Bud has absolutely nothing to do with this. I give you my word. He just said "make the call", I don't understand any of this.
He said something about selling out of the trust which doesn't need to be registerd, can't find it, but found this:
Thehavenots: they are sort of taking it seriously
Wall Street Dude: well they should... and don't get me wrong,, this thing could trade a 2.50 tomorrow... i'm not saying its going to zero... but it WILL go there.
Wall Street Dude: its just simply not real.
Wall Street Dude: they are trying to jam everyone up at DTC, and effect a short squeeze
Wall Street Dude: unfortunatly for them their exit strategy is to sell it all at 1.12
Wall Street Dude: so they take there 3 mil and run
Wall Street Dude: their i mean
Wall Street Dude: and ty for not giving up my name.
Wall Street Dude: and if they get away with it i will be surprised and amazed.
Wall Street Dude: but hey, they might.
Wall Street Dude: they are also (this is important) forgetting about how CNS works.
Wall Street Dude: CNS is 'continuous net settlement'
Wall Street Dude: if a market maker is naked short the stock, he stands to get bought in. HOWEVER, if the position changes at all,,, i.e. less short, more short... then there is a 3 day process all over again to buy him in.
Wall Street Dude: so in the words of my favorite boss 17 years ago... "UPDATE YOUR FAIL TO DELIVER BOY!" (in other words, just buy and sell 100 shares)
Wall Street Dude: and don't ever forget that market makers are just in it to make money just like the longs/shorts are... if a stock is going up, a market maker wants to be long...and visa versa.
Wall Street Dude: also a market maker is given word of an imminent buy in before it happens.
Wall Street Dude: in very rare cases a short squeeze can happen, but its even more rare that it happens with a company with 62 million shares out, (175 million if you read the filings, but i haven't looked into that), because there is an old addage at investment banking firms... "there is always a seller"
Wall Street Dude: and it seems in this case its the previous owners of Furia corp.
Odysseus crossed the river of Styx. He asked Achilles if it was worth trading his life to have his 'name' live forever. Achilles replies: "I would rather be the slave of a slave on earth, then to live here in Hades..." --Homer's The Illiad