Heard, Robins, Cloud, Lubel & Greenwood, LLP, all of Houston, Texas. This group of firms is well known for the gigantic awards they have been able to garner from the Tobacco industry.
In comments to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, C. Austin Burrell, who is providing litigation support and research for the law firms, said that StockGate is more massive than anyone may have imagined. "Illegal Naked Short Selling has stripped hundreds of billions, if not TRILLIONS, of dollars from American investors," and have resulted in over 7,000 public companies having been "shorted out of existence over the past six years." Burrell said some experts believe as much as $1 trillion to $3 trillion has been lost to this practice.
According to the law suits, the DTC is at the heart of the problem. The DTC is the electronic clearing exchange that handles the electronic transfer of shares from one firm to another. The suits allege DTC has an inherent conflict of interest in the entire short selling scandal through the huge income stream they were realizing from it every day. They have made billions of dollars lending individual real shares, in most cases over and over, getting a fee each time they made a journal entry in a "Stock Borrow Program."
Most of the information in today's edition was gleaned from an article published yesterday in the online version of Investors Business Daily. It makes for fascinating reading. Click Here to read the article.
The DTC is owned jointly by the NASDAQ and the New York Stock Exchange. If billions in revenues are in fact being generated by the DTC for allowing failures to deliver, the law suits will eventually uncover the ugly truth.
In the interim, NBC's Dateline is rumored to be preparing a major expose on the issue, and activists in the growing StockGate scandal are trying to recruit Eliot Spitzer to help in the investigation. Stay tuned: This is getting exciting.
MUST READ! ABOUT NAKED SHORTING
1/19/05
It's about Money, Power, Greed
Same as it ever was.
A small cadre of guys in New York, no doubt mostly working within 4 blocks of one another, have gotten together and perfected a criminal scam to game the system and steal billions from investors.
It's been a good run. They've been able to make a lot of money, and if some of the rumors are correct, launder a lot for other criminals and terrorists.
But now they have a problem.
Like the problem the mob had with the Vegas Casinos, you can only pull the same scam for so long before folks get wise and want the laws enforced. So there's this network of bent guys at the regulators who are "buddies" with the hedge funds, and see so much money changing hands that they figure "why not get some to stick to me? The whole market's crooked, why shouldn't I get a little?" You have reporters being paid peanuts in the scheme of things, why not do a favor here and there and maybe get a free trip or a few bucks deposited in a Panamanian account?
You have honest regulators who are so jaded by the cesspool they are wading through, and so sickened by the power wielded by their crooked superiors who tolerate lawlessness on an epic scale and seem more interested in turning a blind eye than in doing anything, that they just put in their time so they can get a good gig on the "outside".
You have a group of probably no more than 300 guys who've created a larcenous enterprise to bilk a system of untold amounts of money.
Because money drives it all.
The clearing houses turn a blind eye - they get paid, so where's the harm? Whole world is crooked, why not make some easy cash? Same with the brokers - sure it's illegal, but nobody's really enforcing the laws on the books, so why not make a million and maybe pay a $10K fine every decade? Who wouldn't? There's a lot of money to be made by guys who aren't quite bright enough to do it legitimately, but can figure out ways to steal and manipulate it.
That's what you are seeing.
Frankly I'd be unaware of it if it wasn't for being in NFI. Most of the investing world is unaware of it. Nobody in the mainstream wants to write about it as their bosses who are collecting cash for "helping out" here and there don't want anyone rocking the boat. The editor of the C section of the WSJ seems to have an endless appetite for slam pieces on Rocker Partners short plays - witness the Weil piece and then the piece of dross they tried to pen about me.
The whole system is subverted, and money is the lubrication, and we, the small investors, are the grist for the mill.
It is time to put a stop to it. Demand that our elected officials fulfill their obligations and force reluctant regulators to do their job and enforce the rules on the books designed to keep us from having our futures stolen from us by 300 guys who want a better plane or a nicer townhouse on the upper East side. These are thieves and criminals, nothing more. The way you deal with criminals is you drag them kicking and screaming before a judge and jury so they can explain their behavior.
