I don't give people hell, I just tell them the truth and they think it's hell. H. Truman
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OFF 80% from highs of $1.14 a few months ago.
MILLIONS OF SHARES BEING PRINTED, TOXIC Convertible Notes Payable being converted at .0025.
Since the beginning of the year 24,000,000 shares converted at .0025
Note holders converted $50,000-60,000 of debt into shares valued over $10,000,000
Shareholders being fleeced!
Buyer beware!
$292,000 of CONVERTABLE debt will add another 140,000,000 shares.
CARO CAPITAL INTENDS TO SELL ITS SHARES. If the shares are restricted, Caro intends to sell them when they are registered. If the shares are freely tradeable, Caro intends to sell them. Caro affiliates, officers, directors and employees may buy and sell shares discussed in this report or any other communications and may profit in the event those shares rise in value. Caro may sell shares at any time.
Caro Capital signed an agreement with Beverly Hills Group Inc. to receive one million shares of the company’s common stock. Caro Capital is currently selling their shares.
LMAO, 100 shares trade @ .45 is HOD. BEWARE HOW THIS IS PROMOTED.....
BEWARE OF THE MARKET MANIPULATION.
What a fricken joke....
Stock goes up .03 and some one thinks we're frying shorts.....too funny
100 share trade @.45 is market manipulation.
Sellers out play the buyers, once again. Still dumping shares on the unsuspecting.
MILLIONS IS SHARES CONVERTED WITH TOXIC CONVERTIBLE NOTES
4. NOTES PAYABLE
In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership limitation, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share.
On November 15, 2014, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,081,734 shares upon conversion of $12,704.34 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $323,145.66. The Company issued out 5,081,734 shares on January 6, 2015.
On April 6 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,790,000 shares upon conversion of $14,475.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $308,670.66. The Company issued out 5,790,000 shares on April 6, 2015.
On June 19, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 6,315,200 shares upon conversion of $15,788.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $292,882.66. The Company issued out 6,315,200 shares on June 19, 2015.
On July 17, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 7,000,000 shares upon conversion of $17,500.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $275,382.66. The Company issued out 7,000,000 shares on July 21, 2015.
ZERO, NO ASSETS, OVER A MILLION IN LIABILITIES.
BHGI has NO CASH, NO REVENUES, NO ASSETS and "the audit" well.......
The President of the company stated;
....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
....limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward.
ROFLMAO, it was 100 @ .45. Reality, sellers out pacing buyers again.
Another example of market manipulation.
YUP, the sellers are out there just patiently waiting for any kind of volume.
BOOM, DUMPING 19,500 shares.
And then reality hits. Back to .28.
BHGI has ONLY signed an agreement with an investment banking firm to assist in raising capital. THEY HAVE NOT SECURED FINANCING!
The investment banker has struck out on 3 previous deals
"The investment banking firm was founded in 1925, is one of the oldest in the United States, a member of the New York Stock Exchange, and a full service broker-dealer. The firm manages two Morningstar rated funds with over $2.8 billion dollars of retail accounts, nearly 100 registered representatives and 20 investment advisors in six different offices."
ERFB .0002, $30,000,000 FAIL!
FONC .0011 $20,000,000 FAIL!
MLHC .0002 $30,000,000 FAIL!
All 3 are current fails.
NOT LOOKING GOOD...... .35 on 25,100 shares.
ITS THE TRUE AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH.
OR are you saying the President of the company lied in an affidavid to the court?
ROFLMAO, OF COURSE ITS THE TRUTH!
The President of the company stated;
....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
....limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward.
FACTS work just fine, 4 months since the audit was announced.
$BHGI News. 8-19-15: BHGI Hires International Business Services Conglomerate BDO
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif., Aug. 19, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- Beverly Hills Group Inc. (BHGI) announces that the international accounting network of BDO Castillo Miranda has been retained to conduct a GAAP audit of Beverly Hills Group's recent acquisitions in Mexico. Those acquisitions include established corporations with ongoing operations in the fields of retail convenience stores, wholesale distribution, construction, real estate development, banking and financial services, with a combined reported 2014 gross sales of USD $4.75 million and Real Estate assets estimated at USD $35 million. The contractual arrangement with BDO Castillo Miranda will include auditing and confirming the reported sales and assets of each of the acquisitions.
AGAIN, ITS OBVIOUS PLANS HAVE CHANGED!
The President of the company stated;
....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
....limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward.
