Often irritated, never duplicated
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MMTC TRADING WILL BE HALTED!
Hmm. I guess the poor little scammed MMTC shareholders weren't important enough for our mighty SEC savior to rescue before now. Too bad the superhero of micro-caps couldn't get his tights on in time to round up the posse before all the massive dilution that surely spells R/S, halted trading, SEC indictments, rising sea levels and the four horsemen of the debacalypse...
Meanwhile, MMTC moves forward on solid data confirmed by NAMSA, AOAC, USDA, and others. Idle threats from the MMTC detractors haven't added up to a hill of listeria-infested guacamole at the leech bar.
I wouldn't be surprised if the new MMTC shares are ensuring controlling interest as deals are wrangled. Insiders may be planning to parcel those shares into collateral for a JV or outright acquisition, or the shares can also be retired once the key agreement is in place.
And how many people here can prove that I'm wrong. That would be a big, red, ZERO!
Go MMTC!
"...the booth looked very impressive, professional,..."
I agree with most, but the "5 minuets" banner made me cringe. First impressions are critical. I love the MMTC technology, but I certainly hope that banner was a outsourced typesetting mistake. I'd understand if a sign shop idiot got that wrong, less so if one of our MMTC geniuses was responsible.
Go MMTC!
Right back into the green...
...Plenty of folks buying dips (when they can get an order filled).
Go MMTC!
It's pretty obvious...
...and you don't need the MMTC patented detection technology to get a positive ID for morons.
Go MMTC!
Yep...
...Given the AOAC, NAMSA, and USDA opinions on the MIT-1000, It's likely a matter of (short?) time until a major wants to control MMTC. The rush to acquire the majority of the float at the same time that the company is unveiling the MMTC flagship product to the industry speaks volumes. You need your ducks in a row to to get across the pond safely.
I wonder how many MIT-1000's the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture could afford? Go MMTC!
"...Toshiba have put their money in MMTC..."
Hard to believe that's bad news. Go MMTC!
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=77855545
I believe the market likes today's filings...
...One could get the impression that the Toshiba connection is providing some optimistic speculation.
Go MMTC!
More Filings/More Buying
Check it out. Go MMTC!
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=53592643
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=53592741
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=53593468
Robert Pett with Toshiba USA?
Wouldn't it be awful if Toshiba was watching all this carefully?
http://peop.lead411.com/Robert_Pett_8350685.html
Think this is our new Ten-Percenter?
http://peop.lead411.com/Robert_Pett_8350685.html
Go MMTC!
"..insiders owning the majority of the os..."
Such an arrangement makes it easier to parcel a large chunk into a partnership with a well-funded large-cap biotech should one be shopping the wares around (at a trade show for example) where some Deep Pockets would be getting the first look at the goodies. Having a solid controlling interest is critical.
I have a friend who works at a Midwestern biotech specializing in cytology applications. He has looked at the MMTC tech and sees the reality of the science. He also thinks that the same life sciences division of the huge multinational that recently acquired his employer might be interested in MMTC. They are just ramping up their few biotech acquisitions after decades in high-tech consumer electronics, international broadcast media and IP licensing.
Because the giant multinational installed a corporate president to the recently acquired business where my friend works, said friend can walk into the president's office and mention that he might take a look at MMTC. I originally sought my friend's opinion on MMTC because he already worked with similar technology. At the time, I was researching the potential for litigation regarding patent infringement via MMTC, and my friend offered much insight on both the MMTC machine and how it compared to similar technologies he had seen. He thinks the MIT-1000 is a game-changer technology, and that it would fit well in the biotech portfolio of his parent company.
I told my friend I'd have no problem with him spreading the word up the ladder. The president travels between the Midwest and Silicon Valley quite a bit, but I suspect he'll be hearing about MMTC before long anyway. The friend doesn't invest, so no real conflict. Just peer-to-peer organic networking.
Go MMTC!
I DID read the article...
.... not one mention of coal. Standard, inaccurate BS. Go LBSR!
"...big-coal-versus-sockeye-salmon..."
Typical Fox; can't even get the headline correct.
Go LBSR!
Excellent...
...More eyes on the prize, more folks reading the news and realizing what MMTC has brought to market. Go MMTC!
MMTC and OSI are great together...
...and it's pretty easy for anyone who is so motivated to go to the OSIS site and match their components to the optical receptor boards evident in the MIT-1000. MMTC used their components and now OSI manufactures the MIT-1000. Looks like they're doing a great job.