Works like a charm.
We've been on the Reg SHO Threshold list now for 7 trading days. Nobody will tell us how many fail to delivers there are. Why not? The NYSE isn't talking. Neither is the DTCC. It's all a secret - even though it isn't supposed to be.
It would be funny if it weren’t so sad - the agencies and exchanges that are entrusted to create "fair and orderly markets" are in fact big believers in secrecy and shielding their members from scrutiny. The NYSE has investigations that it can't tell you it ever had, you just have to trust it, nor can it point to any disciplinary action taken in the last two years - it's all a secret. Secret tribunals, jealously guarding the privacy of the criminals who are hard at work devising novel ways to rip us off.
When the SEC finally passes Reg SHO, with few if any teeth, as a reaction to a whole group of companies wanting to opt out of the trading system, are we seeing any of the rules being enforced? No. If you sold 2 million naked shares prior to Jan. 3 are you going to be forced to cover them and be held accountable? Of course not.
It's disturbing because the premise we base our moral superiority on as a nation is that we are a nation of laws, existing under the rule of law. And yet we are finding out that if the money's good enough, we are no better than the most corrupt backwater banana republic - you want an exception so you can keep stealing? Show me the money.
Perhaps places like Mexico are actually a bit more honest about it - everyone knows the cops accept bribes and that their system is cooked, that power corrupts as it has since time immemorial - no one's pretending that you can be an executioner and not develop a taste for it - have to kind of like it if you are going to stick with the job.
But we are supposedly better. We are above that. Our system protects us from a class of predators who prey on the old, the weak, the unsophisticated. But it turns out the system isn't really doing that, is it? What it's doing is rewarding thievery and larceny and fraud, and dismissing an expectation of due process as hopelessly naive.
I for one have had an ass-full. And as my friend from the SEC says, your worst nightmare as a criminal is a retired guy that is pissed, who will devote all his time and energy to bringing you down, make it his life's work.
How about a whole group of retired folks who are pissed?
MUST READ! ABOUT NAKED SHORTING
1/19/05
It's about Money, Power, Greed
Same as it ever was.
A small cadre of guys in New York, no doubt mostly working within 4 blocks of one another, have gotten together and perfected a criminal scam to game the system and steal billions from investors.
It's been a good run. They've been able to make a lot of money, and if some of the rumors are correct, launder a lot for other criminals and terrorists.
But now they have a problem.
Like the problem the mob had with the Vegas Casinos, you can only pull the same scam for so long before folks get wise and want the laws enforced. So there's this network of bent guys at the regulators who are "buddies" with the hedge funds, and see so much money changing hands that they figure "why not get some to stick to me? The whole market's crooked, why shouldn't I get a little?" You have reporters being paid peanuts in the scheme of things, why not do a favor here and there and maybe get a free trip or a few bucks deposited in a Panamanian account?
You have honest regulators who are so jaded by the cesspool they are wading through, and so sickened by the power wielded by their crooked superiors who tolerate lawlessness on an epic scale and seem more interested in turning a blind eye than in doing anything, that they just put in their time so they can get a good gig on the "outside".
You have a group of probably no more than 300 guys who've created a larcenous enterprise to bilk a system of untold amounts of money.
Because money drives it all.
The clearing houses turn a blind eye - they get paid, so where's the harm? Whole world is crooked, why not make some easy cash? Same with the brokers - sure it's illegal, but nobody's really enforcing the laws on the books, so why not make a million and maybe pay a $10K fine every decade? Who wouldn't? There's a lot of money to be made by guys who aren't quite bright enough to do it legitimately, but can figure out ways to steal and manipulate it.
That's what you are seeing.
