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But it will be a mute point if we don't get revenue. So lets get this show on the road.
That was my buy. LOL
R/S is fine if the Authorized shares and the Outstanding shares reverse together. Then its a wash. But you know that already.
Already pick up a few mil at .0001 today. Keep'em coming.
I think i'll stick with MNGG.
ROFLMAO
Not possible. Me and others are buying up the float.
We will see. I'm going to go join the conversation.
Long and strong MNGG
Here is a direct statement from the CEO from another Board last night.
Mining Global CEO
Ok group
Lets get PSRU deal done this week and announce new CEO by end of week.
Buy some shares back and make this move.
I have asked Scottsdale trade and my atty to review the best way to do this so we dont do it the wrong way.
Also lets keep more questions on this board instead of twitter or call the office they bring the tweets to the other boards and bash it
Working on all the questions, Wednesday should be a good day
Thanks
CEO
Check out the company twitter and facebook for proof.
Is PSRU a better play then MNGG or is this going to be Joel's baby.
What part will PRSU play, if any, in MNGG?
I just hate it when that happens! LOL
Don't you?
It's going to be hard to flip this down the road with buy backs and the fact that a group of us will own half the company. I know of over a billion shares already and my order is in for the open tomorrow.
Follow the company on twitter:
https://mobile.twitter.com/@miningglobalinc
Follow the company on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/miningglobalinc
Sounds good. We're going to choke the float.
I bought another 37 million at .0001 today.
Will be sitting on .0001 again tomorrow.
This is going up soon.
Could be a bunch of selling at .0001 tomorrow just to get money back and move to another stock. I will be a buyer if you want to sell at .0001
Keep up with the company at:
https://www.facebook.com/miningglobalinc
https://mobile.twitter.com/@miningglobalinc
Could be a bunch of selling at .0001 tomorrow just to get money back and move to another stock. I will be a buyer if you want to sell at .0001
Keep up with the company at:
https://www.facebook.com/miningglobalinc
https://mobile.twitter.com/@miningglobalinc
Me too!!
Going to be plenty of volume this week.
Long and strong MNGG
Looking forward to a good week. Should get some good updates.
I will be waiting Monday.
I DID. ONE FAT DIME PLUS COMISSION TO PAINT THE TAPE. SAD
Prev Close
0.0001
Market Cap ($)
332.6K
Today's Open
0.0001
Day's Range
0.0001 - 0.0002
EPS (TTM, GAAP)
-0.0005
Avg Vol (10-day)
98.0M
Last (time)
3:59p ET 09/26/14
Last (size)
1K
I will try at .0001
Come on a 10 cent buy of 1k shares just to make it look like were rolling.
Painted the tape.
I may have to stick with my 50 million shares.
OK. I'll be buying at .0001 on Monday. Every trader saw that paint job.
I wish. It was a 1k share buy for 10 cents. Someone has an agenda
WoW! Someone painted the tape with a 10 cent purchase. LOL
1k shares. Just to pump it up.
We were talking about moving equipment, not permits.
We got the permits baby!
If they want my money they better spank the bid baby!
I'm sitting on the bid at 25 million .0001 and not moving.
This is who has Geralds ear now. This is an old interview with Dr. Rubinfelf but is a look into what is guiding AMBS. This was from the Amgen board on Ihangout.
A Must read!
Mauibound
I like to get a sense of who someone is via their own words.
http://www.twst.com/interview/8279
Will be a good short term play but life changing if you can hold for 5+ years.
So far so good. But don't sell yourself short. Todays prices are a gift. If the science in the pipeline proves out,this is an easy 100 bagger from here. This is just getting started. If you consider the spinoffs and possible buyouts. You could own much more than you do now with buying another share.It may take a few years but i've got time.
You said it brother. Actually .0051, but who's counting.
All aboard the AMBS express!
Now Amgen went public with an IPO in 1983. And as stated by Dr. Rubinfeld in the AMBS Shareholders meeting yesterday Epogen was the number 8 product in the pipeline and turned out to be the money maker that allowed them to grow and acquire other companys and products.
Ambs has a pipeline like many have never seen. Dr Rubinfeld said himself that Manf could be the greatest thing he has seen in 45 years. Think about that, that was before he founded Amgen.
Here is a good look at Amgen's history.
AMGen Corporate Logo, 1983
Amgen's corporate Gulfstream V departs Fox Field, Lancaster, California
The word AMGen is a portmanteau of the company's original name, Applied Molecular Genetics, which became the official name of the company in 1983 (three years after incorporation and coincident with its initial public offering). The company's first chief executive officer, from 1980, was George B. Rathmann, followed by Gordon M. Binder in 1988,[2] followed by Kevin W. Sharer in 2000.[3] Robert A. Bradway became Amgen’s president and chief executive officer in May 2012 following Sharer's retirement.[4]
The company has made at least five major corporate acquisitions.
