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Ya know how some questions kind of answer themselves! ;)
October? I guess it takes some time to duck out and write some more PRs. lol
I'll do my best. ;)
But of course most pinkies are scams. ie: QASP, HMGP
Also watch out for ITKG. It's been pumping for over 14 years and they never go to market with their so-called product.
Sip the kool-aid, don't guzzle it.
Hope you didn't get nicked too bad Bud.
SOEN...bought a small block today for no particular reason. ;)
http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/news/article.aspx?Feed=PR&Date=20100712&ID=11698087&Symbol=SOEN
SOEN...FWIW
"SET-Solar Corporation is based in Mountain View, California. The Company markets and sells high-quality, mono-crystalline and poly-crystalline photovoltaic solar modules to integrators, installers and distributors in the U.S. SET-Solar is partnering with multiple key suppliers with vertically integrated manufacturing capability of producing ingots, wafers, solar cells and photovoltaic modules, including Solar Enertech, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: SOEN), a U.S.-based company producing advanced solar cell technology."
http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/news/article.aspx?Feed=PR&Date=20100712&ID=11698087&Symbol=SOEN
ROTF...you got that right!
I've owned it for almost 5 minutes now and haven't lost a dime. ;)
Your exposing ITKG for what it is. A stock selling company relying on the ignorance of a certain percentile of the market to think what they put out is legit.
All we ever hear is vague lacks of substance from the ITKG longs.
They themselves make it easy to see what is going on with ITKG. NOTHING! That's why they can only respond with "we know what we have" ROTF...
And now their like-minded friends are coming after me on this board.
They announce their intentions by going after posters in cyber space rather than holding the CEO's of these scams accountable.
Have a great day Bud. ;)
It's happened to all of us Bud. Just remember PRs like QASP's for the future. It will be a great learning experience for many who chose to have faith in Dean and this board.
Save what principle you can and live to fight another day.
GLTY
I just emailed both the solar companies in the link you provide and asked them if they buy materials or services from any publicly traded companies.
I hope they respond with some good stuff. Hell, I hope they respond at all. lol
P.S. zzzzz123 your right about QASP.
BTW, I have limited posts remaining so I thought I would answer you in this post to kairos instead. ;)
GLTY
Doesn't look like either of them are publicly traded but maybe a PT company that supplies them with materials or services would be a way in?
Keep digging Bud. ;)
I will email them both and ask them if they do business with any PT companies.
Thanx
QASP continues to tank.
"The funny thing about that little white speck on the top of chicken chit. That little white speck is chicken chit too...."
Could you post some info on this? I would really appreciate that.
Might just find a hot-spot here?
Not too bad here xela.
Keep up the good work Bud. ;)
Obvious isn't it.
Nothing new here. Just the same old vague claims and yet the poster does NO questioning of why ITKG NEVER delivers.
I think we all know who is behind this dissemination of old ITKG tactics.
Looks like the usual suspects are trying a coming back.
They never look to all the vague crap that ITKG puts out. They only try to paint a smiley face on this empty dissemination of ITKG promotion.
That's not news your smelling. It's the same old rotting pile of ITKG crapola! lol
http://electriplast.com/
Looks like ITKG is making false claims at the top of this cite.
Same old tired Jasper video too.
More of the same BS PRs. Vague claims with NO names.
FWIW...
Chinese Companies try to woo U.S. Investors
Andrew S. Ross
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Call it speed dating, investor style.
In 30-minute increments, from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at San Francisco's St. Regis Hotel, executives from more than 100 Chinese companies are pitching roomfuls of portfolio managers on why they should put millions of dollars into their enterprises.
The more serious romancing takes place in the private one-on-one meetings, requested by many of the 200 eminently wooable money handlers in attendance, mostly from the East Coast.
"We've had 700 requests for one-on-ones," said Edward Lainfiesta, president of Newport Beach (Orange County) boutique investment bank Global Hunter Securities LLC, which put on the two-day 2010 China Conference, ending today. "That's the best indicator, the hidden metric of what is going on." ( www.ghsecurities.com).
What's going on in 2010 with the Chinese companies represented by those on display - in sectors ranging from green insecticides to copper wire to post-secondary education - are profit margins of 25 percent or more, similarly compelling annual growth rates and, in the eyes of eager U.S. investors, cheap valuations that don't square with the potential return on investment.