Frankly I'd be unaware of it if it wasn't for being in NFI. Most of the investing world is unaware of it. Nobody in the mainstream wants to write about it as their bosses who are collecting cash for "helping out" here and there don't want anyone rocking the boat. The editor of the C section of the WSJ seems to have an endless appetite for slam pieces on Rocker Partners short plays - witness the Weil piece and then the piece of dross they tried to pen about me.
The whole system is subverted, and money is the lubrication, and we, the small investors, are the grist for the mill.
It is time to put a stop to it. Demand that our elected officials fulfill their obligations and force reluctant regulators to do their job and enforce the rules on the books designed to keep us from having our futures stolen from us by 300 guys who want a better plane or a nicer townhouse on the upper East side. These are thieves and criminals, nothing more. The way you deal with criminals is you drag them kicking and screaming before a judge and jury so they can explain their behavior.
Works like a charm.
We've been on the Reg SHO Threshold list now for 7 trading days. Nobody will tell us how many fail to delivers there are. Why not? The NYSE isn't talking. Neither is the DTCC. It's all a secret - even though it isn't supposed to be.
It would be funny if it weren’t so sad - the agencies and exchanges that are entrusted to create "fair and orderly markets" are in fact big believers in secrecy and shielding their members from scrutiny. The NYSE has investigations that it can't tell you it ever had, you just have to trust it, nor can it point to any disciplinary action taken in the last two years - it's all a secret. Secret tribunals, jealously guarding the privacy of the criminals who are hard at work devising novel ways to rip us off.
When the SEC finally passes Reg SHO, with few if any teeth, as a reaction to a whole group of companies wanting to opt out of the trading system, are we seeing any of the rules being enforced? No. If you sold 2 million naked shares prior to Jan. 3 are you going to be forced to cover them and be held accountable? Of course not.
It's disturbing because the premise we base our moral superiority on as a nation is that we are a nation of laws, existing under the rule of law. And yet we are finding out that if the money's good enough, we are no better than the most corrupt backwater banana republic - you want an exception so you can keep stealing? Show me the money.
Perhaps places like Mexico are actually a bit more honest about it - everyone knows the cops accept bribes and that their system is cooked, that power corrupts as it has since time immemorial - no one's pretending that you can be an executioner and not develop a taste for it - have to kind of like it if you are going to stick with the job.
But we are supposedly better. We are above that. Our system protects us from a class of predators who prey on the old, the weak, the unsophisticated. But it turns out the system isn't really doing that, is it? What it's doing is rewarding thievery and larceny and fraud, and dismissing an expectation of due process as hopelessly naive.
I for one have had an ass-full. And as my friend from the SEC says, your worst nightmare as a criminal is a retired guy that is pissed, who will devote all his time and energy to bringing you down, make it his life's work.
How about a whole group of retired folks who are pissed?
Choad:
I'm retiring for the night now because of my full day tomorrow. I wish you well and hope you make some real profitable trades that benefit you and your loved ones.
God Bless,
TT
Choad:
Your post is disingenuous. I've posted my position in NFI for months and your cynicism only discredits your stance. Since I have historical posts to back up my NFI claims I stand affirmed, can you say the same?
God Bless you still,
TT
Zeev:
Do you monitor your thread? I've found you to be quite the gentleman.? Are there requirements for posting here as to etiquette
God Bless,
TT
Choad:
I don't have time to read the thread on a continual basis. I put that sentence in there as a sort of disclaimer if learned investors as yourself had already discussed the SONS outlook. I'm in for 10k shares at $5.53
I did notice that you have posted many, many times over the past week and can tell you enjoy your idle time. As for me I'm involved in a myriad of projects where I derive my income and haven't the free time to peruse the thread.
Good luck to you and God Bless,
TT
Hi Zeev:
Happy New Year!!!! It looks like a new day has dawned in Israel and there is hope for the future. Good for your people!!!
Anyhow, I'd like to talk about another stock I'm interested in. I brought NFI http://www.nfi-info.net/ to you at a price of $30 a share back in May 04 and the stock ran to $58 of late. I hope some of the stellar swing traders that read your thread participated and if they didn't I'd like to suggest a look see at Sonus Networks (SONS). They've just partnered with Samsung in the VOIP arena and already do business with Verizon and ATT and others.