In June 2013, Amgen offered to buy the shares of Onyx Pharmaceuticals for $120 per share, sending Onyx shares up by around 30% after the news was announced.[5]
Timeline[edit]
1989. Amgen received approval for the first recombinant human erythropoetin product, Epogen, for the treatment of anemia associated with chronic kidney failure. Epogen (also marketed by Johnson and Johnson under the tradename Procrit) would later be approved for anemia due to cancer chemotherapy, anemia due to treatment with certain HIV drugs, and for the reduction of the need for transfusions associated with surgery.[6]
1991. In February 1991, Amgen received FDA approval for Neupogen for the prevention of infections in patients whose immune systems are suppressed due to cancer chemotherapy.[7] A 2002 meta-analysis found that Neupogen treatment reduced the risk of febrile neutropenia by 38%, reduced the risk of documented infection by 49%, and reduced the risk of infection-related mortality by 40%.[8]
1998. In November 1998, Amgen received approval for Enbrel (etanercept), the first rheumatoid arthritis drug targeting tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha).[9] A 2006 assessment by the National Institute of Clinical Excellence of the United Kingdom concluded that etanercept and related rheumatoid arthritis drugs later introduced by competitors "are effective treatments compared with placebo for RA patients who are not well controlled by conventional DMARDs, improving control of symptoms, improving physical function, and slowing radiographic changes in joints."[10] A more recent study demonstrated that compared to traditional disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs, treatment with etanercept improved survival, reduced cardiovascular events and reduced the incidence of hematological cancers.[11]
2008. Forbes magazine ranks AMGEN CEO Kevin Sharer 169 out of 175. Rankings were based on performance versus pay metrics.[dead link][12]
2009. Sen. Edward Kennedy introduced a bill granting AMGEN and other biotech companies more than 13 years of marketing exclusivity. Kennedy Institute receives $5 million from Amgen.[13]
2010. On June 6, 2010 Amgen received FDA approval for Prolia, a protein drug for the treatment of post-menopausal osteoporosis.[14] In clinical trials, Prolia reduced the rate of vertebral fractures by 61% and the risk of hip fractures by 40%.[15]
2010 In November 2010 the FDA approved Xgeva for the prevention of complications of bone metastases in patients with solid tumors.[16] The clinical trials primarily enrolled patients with breast or prostate cancer.
Acquisition history[edit]
1994 – Synergen, Inc.[27]
2000 – Kinetix Pharmaceuticals, Inc.[28]
2002 – Immunex Corporation[29][30]
2004 – Tularik, Inc.[31]
2006 – Abgenix, Inc.[32][33][34]
2006 – Avidia, Inc.[35]
2007 – Ilypsa, Inc.[36]
2007 – Alantos Pharmaceuticals Holdings, Inc.[36]
2011 – BioVex Group, Inc.[37]
2011 – Laboratório Químico Farmacêutico Bergamo Ltda.[38]
2012 – Micromet, Inc.[39]
2012 – Mustafa Nevzat Ilaç[40][41]
2012 – KAI Pharmaceuticals[42]
2012 – deCODE genetics
2013 – Onyx Pharmaceuticals Inc.[43]
Products[edit]
As of December, 2013, Amgen had twelve approved drugs or therapeutic biologicals for seventeen conditions (conditions lists are highly generalized; see each article for more detail):
Aranesp (darbepoetin alfa) (for anemia)
Enbrel (Etanercept) (for various forms of arthritis)
Epogen (Epoetin) (also known as Procrit; for anemia)
Neulasta (PEG Granulocyte-Colony Stimulating Factor or "Pegfilgrastim" (for neutropenia)
Neupogen (Granulocyte-Colony Stimulating Factor) (for neutropenia)
Nplate (Romiplostim) (for chronic immune thrombocytopenic purpura)
Prolia (denosumab) (for postmenopausal osteoporosis)
Sensipar/Mimpara (Cinacalcet) (for Primary & Secondary hyperparathyroidism, a mineral metabolism complication common in patients with kidney failure)
Vectibix (Panitumumab) (for colon cancer)
XGEVA (denosumab) (for the prevention of skeletal-related events (SREs) (pathological fracture, radiation to bone, spinal cord compression or surgery to bone in adults with bone metastases from solid tumors)
Products developed and then sold off[edit]
Kepivance (Palifermin) (for oral mucositis) (sold to Biovitrium, now Swedish Orphan Biovitrum, in December 2008)[44]
StemGen (Ancestim) (for use in combination with filgrastim for mobilizing peripheral hematopoietic stem cells[45]) (sold to Biovitrium, now Swedish Orphan Biovitrum, in December 2008)[44]
Kineret (Anakinra) (for rheumatoid arthritis) (exclusively licensed to Biovitrium, now Swedish Orphan Biovitrum, in December 2008)[44]
Dr. Rubinfeld is one of the four original co-founders of Amgen.
