As the Sulja world turns:
Twenty Four hours a day, three hundred sixty five days a year, someone somewhere is working on a Sulja project. What we have available is a pink sheet company, which is global in outlook and execution. Lumber from Liberia, materials from Canada while supporting massive structures in Dubai.
What we have is a microcosm of the new economy. Soon this small company from Ontario, will be trading stocks on the Dubai stock exchange. Who would have thought it just a few short months ago when Dennis Ammerman coined the infamous phrase "Short Seller Captured Capital".
Many board participants don't want to talk about that issue. It just seems too good to be true, or too unreal that a U.S. financial system would allow phantom shares to be traded for months. Yes, those participants are correct in the sense we really don't need that issue in order for this stock to trade at much higher multiples. However, let me just throw this out there. I don't believe Consultech would have been interested enough in Loftwerks to give Dennis 10 million dollars, if they didn't see a unique opportunity. They saw an opportunity available, an opportunity that was verified numerous times before they merged and gained controlling interest of the shares. So they took it!
Whether Dennis Ammerman has sold some of his 100 million shares in the ensuring months since he left the company is an open question at this point. I doubt he did, knowing how captured the shorts were. But, I believe we are going to find out in the next couple of weeks what the shares structure is.
These answers may suprise many.