We have been hearing about this audit for over 4 months. Obviously plans have change. The company has no funds.
The President of the company stated;
....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
....limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward.
WARNING AS THIS FAILED PROMOTION AND HYPE IS GOING ON!
BEWARE OF BHGI CONVERTIBLE TOXIC NOTES!!!
In Pink Sheet penny stocks, there is a tool that some promoters and companies use known as “aged debt.”
This is convertible debt that can be converted into common stock. For example, it could be a three year note from the company convertible into stock at $0.01 per share.
The conversion price could also be stated in terms of a percentage of market price, for example, the debt could convert at 50% of the market price.
Aged debt means that the debt was issued u enough ago that the holding period requirements of Rule 144 have been satisfied. The holding period, as you may know, for Rule 144 is one year for Pink Sheet companies and six months for OTC BB and other SEC registered companies.
Now we can consider what this means to the company and the holder of the aged debt. Aged debt usually trades at a discount to face value. Suppose you can buy $348,000 of aged debt for $348,000. If it converts into stock at $0.0025 and the stock rises in the market to 0.45 per share, you can convert into 139,200,000 shares. At forty-five cents per share, this is worth $62,640,000 you paid $348,000. Hmmm......
What this means to a shareholder of the company's stock who is hoping for appreciation is that there is going to be a ton of stock on the market keeping the price down. So be sure to look for convertible debt when you do your stock picking. You will find that the existence of this debt is not often featured to stock buyers by stock promoters. They try to hide this. So in addition to all the enormous dangers of speculating in penny stocks, we have this one.
When converting the aged debt, the debt holder is careful to convert only a portion of the debt at any one time so he does not go to 10% of the outstanding and become a control person. However, he can convert and sell and convert and sell and convert and sell and never go over 10% and still dump all the stock he can convert into. If the debt holder goes over 10% of the outstanding, he will be considered to be an insider and subject to limitations on the volume of stock that can be sold, like 1%, and limits on the manner of sale.
You will see OTC shells advertised for reverse mergers that feature aged debt as one of the sales features of that shell.
However, here is where the aged debt players can make a fatal mistake. If one promoter buys control of the reverse merger public shell, and also buys the aged debt at the same time, then he is an insider as he has control. This limits what he can sell under Rule 144. If the promoter uses the aged debt himself, or then gives or sells the aged debt to someone else, the debt is subject to the holding period rules of Rule 144 and the holding period starts to run from the time of the transfer to the associate, not the date of creation of the debt. The promoter may overlook this point either because of ignorance of the law or by deliberately violating the law.
The same problem exists if the debt was in the hands of an insider or affiliate. The holding period for the new buyer starts when the affiliate sells the stock to the new buyer who is not an affiliate.
If another party independent of the promoter bought the debt, and the previous debt holder was not an insider, then the buyer could tack the holding period of the previous holder. Assuming the previous holder had the aged debt for more than a year, the new buyer would have satisfied the holding period rules of Rule 144.
A greedy promoter may give the debt to an associate who will secretly sell the stock and give the proceeds of that sale to the promoter. This is a violation as a false name of the owner was used and because the stock would be attributed to the promoter whose holding period started when he bought the shell and who is subject to the volume and manner of sale restrictions of Rule 144.
Another problem that these promoters run into is that they seem to think that any debt can be converted into stock. Typically an OTC shell company winds up as a shell with some debts. One of these debts is almost always back salary to the company president who was not taking pay because of the bad condition of the company. However, this is a straight debt, not a convertible debt. Thus it cannot be magically transformed into immediate stock. In order to use this, the directors would have to exchange it for a convertible note and the holding period for the note for Rule 144 purposes will start when the conversion feature is created. Straight debt is not a security for these purposes.
Also as all 144 stock has to be paid for in full to start the holding period, debts created for services have to have all of the services fully performed before the stock or securities are fully paid for and the holding period started.
As some unscrupulous characters may attempt to “age” the debt by simply forging and backdating, I recommend that you take your convertible notes to a notary who can certify as to the date it was created and who signed it. Then you will be able to prove your aged debt is legitimate.
One final point, Rule 144 is a tool to allow investors to sell their stock. It is not a rule for financing the company. If you are the company, do not make a deal with a seller of 144 stock to put the proceeds of his sales into the company.
Ya never said what year, OBVIOUSLY NOT THIS ONE!
The President of the company stated;
....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
....limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward.
YES BHGI IS A SCAM!