Dr. Rubinfeld co-founded Amgen after a 23 year career in a variety of senior scientific and operational positions at Bristol Myers Squibb.
Dr. Rubinfeld is credited with inventing Amoxicillin , biodegradable detergent and the 10 second Polaroid film. Dr. Rubinfeld received his PhD in Chemistry from Columbia University.
He said this nearly two years ago...
"I believe in MANF," said Dr. Rubinfeld, "I have reviewed a great number of technologies in my 45 year career in the biopharmaceutical field, and I believe that MANF could be one of the biggest successes that I have ever seen. The fundamental scientific premise of reducing protein misfolding is basic, yet very profound. The data, while early, demonstrates very clearly at the cellular level and in animals that MANF reduces apoptosis, improves cellular function, and restores behavioural deficits in a number of disease models, including Parkinson's, Stroke, Myocardial Infarction and Traumatic Brain Injury. These are all indications with very large markets and clear unmet medical need. I believe that if we are able to further de-risk MANF with positive toxicology studies and early clinical data, the Company's new orphan drug strategy could get MANF to market rather expeditiously. MANF has the commercial potential to become a blockbuster drug."
And just 2 weeks ago Amarantus Announces Positive MANF Ocular Toxicology Data
today announced positive 15-day non-GLP toxicology data for a single intravitreal administration of MANF in an ocular safety animal model, relevant to MANF's development in ocular diseases, including orphan indications
http://ir.amarantus.com/company-news/detail/1...ology-data
Listened to and talked with Dr. Rubinfeld today. This is an update and first hand account form one of the shareholders of AMBS and was posted on the AMBS board from the shareholders meeting today.
Posted By: barcode27
Update from ASM Meeting:
I arrived at the Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich, and Rosati offices around 9:15 AM (saw Gerald going in the door up ahead of me). After navigating the construction zone in the lobby, I arrived on the 33rd floor and checked in with the receptionist. I could see Gerald, John, Marc Faerber, and a few others through the glass windows of a conference room directly ahead. All shareholders were being directed to wait in a room down the hall until the meeting began. It was a nice opportunity to visit with other shareholders. Robert Harris stuck his head in the door and thanked us all for coming at some point in there.
Just before 10 AM, Gerald came to our room and invited us to join him the main conference room. We all made informal introductions to the company personnel before the meeting began. Amarantus attendees were:
Gerald Commissiong
John Commissiong
Bob Farrell
Robert Harris
Marc Faerber
Joe Rubinfeld (was excited to see him there!)
Don Huffman
David Lowe
I counted 10 shareholders in attendance, including myself (may be off by one or two since we were all sitting along one side of a long table).
There was also an attendee from Marcum (didn't catch his name), and a representative of VStock Transfer was on the phone.
Gerald opened the meeting by reading from a pre-planned script regarding ground rules, participant roles, and the issues at hand which would be voted on. Bob Farrell took over and also read some of the scripted opening.
Gerald then walked through each item for vote with a brief explanation and paused to see if there were any formal questions regarding any of the issues. Hearing none, he stepped through this portion fairly quickly. Ballots were then distributed in the room to people who indicated they hadn't voted already.
Highlights from the voting portion:
As of today, there are 753.984M shares outstanding, and 748M of those shares were represented either in person or by proxy for this vote. All items passed according to the recommendations of the board (no surprise there). Gerald left the room to fax the in-person ballots to VStock, but I felt this was largely a symbolic move since he had already announced that each item had passed.
After the official meeting, Gerald said they everyone could stick around for informal discussion and mingling. Not a single person left the room, and I was very impressed at how attentive and engaged everyone from the company was. I especially noted Don Huffman and Robert Harris taking detailed notes on shareholder questions, concerns.
Shareholder question portion:
IMO, the most unfortunate/uncomfortable part of the meeting began when the first shareholder took the floor. If he posts on here, I'm sorry, but I doubt he does since he made it a point to say that he doesn't own a computer, cell phone, iPad, etc. He offered support for the company and said he was proud to be a shareholder, then began rambling for what seemed like forever suggesting that the company should pay 12-18 year old kids to do research projects. I couldn't really follow what he was saying, but most of it was nonsensical. He kept saying stuff like "Gerald, you don't have any experience and don't really know the biotech lingo, but your father does." He was pretty rude to Gerald and I thought it was way out of line. I won't go into more detail here, but needless to say I was glad when he yielded the floor.
