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Re: jrsh post# 203029

Wednesday, 06/08/2022 9:09:46 AM

Wednesday, June 08, 2022 9:09:46 AM

Post# of 220404
There are a number of requirements to be met in order to uplist. Share price is but one. The real sticker is getting an SEC-approved auditor and becoming SEC reporting, vs alternative reporting. That is no small challenge.
One reason is that nearly 10% of all NSAV shares are not registered, and are restricted. That will have to be corrected. Then, of course, NSAV would have to become DTC eligible, which means DTC holds the shares instead of how it is now done, which is unknowable currently.

But since NSAV's lawyer can 'free' these unregistered, restricted shares for a measly $500, it CAN be done. There are hundreds of millions of these (common) shares and they will ALL have to become registered, AND unrestricted before they can even THINK about uplisting. They can't even get an SEC auditor until that mess is cleaned up. I personally have half a million of these shares.

NSAV will occasionally mention uplisting, but you should think of that as a pump, not a promise. At least until they start sorting out the mess.