Investors never paid BHGI for millions of shares, BHGI NEVER RECEIVE ANY FUNDS FROM SHARES!
4. NOTES PAYABLE
In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership limitation, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share.
On November 15, 2014, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,081,734 shares upon conversion of $12,704.34 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $323,145.66. The Company issued out 5,081,734 shares on January 6, 2015.
On April 6 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,790,000 shares upon conversion of $14,475.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $308,670.66. The Company issued out 5,790,000 shares on April 6, 2015.
On June 19, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 6,315,200 shares upon conversion of $15,788.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $292,882.66. The Company issued out 6,315,200 shares on June 19, 2015.
On July 17, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 7,000,000 shares upon conversion of $17,500.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $275,382.66. The Company issued out 7,000,000 shares on July 21, 2015.
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YES BHGI IS A SCAM!
NO CASH, NO ASSETS, NO REVENUES.
ISSUING MILLIONS OF SHARES IN TOXIC DEBT CONVERTION!
No money for audit,
"....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
...limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward. "
as reported by BHGI President.
No money for audit,
"....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
...limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward. "
as reported by BHGI President.
The President of the company stated;
....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
....limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward.
CARO CAPITAL INTENDS TO SELL ITS SHARES. If the shares are restricted, Caro intends to sell them when they are registered. If the shares are freely tradeable, Caro intends to sell them. Caro affiliates, officers, directors and employees may buy and sell shares discussed in this report or any other communications and may profit in the event those shares rise in value. Caro may sell shares at any time.
Caro Capital signed an agreement with Beverly Hills Group Inc. to receive one million shares of the company’s common stock. Caro Capital is currently selling their shares.
MILLIONS OF SHARES BEING PRINTED, TOXIC Convertible Notes Payable being converted at .0025.
Since the beginning of the year 24,000,000 shares converted at .0025
Note holders converted $50,000-60,000 of debt into shares valued over $10,000,000
Shareholders being fleeced!
Buyer beware!
$292,000 of CONVERTABLE debt will add another 140,000,000 shares.
SO NOW WE LEARN ANOTHER $608,387 is CONVERTIBLE!
5. LOANS PAYABLE – Related Party
During the three months ended September 30, 2015, a related third party made advances and directly paid Company expenses. The Loan Payable is convertible, unsecured, interest bearing and due on demand.
This was never disclosed in previous financials!!!!
5. LOANS PAYABLE - OTHER
During the three months ended June 30, 2015, an unrelated third party made advances and directly paid Company expenses. The Loan Payable is unsecured, non-interest bearing and due on demand.
NUMEROUS CONVERTIONS, TOTALLING OVER 24 MILLION SHARES HAVE ALREADY TAKEN PLACE.
4. NOTES PAYABLE
In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership limitation, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share.
On November 15, 2014, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,081,734 shares upon conversion of $12,704.34 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $323,145.66. The Company issued out 5,081,734 shares on January 6, 2015.
On April 6 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,790,000 shares upon conversion of $14,475.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $308,670.66. The Company issued out 5,790,000 shares on April 6, 2015.
On June 19, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 6,315,200 shares upon conversion of $15,788.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $292,882.66. The Company issued out 6,315,200 shares on June 19, 2015.
On July 17, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 7,000,000 shares upon conversion of $17,500.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $275,382.66. The Company issued out 7,000,000 shares on July 21, 2015.
RED ALERT! RED ALERT! RED ALERT! RED ALERT!!!
THIS STOCK IS A BIG SCAM.
HUGE PROMOTION GOING ON.
BEWARE! BEWARE! BEWARE!
THOSE PESKY CONVERTIBLE NOTES PAYABLE BEING CONVERTED AT .0025 A SHARE. MILLIONS BEING CONVERTED!!! OVER 24.4 MILLION SHARES SINCE JANUARY 2015.
In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership limitation, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share.
On November 15, 2014, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,081,734 shares upon conversion of $12,704.34 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $323,145.66. The Company issued out 5,081,734 shares on January 6, 2015.
On April 6 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,790,000 shares upon conversion of $14,475.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $308,670.66. The Company issued out 5,790,000 shares on April 6, 2015.
On June 19, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 6,315,200 shares upon conversion of $15,788.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $292,882.66. The Company issued out 6,315,200 shares on June 19, 2015.
On July 17, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 7,000,000 shares upon conversion of $17,500.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $275,382.66. The Company issued out 7,000,000 shares on July 21, 2015.
