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Monday, 02/16/2015 12:51:06 AM

Monday, February 16, 2015 12:51:06 AM

Post# of 4188
Breitling Energy in its first nine months as a publically traded company had over $41,000,000 in revenue and a net income of $6,793,000.

The company has had no debt, no toxic funding and no dilution during this period of growth.

The company’s business model incorporates a unique strategy that allows accredited investors to participate in the funding of oil and gas wells in exchange for a royalty interest once they are producing.

This plan of operation helps protect shareholders and the integrity of the share structure by developing properties without having to dilute the stock or take on any debt.

Breitling Energy is developing new prospects as a working interest owner, not an operator which is why you don’t have permits listed with Texas Railroad Commission.

Faulkner has long said that the company will continue to contract the drilling through third party operators.

Chris Faulkner is a trusted industry analyst that has been on Bloomberg, BBC, MSNBC, CNBC and Fox News dozens of times.

http://www.breitlingenergy.com/media/in-the-media/

You have an anti-fracking blogger that knows so little about the company, that she admittedly cant tell you when it was originally incorporated.

I will give you a hint.

It was on 10/15/2004, but it doesn’t show up with the Texas Secretary of State because it was incorporated in the state of Oklahoma.

Breitling Energy has clearly had a decade of growth and there is nothing muddy about it as the blogger claims.

She continues her ramblings by linking to a blanket statement about the risks involved in reverse mergers posted in 2011, long before Breitling Energy became public.

She also drones on with more useless information about the previous stock ticker symbols and companies that have no relevancy to the current company.

The even more entertaining part of the blog is in the comment section.

Clueless posters that fail to realize that Breitling Energy and Crude Energy used to be one larger company that was originally called Breitling Oil and Gas.

Breitling Energy was taken public as a pure play Exploration and Production Company while leaving the royalty side private with Crude, so of course Chris Faulkner and Parker Hallam have a long history together. LOL…

The Seeking Alpha blogger claims that Breitling would be a good stock to short because of the market valuation if there were more volume. LOL…

Retail traders cant short stocks in this price range, so he is just perpetuating a myth that gets echoed all over the internet about daily short selling.

He also fails to mention that a 500M O/S was only necessary because the shares needed to be issued so Breitling could go public to begin with.

The public float is around 40M which would give the company a market cap closer to $20M rather than $200. There isn’t any dilution here.

With the more realistic valuation based on the float, the company looks cheap at $.40 with revenues more than double than a $20M market valuation based on the total number of publically traded shares.

The additional potential bonus for Breitling Energy shareholders will be the possibility of making extra money after the uplisting.

Advanced traders who trade options will have the opportunity to sell stock options rather than buy them.

I will be able to sell calls and puts for premiums that can provide immediate cash that will settle into my account. When/if those contracts expire, I retain my BECC holdings while pocketing premium.

BECC is a rare opportunity on the OTC board right now.

IMO and FWIW.

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