With the companies, almost all of them listed on U.S. exchanges, looking for fresh private money to help fuel their growth, one might have expected wedding bells to periodically chime at the St. Regis. Ah, but the last time Americans rushed to altar, back before the great financial crash, "a lot of them got burned," said Richard Anslow, managing partner of Anslow & Jaclin LLP, a New Jersey law firm, a number of whose Chinese company clients were present at the conference.
"They're jumping back in, but with their eyes, ears - and noses - wide open. There's a lot more due diligence."
Despite the promise, U.S. investors are still nervous about China, agreed Mark Flather, a director of HC International Inc., an investor relations firm in Encinitas (San Diego County) focused exclusively on Chinese companies listed on U.S. exchanges. "There have been 'interesting situations' you wished you'd stayed away from," he said. "Now there's a premium on quality, rather than quantity."
But with piles of money beginning to burn a hole in their pockets, "we'll see a lot more fund managers getting on a plane and visiting China. People want to go where the growth is."
Brand America: Steve Ye wasn't at the St. Regis to pitch, even though his company, Solar EnerTech Corp., is one of the 550 Chinese companies currently listed on a U.S exchange ($0.14 on OTCBB at Monday's close), and is on the lookout for more U.S. investment.
He was there to network and in town to attend the Intersolar North America show ( www.intersolar.us), which begins today at Moscone Center and the Intercontinental Hotel. Solar EnerTech, whose solar energy photovoltaic cells are sold mostly in Europe and Australia, is one of the 570 exhibitors there.
But Ye not only wants his company to break into the U.S. market, he wants it to be known as a "U.S. company which does its manufacturing in China."
The company has a head start in that rebranding pursuit, having been founded, and still headed, by a Silicon Valley serial entrepreneur, Leo Shi Young, and lists its corporate office in Mountain View.
"We're looking to differentiate ourselves from most Chinese companies in our space," said Ye, Solar EnerTech's CFO. "We want to be known for our quality and technology, even if it takes longer for us to grow. They see themselves simply as commodity suppliers, less focused on the long term, more on making a fast buck now."
Part of that longer-term view involved the establishment last year of a separate R&D facility in partnership with Shanghai University and seeking greater efficiencies in the production of PV cells.
While it "was hit pretty hard" by the global recession and the collapse of solar prices, the company - which I first encountered in a reporting trip to Shanghai in November 2008 - has since opened a second production facility outside Shanghai, recorded consecutive quarterly profits and projects sales of $80 million this year.
The company already has the backing of one major U.S. investor. Its controlling shareholder, as of earlier this year, is the Quercus Trust, a Los Angeles family fund run by David Gelbaum, reportedly one of the country's largest private investors in green tech, with an estimated $500 million invested in "40 to 50 green tech firms," Gelbaum has said. "I'm very bullish on solar."
Best Regards!
Kate Zhao
Media Relations Specialist
CCG Investor Relations
1325 Avenue of the Americas, Suite 2800
New York, NY 10019
(O): 646-833-3423
(C): 310-920-1150
www.ccgir.com
www.ccgirasia.com
How many times has Dean and the longs claimed the loan, etc. as fact?
It's been so many now I've lost track!
Thanx. Keep us posted please.
FWIW...
Chinese Companies try to woo U.S. Investors
Andrew S. Ross
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Call it speed dating, investor style.
In 30-minute increments, from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at San Francisco's St. Regis Hotel, executives from more than 100 Chinese companies are pitching roomfuls of portfolio managers on why they should put millions of dollars into their enterprises.
The more serious romancing takes place in the private one-on-one meetings, requested by many of the 200 eminently wooable money handlers in attendance, mostly from the East Coast.
"We've had 700 requests for one-on-ones," said Edward Lainfiesta, president of Newport Beach (Orange County) boutique investment bank Global Hunter Securities LLC, which put on the two-day 2010 China Conference, ending today. "That's the best indicator, the hidden metric of what is going on." ( www.ghsecurities.com).
What's going on in 2010 with the Chinese companies represented by those on display - in sectors ranging from green insecticides to copper wire to post-secondary education - are profit margins of 25 percent or more, similarly compelling annual growth rates and, in the eyes of eager U.S. investors, cheap valuations that don't square with the potential return on investment.