THIS IS A SCAM!
Management Service Agreement
In connection with the Purchase Agreement and the Company’s change in operational focus to developing the products related to the Cosmetic Assets, on October 1, 2014, the Company entered into a Management Services Agreement (the “Services Agreement”) pursuant to which it appointed Palm Desert Management Inc. as the services provider (the “Service Provider”) to provide certain advisory and consulting services to the Company. The Services Agreement expires (1) year after the date of the Services Agreement, with automatic yearly renewals on each anniversary date, for a maximum of five (5) years total; provided, however, that the Services Agreement may be terminated at any upon mutual agreement of the Company and the Service Provider. Under the Services Agreement the Service Provider agreed to provide the Company with business and organizational strategy, financial and investment management and advisory services, seek, screen and negotiate with management personnel, and perform such other tasks as the board of directors of the Company (the “Board”) or the Company officers may reasonably request from time to time, as well as investment, financial, strategic and corporate advisory services in connection with (i) the closing of operational transactions deemed advisable by the Board, and (ii) any other merger, acquisition, recapitalization, divestiture, financing, refinancing or other similar transaction in which the Company may be, or may consider becoming, involved (collectively, the “Services”). As consideration for the Service, the Company issued to the Service Provider an aggregate management fee, for the five years of Services contemplated by the Services Agreement, in an amount equal of fifty million (50,000,000) shares of Common Stock (the "Management Fee"). The first one-fifth of the Management Fee vested immediately with the Services Provider and the remaining amount is subject to claw back in the event the Services Agreement is terminated prior to its 5th anniversary. As a result of the issuance of the Management Fee, the Service Provider became the largest shareholder of the Company.
Interesting, the debt holders are NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE COMPANY, SO HOW IS THAT EVEN POSSIBLE? Have you read the history of the debt? It is privately held, NOT AFFILATED WITH INSIDERS and was only $348,000, now has been partially converted at .0025 a share, valued at close to $10 millions.
CONVERTION rate of .0025 a share IS TOXIC DEBT, I don't care how they put it on the books. TOXIC DEBT STEALS EQUITY FROM INVESTORS AND SHAREHOLDERS!!!
All the equity investment is being stripped from investors.
THE COMPANY HAS NO ASSETS, NO REVENUES!
Look at the proposed deal.....$35 million in real estate, generating ONLY $4.75M in revenue. There is NO WAY A COMPANY CAN SUPPORT THE DEBT OF $35 MILLION.
BHGI has ONLY signed an agreement with an investment banking firm to assist in raising capital.
THEY HAVE NOT SECURED FINANCING!
The investment banker has struck out on 3 previous deals
"The investment banking firm was founded in 1925, is one of the oldest in the United States, a member of the New York Stock Exchange, and a full service broker-dealer. The firm manages two Morningstar rated funds with over $2.8 billion dollars of retail accounts, nearly 100 registered representatives and 20 investment advisors in six different offices."
ERFB .0002, $30,000,000 FAIL!
FONC .0011 $20,000,000 FAIL!
MLHC .0002 $30,000,000 FAIL!
All 3 are current fails.
AND
BHGI has A TOXIC CONVERTIBLE NOTE!
"In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership limitation, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share."
WARNING AS THIS FAILED PROMOTION AND HYPE IS GOING ON!
BEWARE OF BHGI CONVERTIBLE TOXIC NOTES!!!
In Pink Sheet penny stocks, there is a tool that some promoters and companies use known as “aged debt.”
This is convertible debt that can be converted into common stock. For example, it could be a three year note from the company convertible into stock at $0.01 per share.
The conversion price could also be stated in terms of a percentage of market price, for example, the debt could convert at 50% of the market price.
Aged debt means that the debt was issued u enough ago that the holding period requirements of Rule 144 have been satisfied. The holding period, as you may know, for Rule 144 is one year for Pink Sheet companies and six months for OTC BB and other SEC registered companies.
Now we can consider what this means to the company and the holder of the aged debt. Aged debt usually trades at a discount to face value. Suppose you can buy $348,000 of aged debt for $348,000. If it converts into stock at $0.0025 and the stock rises in the market to 0.45 per share, you can convert into 139,200,000 shares. At forty-five cents per share, this is worth $62,640,000 you paid $348,000. Hmmm......