Next came excellent questions on LymPro, specifically centered on the ICON deal. Gerald couldn't say too much, but I did note that he expects the arrangement with ICON to expand in scope in the future after the next set of results are released. Everyone in the room perked up when Joe Rubinfeld spoke up for the first time, emphasizing that we're ready to launch a diagnostic in 4 months... "we're there!"
I asked a question related to GDNF and MANF, specifically on how the ongoing GDNF trials in the UK might be able to provide some lift to the MANF PD effort. I noted the the amount of scientific literature published to date on GDNF seems to be 10 to 1 vs. MANF and asked if the company saw any reason for that. A good discussion then resulted with input from David Lowe and John Commissiong. John essentially said that "GDNF is an old drug" and that he fully expects a new flood of MANF research and published material over the next 2-3 as interest in neurotrophic factors has been resurrected after a sleepy decade. I asked David Lowe directly if he thought that in 10-15 years there would be a fragmented market between neurotrophic factors like GDNF, CDNF, MANF, etc, and he was emphatic that he thought MANF would become the leader eventually.
Other random notes from the question portion:
- Gerald mentioned a pre-IND meeting regarding MANF with the FDA in a "couple of days." Disclaimer: I may not have heard him right (maybe he meant a couple of weeks/months), but it's sitting right here in my notes and my ears perked up in the meeting when he said this. He then went on to discuss a fairly critical 60-120 day period when the company will have a back-and-forth dialogue with the FDA regarding their IND submission.
- Eltoprazine first patient dosing is possible this year, but to be conservative the company is targeting early 2015. Gerald mentioned again that Eltoprazine has already been in 700 patients, strong safety profile, etc.
- JC was asked if he liked the setup at QB3, if he had what he needed, etc. He said it was a good arrangement, and started to mention upcoming collaboration with different university teams. Gerald quickly stepped in and stopped him, saying that they weren't allowed to talk about that yet. Everyone had a good chuckle at that. He had some follow-on questions regarding PhenoGuard, and made note of the fact that not everyone can do this type of work (mentioned that you not only have to keep the neurons alive, but also keep them "connected". I don't know enought about the science to comment more on that, just reporting what he stated.
- There are no formal ties to Cerora, just that they like the company and have a strong belief in the founder's integrity (guessing this was referring to Adam Simon)
After the Q&A session everyone hung around for another half hour or so and talked one-on-one. I got to speak with Don Huffman and David Lowe extensively during this time, and also talked with Joe Rubinfeld briefly. Folks, these guys are dedicated to what they're doing and I was honored to be in the room talking with them. I was very impressed with the entire session and feel more strongly than ever that the company has assembled the right team at the right time and is poised to do Earth-shattering things.
Thank you Barcode27 for the information in my last post.
Just a reminder about todays update after the close.
The Company will host a business update call on September 2, 2014 at 4:15 PM ET. To participate please dial 877-737-7051, (international dialers 201-689-8878), Participant Passcode: 2027916. The Company anticipates addressing a number of matters related to our core programs, including qualitative early revenue guidance for LymPro, progress being made on the Company's Phase 2b initiation with Eltoprazine for PD LID, and next steps toward a first-in-man trial for MANF in orphan ophthalmological indications. You may pre-register at: http://services.incommconferencing.com/Diamon...g=3099c1ec
"The Company is now on firmer financial footing than it has historically been, with access to flexible financing due to our agreement with Lincoln Park Capital and the successful retirement of significant derivative liability," said Robert Farrell, J.D., Chief Financial Officer of Amarantus. "Going forward, we anticipate an increase in expenditures due to research and development activities of our key programs. We have access to the necessary resources to fund these activities. In addition, we are currently exploring various strategies to offset certain of these expenditures as prudently and deliberately as possible as we continue to build Amarantus towards a listing on a national exchange in the near future."
No RS will be needed.
If that's what you think. I would need to sell with all the stress its causing you.
I'm betting you will be forced to change your mind.
If this is junk paper, why would you buy any at all?
Good things are coming. Not going to get worked up into a lather over misplaced expectations.
If you don't have all the info you need to stay the course by September 23, you should sell.
AMBS is going to shock many with what is coming I feel. (In a good way)
Big Boy Pants required for this investment.
Long and strong AMBS!
Proxy statement filed today!
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1424812/000114420414051408/v387150_def14a.htm