With the companies, almost all of them listed on U.S. exchanges, looking for fresh private money to help fuel their growth, one might have expected wedding bells to periodically chime at the St. Regis. Ah, but the last time Americans rushed to altar, back before the great financial crash, "a lot of them got burned," said Richard Anslow, managing partner of Anslow & Jaclin LLP, a New Jersey law firm, a number of whose Chinese company clients were present at the conference.
"They're jumping back in, but with their eyes, ears - and noses - wide open. There's a lot more due diligence."
Despite the promise, U.S. investors are still nervous about China, agreed Mark Flather, a director of HC International Inc., an investor relations firm in Encinitas (San Diego County) focused exclusively on Chinese companies listed on U.S. exchanges. "There have been 'interesting situations' you wished you'd stayed away from," he said. "Now there's a premium on quality, rather than quantity."
But with piles of money beginning to burn a hole in their pockets, "we'll see a lot more fund managers getting on a plane and visiting China. People want to go where the growth is."
Brand America: Steve Ye wasn't at the St. Regis to pitch, even though his company, Solar EnerTech Corp., is one of the 550 Chinese companies currently listed on a U.S exchange ($0.14 on OTCBB at Monday's close), and is on the lookout for more U.S. investment.
He was there to network and in town to attend the Intersolar North America show ( www.intersolar.us), which begins today at Moscone Center and the Intercontinental Hotel. Solar EnerTech, whose solar energy photovoltaic cells are sold mostly in Europe and Australia, is one of the 570 exhibitors there.
But Ye not only wants his company to break into the U.S. market, he wants it to be known as a "U.S. company which does its manufacturing in China."
The company has a head start in that rebranding pursuit, having been founded, and still headed, by a Silicon Valley serial entrepreneur, Leo Shi Young, and lists its corporate office in Mountain View.
"We're looking to differentiate ourselves from most Chinese companies in our space," said Ye, Solar EnerTech's CFO. "We want to be known for our quality and technology, even if it takes longer for us to grow. They see themselves simply as commodity suppliers, less focused on the long term, more on making a fast buck now."
Part of that longer-term view involved the establishment last year of a separate R&D facility in partnership with Shanghai University and seeking greater efficiencies in the production of PV cells.
While it "was hit pretty hard" by the global recession and the collapse of solar prices, the company - which I first encountered in a reporting trip to Shanghai in November 2008 - has since opened a second production facility outside Shanghai, recorded consecutive quarterly profits and projects sales of $80 million this year.
The company already has the backing of one major U.S. investor. Its controlling shareholder, as of earlier this year, is the Quercus Trust, a Los Angeles family fund run by David Gelbaum, reportedly one of the country's largest private investors in green tech, with an estimated $500 million invested in "40 to 50 green tech firms," Gelbaum has said. "I'm very bullish on solar."
Best Regards!
Kate Zhao
Media Relations Specialist
CCG Investor Relations
1325 Avenue of the Americas, Suite 2800
New York, NY 10019
(O): 646-833-3423
(C): 310-920-1150
www.ccgir.com
www.ccgirasia.com
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According to Richard Maybury the largest financial Hot-Spot is the Social Security age demographic.
Maybe we should be looking for what the 59 1/2 plus crowd wants to spend their money on?
FWIW
I drive a taxi and I haul senior citizens around all day long.
The number one thing that they are interested in is good health care and companionship.
Twinkies and cigarettes are right up their with some of them too.
Good night to all. ;)
QASP is a scam and I think the newbies have the right to know how the CEO treats his shareholders.
Even though you may disagree.
GLTY
"I'm a real shareholder not just a paid person that's job
proficiency is determined by how malicious and deceitful he can be."
I believe you. Your discription fits DB not you or I. ;)
Obummer...
Who cares. He only wants to sell stock anyway. Pretty obvious that's all he had ever planned for QASP.
Obviously you had no supportive evidence for all the QASP forward looking claims.
ie: See QASP market cap and delivery rate. ;)
From a blimp to a helicopter...what's next a kite and string?
"Not all pinkies are made equal."
True, you just have to find the "one" that doesn't jerk the shareholders around with PR crapola like QASP has.
There's a reason QASP PRs are crapola!