What this means to a shareholder of the company's stock who is hoping for appreciation is that there is going to be a ton of stock on the market keeping the price down. So be sure to look for convertible debt when you do your stock picking. You will find that the existence of this debt is not often featured to stock buyers by stock promoters. They try to hide this. So in addition to all the enormous dangers of speculating in penny stocks, we have this one.
When converting the aged debt, the debt holder is careful to convert only a portion of the debt at any one time so he does not go to 10% of the outstanding and become a control person. However, he can convert and sell and convert and sell and convert and sell and never go over 10% and still dump all the stock he can convert into. If the debt holder goes over 10% of the outstanding, he will be considered to be an insider and subject to limitations on the volume of stock that can be sold, like 1%, and limits on the manner of sale.
You will see OTC shells advertised for reverse mergers that feature aged debt as one of the sales features of that shell.
However, here is where the aged debt players can make a fatal mistake. If one promoter buys control of the reverse merger public shell, and also buys the aged debt at the same time, then he is an insider as he has control. This limits what he can sell under Rule 144. If the promoter uses the aged debt himself, or then gives or sells the aged debt to someone else, the debt is subject to the holding period rules of Rule 144 and the holding period starts to run from the time of the transfer to the associate, not the date of creation of the debt. The promoter may overlook this point either because of ignorance of the law or by deliberately violating the law.
The same problem exists if the debt was in the hands of an insider or affiliate. The holding period for the new buyer starts when the affiliate sells the stock to the new buyer who is not an affiliate.
If another party independent of the promoter bought the debt, and the previous debt holder was not an insider, then the buyer could tack the holding period of the previous holder. Assuming the previous holder had the aged debt for more than a year, the new buyer would have satisfied the holding period rules of Rule 144.
A greedy promoter may give the debt to an associate who will secretly sell the stock and give the proceeds of that sale to the promoter. This is a violation as a false name of the owner was used and because the stock would be attributed to the promoter whose holding period started when he bought the shell and who is subject to the volume and manner of sale restrictions of Rule 144.
Another problem that these promoters run into is that they seem to think that any debt can be converted into stock. Typically an OTC shell company winds up as a shell with some debts. One of these debts is almost always back salary to the company president who was not taking pay because of the bad condition of the company. However, this is a straight debt, not a convertible debt. Thus it cannot be magically transformed into immediate stock. In order to use this, the directors would have to exchange it for a convertible note and the holding period for the note for Rule 144 purposes will start when the conversion feature is created. Straight debt is not a security for these purposes.
Also as all 144 stock has to be paid for in full to start the holding period, debts created for services have to have all of the services fully performed before the stock or securities are fully paid for and the holding period started.
As some unscrupulous characters may attempt to “age” the debt by simply forging and backdating, I recommend that you take your convertible notes to a notary who can certify as to the date it was created and who signed it. Then you will be able to prove your aged debt is legitimate.
One final point, Rule 144 is a tool to allow investors to sell their stock. It is not a rule for financing the company. If you are the company, do not make a deal with a seller of 144 stock to put the proceeds of his sales into the company.
NEWBIES BEWARE.....
MILLIONS OF SHARES ISSUED AT .0025 a share
4. NOTES PAYABLE
In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership limitation, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share.
On November 15, 2014, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,081,734 shares upon conversion of $12,704.34 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $323,145.66. The Company issued out 5,081,734 shares on January 6, 2015.
On April 6 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,790,000 shares upon conversion of $14,475.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $308,670.66. The Company issued out 5,790,000 shares on April 6, 2015.
On June 19, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 6,315,200 shares upon conversion of $15,788.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $292,882.66. The Company issued out 6,315,200 shares on June 19, 2015.
On July 17, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 7,000,000 shares upon conversion of $17,500.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $275,382.66. The Company issued out 7,000,000 shares on July 21, 2015.
No money for audit,
"....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
...limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward. "
as reported by BHGI President.
Caro Capital signed an agreement with Beverly Hills Group Inc. to receive one million shares of the company’s common stock. Caro Capital is currently selling their shares.
Its more like a rotten tomato.
MILLIONS OF SHARE ISSUED FOR TOXIC CONVERTIBLE DEBT.
BHGI never received any monies for issuing million s of shares.
YES BHGI IS A SCAM!
NO CASH, NO ASSETS, NO REVENUES.
ISSUING MILLIONS OF SHARES IN TOXIC DEBT CONVERTION!
YES BHGI IS A SCAM!
Investors never paid BHGI for million of shares, BHGI NEVER RECEIVE AN FUNDS FROM SHARES!