I apologize if this subject has already been discussed here as I don't have time to read the thread. I've been blessed with a windfall of profits this year and have contributed to the Tsunami relief I suggest contributing here http://www.lds.org/ldsfoundation/welfare/welcome/0,7133,1325-1-9,00.html where you know large amounts of money won't be diverted to large CEO pension funds and the funds will be honestly disbursed
God Bless you Zeev and I wish you a fruitful 2005,
TT
Choad:
Hope you didn't sell everything but hope you did pick up some NFI today. I just got back from a Christmas Play and read this on the Yahoo message board and thought you may find it amusing. It mentions the recent NFI secondary.
God Bless,
TT;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
From DDD
We have been begging and chastising the company for not dealing with the shorts.
And then they do this "priced too low" secondary, that so maony boo hooed about, and that at the time I posited could well be to get some big boys onboard to put the pork to the shorts.
I was pretty much laughed off the board by many, if I recall.
Ever since then, we've had an eerie, methodical support and increase in the share price, accelerating as we approach the end of the year, when a big increase would most hurt those that have been hurting us.
Now, I'm not saying that the world works in a way where some heavyweights buy a bunch of shares at a discount and then squeeze the nuts of our enemies at arguably the most painful possible time for them, radically increasing the value of their new position while cost averaging up, but it is an interesting coincidence, no?
And what would be even funnier is if these same guys lent their shares out at a high cost, and then bought the shares back as they were sold into the market (a la Hhill) effectively doubling their position subsidized by the shorts, and then called them back right around Xmas so that the turds only had the week after Xmas to cover, a period where we are historically pretty slow and it would create a kind of carnage.
Now I'm not saying that's what is going to happen. It could just be some kind hearted folks who see a good value. Dunno.
But as Cerv says, I do love a scenario.
And it's certainly something for any smaller shorts to be contemplating over the weekend. Because if that is even close to happening, next week will be painful, but the week after will be financial ruin. Kinda fun to speculate about, huh? And it makes you wonder if the short that covered a week or so ago didn't get a little heads up. Maybe he isn't such a bad guy, or has the right friends, or was advised that this wasn't his war.
Dunno.
Fun fun fun, though. It's all good.
extelecom:
Glad I gave you a chuckle!
Merry Christmas and God Bless,
TT
Basserdan:
Rather than going to Yahoo message board you may want to try here. http://www.nfi-info.net/
As far as profits go, they are supposed. I have to make a decision this morning whether to exercise or sell my $50 Dec. 50 calls. I sold my NFI position last Friday and bought those calls because i was scared to be out of the stock, but NFI just keeps rising.
I think I will heed Zeev's advise and take some profits and lower my exposure by just holding options. But then I'll lose that incredible dividend. Don't know?
God Bless,
TT
Choad:
I'm sorry you think I have an ego problem. I wish well to all here and have nothing to prove. We post by choice here don't we? I hope I haven't made you envious of a lucky stock trade. I really just stumbled on to NFI and had some extra money to throw at it. My gains really only reflect a years salary and are small in the long run. I'm trying to learn something and I am miffed at why there is so little interest in this company given the supposed opportunity.
God Bless,
TT
AD:
Thank you for your help. I've been lucky this year and have asked questions on this board about NFI to try and affirm and learn about the reasons for the rise and fall of this stock.
You asked "And, what have ya done for me lately". I'd like to contribute to your favorite charity in your name if you'll post a charity. I do tithe and believe you reap what you sow.
God Bless,
TT
Thanks Zeev, and Good night.
God Bless,
TT
To all:
If you guys post to me by private message I can't reply because I'm not a paying member. I'd join but no one here seems to be interested in NFI even though it's up 70% since I brought NFI to the attention of this board in May.
God Bless,
TT