Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
CapriCapers.
Still no comment on IPIX?
Figures.
If I were one of the rather frustrated posters who claim to be long on this sorry scam, I'd ask you vociferously and often why you were here.
Instead I will note that you're simply here to critique other posters, and appear to have zero to say about the actual subject of this MB.
I suppose everybody has to have a hobby.
Why do you never write about IPIX?
I understand that trolling is your thing, Sneery Owl, but surely you must have something to say about this sad vehicle for extracting money from the greedy and gullible and giving it to the rapacious and greedy?
Or is that forbidden by your contract of employment?
This is why I’m not renewing my subscription:
Stirred up by the usual far right hate groups financed from Moscow and Beijing (and by robberies when the Gardai are distracted by orchestrated demonstrations).
Ireland remains a peaceful and welcoming nation for the most part. It’s just the Nazis we need to worry about. Our population still remains several million below the pre-Famine levels, so there’s plenty of room for newcomers. And lots of cash from US-tax evading corporations to finance the needs of locals and incomers.
It’s had the Hans Brost kiss of death.
There is no possibility of recovery.
Back on the payroll? Congratulations!
I failed to learn that lesson twice.
Third time’s a charm.
I hope so, anyway.
Doubt it. Even the minimal trading is probably Hans and company doing a bit of laundry.
UAM mites? Sounds painful.
Possibly contracted from being in contact with scrofulous mafiosi like those Canadian chaps behind obvious scam UAMM.
I was involved with one of the most heavily advertised Pharma brands at the turn of the century.
We calculated that for every $1 spent on TV advertising we got $3-5 back. Not too shabby.
The exception was the campaign for Xenical (orlistat) (not one of my company’s drugs, thankfully). The so-called “fair balance” statement at the end presented a couple of side effects which actually caused the sales to go down.
I suspect the RoI on TV advertising is much lower nowadays, if only because of media fragmentation.