4. NOTES PAYABLE
In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership limitation, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share.
On November 15, 2014, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,081,734 shares upon conversion of $12,704.34 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $323,145.66. The Company issued out 5,081,734 shares on January 6, 2015.
On April 6 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,790,000 shares upon conversion of $14,475.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $308,670.66. The Company issued out 5,790,000 shares on April 6, 2015.
On June 19, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 6,315,200 shares upon conversion of $15,788.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $292,882.66. The Company issued out 6,315,200 shares on June 19, 2015.
On July 17, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 7,000,000 shares upon conversion of $17,500.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $275,382.66. The Company issued out 7,000,000 shares on July 21, 2015.
WARNING AS THIS FAILED PROMOTION AND HYPE IS GOING ON!
BEWARE OF BHGI CONVERTIBLE TOXIC NOTES!!!
In Pink Sheet penny stocks, there is a tool that some promoters and companies use known as “aged debt.”
This is convertible debt that can be converted into common stock. For example, it could be a three year note from the company convertible into stock at $0.01 per share.
The conversion price could also be stated in terms of a percentage of market price, for example, the debt could convert at 50% of the market price.
Aged debt means that the debt was issued u enough ago that the holding period requirements of Rule 144 have been satisfied. The holding period, as you may know, for Rule 144 is one year for Pink Sheet companies and six months for OTC BB and other SEC registered companies.
Now we can consider what this means to the company and the holder of the aged debt. Aged debt usually trades at a discount to face value. Suppose you can buy $348,000 of aged debt for $348,000. If it converts into stock at $0.0025 and the stock rises in the market to 0.45 per share, you can convert into 139,200,000 shares. At forty-five cents per share, this is worth $62,640,000 you paid $348,000. Hmmm......
What this means to a shareholder of the company's stock who is hoping for appreciation is that there is going to be a ton of stock on the market keeping the price down. So be sure to look for convertible debt when you do your stock picking. You will find that the existence of this debt is not often featured to stock buyers by stock promoters. They try to hide this. So in addition to all the enormous dangers of speculating in penny stocks, we have this one.
When converting the aged debt, the debt holder is careful to convert only a portion of the debt at any one time so he does not go to 10% of the outstanding and become a control person. However, he can convert and sell and convert and sell and convert and sell and never go over 10% and still dump all the stock he can convert into. If the debt holder goes over 10% of the outstanding, he will be considered to be an insider and subject to limitations on the volume of stock that can be sold, like 1%, and limits on the manner of sale.
You will see OTC shells advertised for reverse mergers that feature aged debt as one of the sales features of that shell.
However, here is where the aged debt players can make a fatal mistake. If one promoter buys control of the reverse merger public shell, and also buys the aged debt at the same time, then he is an insider as he has control. This limits what he can sell under Rule 144. If the promoter uses the aged debt himself, or then gives or sells the aged debt to someone else, the debt is subject to the holding period rules of Rule 144 and the holding period starts to run from the time of the transfer to the associate, not the date of creation of the debt. The promoter may overlook this point either because of ignorance of the law or by deliberately violating the law.
The same problem exists if the debt was in the hands of an insider or affiliate. The holding period for the new buyer starts when the affiliate sells the stock to the new buyer who is not an affiliate.
If another party independent of the promoter bought the debt, and the previous debt holder was not an insider, then the buyer could tack the holding period of the previous holder. Assuming the previous holder had the aged debt for more than a year, the new buyer would have satisfied the holding period rules of Rule 144.
A greedy promoter may give the debt to an associate who will secretly sell the stock and give the proceeds of that sale to the promoter. This is a violation as a false name of the owner was used and because the stock would be attributed to the promoter whose holding period started when he bought the shell and who is subject to the volume and manner of sale restrictions of Rule 144.
Another problem that these promoters run into is that they seem to think that any debt can be converted into stock. Typically an OTC shell company winds up as a shell with some debts. One of these debts is almost always back salary to the company president who was not taking pay because of the bad condition of the company. However, this is a straight debt, not a convertible debt. Thus it cannot be magically transformed into immediate stock. In order to use this, the directors would have to exchange it for a convertible note and the holding period for the note for Rule 144 purposes will start when the conversion feature is created. Straight debt is not a security for these purposes.
Also as all 144 stock has to be paid for in full to start the holding period, debts created for services have to have all of the services fully performed before the stock or securities are fully paid for and the holding period started.