Anyone who says different is feeding you a line of flaming BS.
Think about it...
A few hundred vendors at IAFP, each staffed with numerous employees who have the training to recognize the tremendous leverage of the MMTC technology. I wouldn't be surprised if dozens of them already pulled up the MMTC stock quote, fully aware after seeing the MMTC booth that this is a technology that will likely become partnered or profitable soon.
Wait until they see how much of the float is tied up by insiders, and how NAMSA, AOAC, and USDA are all on board confirming the results. Let the gawkers start to tell friends and colleagues.
I'm ready for some serious green. Bring it, MMTC!
Thanks, Janey!
Good to know you're here, as I have an order I can't get filled. I'm hoping we get a dip during amateur hour, but with 3M, ConAgra, and the rest of the big boys seeing the MMTC machine and stats for the first time today, the dips may be gone, present company excepted.
Go MMTC!
"...volume 0 at 0.039..."
It's funny, because I just confirmed two orders that went through in my account.
The pieces are in place...
...I will likely buy back some shares I sold to lock in freebies last year. I have a suspicion that this little company is about to be recognized in a big way. Insider buying, fast-tracking the move to market, and now being under the eyes of the deepest pockets in the sector. Get ready for this long-overlooked gem of high-tech to see an upward correction. It could be dramatic, especially if some of the big boys get a little competitive.
Seven-figure gains anyone?
Many thanks, HKipp!
I'm very glad to be holding MMTC shares right now. Many thanks for your solid info and insights. If you get a chance, what was your initial impression of Nunez?
Regarding the certs...
The certs will be a formality given that previous testing confirmed the efficacy of the MIT-1000. I do think that eventual CE mark certification would be a good route, but apparently the Asian markets are open to MMTC already, so do like Edison and do what you can, where you are, with what you have.
Go MMTC!
BTW, Anglo knows exactly where LBSR claims are...
...and they could easily put their considerable heft behind getting the environmental advantages of the Big Chunk claims known as the permitting process ramps up. It's the sort of compromise that helps opposing parties close deals in the real world, and they would greatly increase their chances of eventually building a mining district, plus accrue a much greater eventual value as several Pebble-sized claims are proven, all with ZTEM accuracy.
" ...worlds biggest discovery...."
Soon to be "formerly worlds biggest discovery".
And NAK has seen their PPS slide by nearly 90% from the 2-year high. They need to make a deal. They know what's coming, and they can't stop it. Time to come up with a real offer.
"...deep in the process of getting their permit."
You mean the process of not getting their permit?
Yes, NAK can call the LBSR loan, but I bet they don't want to give Briscoe any reason to strike deals that might be unfavorable to NAK in the eventual district. They already got on the bad side of Anglo and things haven't gone too well since then. They need a viable option, LBSR represents several.
LBSR has the claims favored by the EPA and soon we'll have the drill cores favored by the market. NAK will play ball for a stake in the rest of the caldera. I'm sure it's a bitter pill for them after spending so much to prove Pebble, only to discover that they had the lesser of the claims with regard to size and environmental factors. That said, they will bypass the vindictive drama and BS that is all too common here and make a deal that saves their shareholders from further erosion of the PPS.
And then we'll have the support of PLP as the other targets are proven. Get ready...
Many thanks, SGR!
Go MMTC!
The caliber of claims warrants speculation...
...Very few tiny companies have the potential seen here. I could see just 10% of our Alaska claims being spun into an entity large enough to prove out several more deposits, which in turn can attract the kind of money that allows the proving of NPSP or Tombstone, each news cycle launching the PPS from a multiple of the previous support.
That's why I am thrilled to hear that projects are finally ready for drilling and funding is in place. Briscoe has placed his dominoes carefully, and a succession of solid moves by LBSR could be one of those truly spectacular stories. Time will tell, but my shares are tucked away for much higher prices.
Thanks for sharing...
...Any fool can cobble together a bells & whistles widget to impress the proles. I see an elegantly simple device, status indicators and safety warnings for the laser parts, and a neutral presentation that looks perfectly at home in hospitals, labs, food safety institutions, etc. MMTC has done well with this version of the product, IMO.
When you have the next big thing, you don't need gimmicky packaging. Just ask the folks who designed your Ipod. Great tech helps you forget the decade(s) that went into the research and design, ultimately taking something too complex for most people and performing it via computerized interface, and the simpler, the better.
