Thursday, February 21, 2019 5:19:27 PM
From the DD Support Board and Fraud research- as you can see VYST is not eligible to buyback shares anytime soon. They would be months away even if they had the cash.
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Quote:
Can a company do a stock buyback it they are in debt?
Probably not, but that is not one of the specific legal criteria a company must meet in order to legally repurchase shares.
A share repurchase (or buyback) is considered to be a distribution to common shareholders. In order to do that legally, a company may only use assets which are already owned by the common shareholders. Common shareholders are dead last in line for assets. The debtors are first, then creditors, then preferred shareholders, and finally common shareholders. Which means, the company must be in a positive asset position - the Company must have enough net assets (assets minus liabilities, including any amounts due preferred shareholders, which is important to recognize) to pay 100% of what is owed to all the classes in front of the common shareholders before they can buy back shares. And then they can only use the assets above that threshhold. AND, the company must have current financial statements which prove this is the case - no "take our word for it".
The Company must also have sufficient current assets to meet its obligations as they come due. A company having a lot of fixed or intangible assets, but little cash, is unlikely to meet this requirement as those assets are not readily convertible to cash to pay off debt maturing or its current liabilities.
Those 3 criteria (positive assets, current financial statements and sufficient current assets) are the 3 legal criteria a company must meet in order to repurchase shares under State laws. BUT, there is another consideration. Note that almost every contractual agreement for the issuance of toxic death spiral convertibles specifically states the Company is prohibited from repurchasing shares while any part of the debt remains unpaid. And this is important. We know most of these toxic convertible buyers will sue issuers immediately if they violate the purchase contracts. But recently, a lot of toxic death spiral issuers have issued news releases, and 8-K's, announcing repurchases plans when not only are they broke, but they cannot legally repurchase shares under the legal criteria above, AND they are prohibited from doing so under their contractual agreements. But yet the toxic note holders do nothing. Why? Because the fake "buybacks" are almost certainly being orchestrated by the toxic note holders as a scheme to pump the stock and increase buying volume which they can then convert and dump into. I have seen it quite a bit recently, and they all involve the same group of toxic note holders. And in each case, the Company in question is on life support and unquestionably near death. The bogus buyback announcement is the last gasp which gives the note holders one last dumping opportunity before the Company disappears for good.
___________________________
Quote:
Can a company do a stock buyback it they are in debt?
Probably not, but that is not one of the specific legal criteria a company must meet in order to legally repurchase shares.
A share repurchase (or buyback) is considered to be a distribution to common shareholders. In order to do that legally, a company may only use assets which are already owned by the common shareholders. Common shareholders are dead last in line for assets. The debtors are first, then creditors, then preferred shareholders, and finally common shareholders. Which means, the company must be in a positive asset position - the Company must have enough net assets (assets minus liabilities, including any amounts due preferred shareholders, which is important to recognize) to pay 100% of what is owed to all the classes in front of the common shareholders before they can buy back shares. And then they can only use the assets above that threshhold. AND, the company must have current financial statements which prove this is the case - no "take our word for it".
The Company must also have sufficient current assets to meet its obligations as they come due. A company having a lot of fixed or intangible assets, but little cash, is unlikely to meet this requirement as those assets are not readily convertible to cash to pay off debt maturing or its current liabilities.
Those 3 criteria (positive assets, current financial statements and sufficient current assets) are the 3 legal criteria a company must meet in order to repurchase shares under State laws. BUT, there is another consideration. Note that almost every contractual agreement for the issuance of toxic death spiral convertibles specifically states the Company is prohibited from repurchasing shares while any part of the debt remains unpaid. And this is important. We know most of these toxic convertible buyers will sue issuers immediately if they violate the purchase contracts. But recently, a lot of toxic death spiral issuers have issued news releases, and 8-K's, announcing repurchases plans when not only are they broke, but they cannot legally repurchase shares under the legal criteria above, AND they are prohibited from doing so under their contractual agreements. But yet the toxic note holders do nothing. Why? Because the fake "buybacks" are almost certainly being orchestrated by the toxic note holders as a scheme to pump the stock and increase buying volume which they can then convert and dump into. I have seen it quite a bit recently, and they all involve the same group of toxic note holders. And in each case, the Company in question is on life support and unquestionably near death. The bogus buyback announcement is the last gasp which gives the note holders one last dumping opportunity before the Company disappears for good.
Recent VYST News
- Vystar Plans Dividend Spin Off of RXAIR and Related Brands Following R3alm, Inc. Transaction • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 04/27/2026 12:00:00 PM
- Vystar and R3alm Launch R3alm.com Following Strategic Transaction • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 04/21/2026 12:00:00 PM
- Vystar Enters into Binding Letter of Intent to Acquire 50% Interest in R3alm Inc. • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 04/20/2026 01:22:43 PM
- Form 10-K - Annual report [Section 13 and 15(d), not S-K Item 405] • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 04/15/2026 06:25:19 PM
- Form NT 10-K - Notification of inability to timely file Form 10-K 405, 10-K, 10-KSB 405, 10-KSB, 10-KT, or 10-KT405 • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 03/30/2026 03:33:28 PM
- Vystar Announces 2-Week-Long Memorabilia Sweepstakes on X Platform • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 02/18/2026 02:30:00 PM
- Vystar Enters Final Testing of Breakthrough Dialysis Water Filtration Technology • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 01/29/2026 03:40:00 PM
- Vystar to Acquire Stake in GoPaid and Partner with Capital R3alm to Launch R3alm Oracle and Collectibles Platform • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 01/27/2026 03:57:10 PM
- Vystar Corp. Submits Binding Letter of Intent to Acquire Stake in GoPaid.com LLC and Form Strategic Partnership with Capital R3alm to Launch R3alm Oracle and R3alm Collectibles • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 01/08/2026 04:40:38 PM
- Vystar® Reports, Following its First of its Kind Court Victory against EMA Financial, Inc. of $497,439.58 in Legal Fees and Costs Awarded. • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 12/22/2025 08:00:00 PM
- Form 10-Q - Quarterly report [Sections 13 or 15(d)] • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 11/12/2025 05:59:16 PM
- Incubator Stock Review Initiates Coverage on Vystar • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 10/24/2025 02:05:00 PM
- Vystar’s Vytex® Cloud Bed-in-a-Box Available for Sale • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 10/17/2025 12:30:00 PM
- Vystar® to restart sales of Vytex® Cloud Bed-in-a-Box • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 09/12/2025 01:20:00 PM
- Form 10-Q - Quarterly report [Sections 13 or 15(d)] • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 08/01/2025 04:16:02 PM