As some unscrupulous characters may attempt to “age” the debt by simply forging and backdating, I recommend that you take your convertible notes to a notary who can certify as to the date it was created and who signed it. Then you will be able to prove your aged debt is legitimate.
One final point, Rule 144 is a tool to allow investors to sell their stock. It is not a rule for financing the company. If you are the company, do not make a deal with a seller of 144 stock to put the proceeds of his sales into the company.
SO NOW WE LEARN ANOTHER $608,387 is CONVERTIBLE!
5. LOANS PAYABLE – Related Party
During the three months ended September 30, 2015, a related third party made advances and directly paid Company expenses. The Loan Payable is convertible, unsecured, interest bearing and due on demand.
This was never disclosed in previous financials!!!!
5. LOANS PAYABLE - OTHER
During the three months ended June 30, 2015, an unrelated third party made advances and directly paid Company expenses. The Loan Payable is unsecured, non-interest bearing and due on demand.
NUMEROUS CONVERTIONS, TOTALLING OVER 24 MILLION SHARES HAVE ALREADY TAKEN PLACE.
4. NOTES PAYABLE
In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership limitation, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share.
On November 15, 2014, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,081,734 shares upon conversion of $12,704.34 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $323,145.66. The Company issued out 5,081,734 shares on January 6, 2015.
On April 6 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,790,000 shares upon conversion of $14,475.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $308,670.66. The Company issued out 5,790,000 shares on April 6, 2015.
On June 19, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 6,315,200 shares upon conversion of $15,788.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $292,882.66. The Company issued out 6,315,200 shares on June 19, 2015.
On July 17, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 7,000,000 shares upon conversion of $17,500.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $275,382.66. The Company issued out 7,000,000 shares on July 21, 2015.
RED FLAGS!!!! RED FLAGS!!!! RED FLAGS!!!! RED FLAGS!!!! RED FLAGS!!!!!!
4. NOTES PAYABLE
In August 2002, the Company received a loan from an unrelated individual amounting to $180,000. Interest on this loan is $1,050 per month and payable monthly. The loan was due and payable on October 30, 2007. In May 2014, the Company issued a replacement convertible promissory note to the holder of this debt in the principal amount of $335,850, reflecting the principal and accrued interest of the August 2002 note payable through March 31, 2014. The convertible promissory note accrues interest at 6% per annum and permits the holder to convert principal and accrued interest, subject to a 9.99% ownership m, into shares or common stock at a conversion price of $0.0025 per share.
On November 15, 2014, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,081,734 shares upon conversion of $12,704.34 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $323,145.66. The Company issued out 5,081,734 shares on January 6, 2015.
On April 6 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 5,790,000 shares upon conversion of $14,475.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $308,670.66. The Company issued out 5,790,000 shares on April16, 2015.
On June 19, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 6,315,200 shares upon conversion of $15,788.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $292,882.66. The Company issued out 6,315,200 shares on June 19, 2015.
On July 17, 2015, the Company received a conversion notice requesting the issuance of 7,000,000 shares upon conversion of $17,500.00 of the note’s outstanding balance, leaving a principle amount of $275,382.66. The Company issued out 7,000,000 shares on July 21, 2015.
MILLIONS OF SHARES BEING PRINTED, TOXIC Convertible Notes Payable being converted at .0025.
Since the beginning of the year 24,000,000 shares converted at .0025
Note holders converted $50,000-60,000 of debt into shares valued over $10,000,000
Shareholders being fleeced!
Buyer beware!
$292,000 of CONVERTABLE debt will add another 140,000,000 shares.
Very interesting comments from BHGI president,
...limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward.
Business Plans terminated....
On August 12, 2015, Beverly Hills Group, Inc. has entered into an agreement to acquire a private Company with various subsidiaries having diverse operations in retail stores, wholesale distribution, construction, real estate development, banking and financial services throughout Mexico.
QUOTES FROM THE PRESIDENT,
17. ....BHGI is unable to attract new investors and to closing contracts...
20. ...limiting the company's ability to attract shareholders and investors and preventing the company from completing the closing of contracts necessary to move the company forward.
FAILED TO COMPLETE CLOSING necessary to move company forward.
On August 12, 2015, Beverly Hills Group, Inc. has entered into an agreement to acquire a private Company with various subsidiaries having diverse operations in retail stores, wholesale distribution, construction, real estate development, banking and financial services throughout Mexico.