My most recent MMTC DD reading suggests that while culturing time may be reduced a bit as detection methods become quicker and more accurate, the biology of culturing is largely established and any competitors will face similar challenges. Most of the competitors I've seen use more expensive technology requiring more proprietary and costly expendables, at least when considering the testing being done on a large commercial scale. Given the size of the industry, the most cost-effective solution will likely thrive.
MMTC has a seat at that table, and it looks like one of the best seats. Much can happen, but if that shiny new MIT-1000 is viewed at the trade show by people who understand the leverage of the technology on a cost basis, MMTC should make some waves.
Have shares, will travel. Heading North!
"Mind you, there can be no pathogen demonstrations..."
You mean they cant have cultures teeming with deadly bacteria out on the floor waiting for some idiot to knock it over? Go figure.
And go MMTC!
"...still under a nickel come Dec 31,2012."
Only sub-nickel? I thought you promised us sub-penny (again and again) by now. I have dry powder waiting and I need to grab shares for my Dad. If you can't get me those LBSR sub-pennies we keep hearing about, I may have to look for another source. Speaking of can't deliver...
I am buying, and looking forward to ZTEM showing its worth in a few weeks. It's coming. Go LBSR!
More on contracting copper futures...
The largest producers are ramping down, and that's in the context of anemic growth and uncertainty for building and infrastructure. A couple quarters of real recovery and copper soars.
"Mining companies will struggle to keep up because the metal content of ore is declining, new deposits are getting harder to find and wages and fuel bills are increasing. Costs are rising by as much as 10 percent a year for some producers, Macquarie said. The average ton of ore contains about 1.1 percent copper, compared with more than 1.3 percent in 2000, it estimates.
Codelco’s first-quarter output was 10 percent lower than a year earlier and Rio Tinto Group’s first-half production slid 7.5 percent. Its Bingham Canyon open pit mine in Utah, the London-based company’s second-biggest copper operation, is more than 100 years old and now more than three-quarters of a mile deep. Melbourne-based BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP), the world’s biggest mining company, extracted 4 percent less copper in its financial year that ended June 30."
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-17/looming-copper-surplus-contracting-as-mining-fails-commodities.html?cmpid=yhoo
...Nibble-Nibble...
Took a while to get filled, and I was waving a bit above the bid. Given the current scenario, I had to grab a few for my Dad.
*Applause*
Many Thanks, S4! You are a trooper and a serious asset to this board!
"Drilling at Big Chunk will happen BEFORE Sept 1"
Umm, did it just get hotter in here? I'm feeling a little kerfuffled.
Go LBSR!
"Or am I missing something here( again)?"
Perhaps. China is a whole different animal, with the sovereign wealth of the entire nation focused on long-term strategic asset acquisition, all under a form of government that is pro-business in a way that very few modern nations can match.
Add the fact that China's economic growth recently "slowed" to a measly 7+% (!)- compare that to the US domestic growth for the same periods since 2008), and US interests are likely outgunned if the Chinese decide they have to have a large presence in AK. Most of the majors that have the resources to effectively partner any of LBSR's super projects are offshore or multinational anyway, and they will still struggle to counter a China offer if it comes.
Fortunately, we'll still have several multi-billion-dollar 'consolation prize' deposits for the also-ran's, and the state department will probably unofficially and quietly demand that domestic strategic interests are represented in any final plan. It's a big table, and the big boys will pony up for a good seat at the feast.
People in my family are starting to ask me how they can acquire some LBSR shares based on the info we have all been processing lately. The data is getting obvious enough for a mass influx of retail investors. Two years ago, I asked myself if I was missing something, if Little-Old-Me was possibly smart enough to be this early to such an incredible opportunity. Vindication is imminent. Can't wait to gift some help to people who need it when I start hitting my sale targets. Having money is great, sharing money is much better.
It's coming...
Nice insight here...
...courtesy of VP. Enjoy...
http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2012/7/14_An_Absolutely_Stunning_Development_In_The_Gold_Market.html
This one is also interesting. The fundamentals are in place for another leg up in gold.
http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2012/7/15_This_Major_Fed_Move_Is_About_To_Create_An_Explosion_In_Gold.html
"Get the $600K claim fees paid...and we can drill"
Yeah, or drill a few to show we have a dozen Pebbles, then make 600K + 4.5M look like chicken feed. It's coming. GO LBSR!
T-minus Nine days and Counting...
...MMTC is tossing out the first pitch in the big leagues. The 23rd is closing fast. I'd hate to be holding a bunch of offshort paper on MMTC right now. Orders, revenues, news seem imminent.
Go MMTC!