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Re: Stockoboots post# 19988

Thursday, 03/25/2010 11:21:17 PM

Thursday, March 25, 2010 11:21:17 PM

Post# of 35503
The purpose of the conference call (CC) on Wed.

Stockoboots, I am sympathized with your idea, "perceived as a scam". I've just posted the following on the Yahoo board, too.

As I listened to the CC and observed the regretful aftermath of it, I have thought that if this game were a scam, the CC would not be like this.
If this were a scam, the CC should be plotted to be much more sophisticated, elegant and eloquent.
But it was not: What a clumsy, and unkind to the shareholders! Furthermore, the terrible clicking noise!

My own humble intuition tells me that the CC was schemed like that "intentionally" and "deliberately".
(Did anybody listen to the CC of Cell therapeutics today? How sophisticated, at least, the format was.)
Then, why did the company and the management do like that? Because they want to make the price down.
If they did the CC in that way, everybody knew that the stock price will be tanked.

Then, my next question is why they wanted to make the price down? For whose benefit? For them, or for the buyer group?
(or for us, the shareholder" smile sorry.)

Here, I don' have a good answer.

If there is some agreement between the company and the buyer group, so if the company is to help the buyer buy the cheaper stocks in the open market, then the buyer were able to buy much cheaper ones in Feb. Then, why?

Is there anybody who would give us a good explication?

Summary: If this game were a scam, the conference call would not be schemed in such clumsy manners.
Therefore, I would not believe that this game is a scam.

(Well, paradoxically, if the clumsiness itself is originally plotted in the scam, then I am willing to drink this poisoned chalice (glass).)