On 3/25/2010 GoIP (GOIG) released a PR thru Mina Mar Marketing stating that they are in the final stages of a merger/buy-out agreement with a USA based cell phone recycling company. UWRL has stated in their most recent PR thru Mina Mar Marketing on 3/21/2010 that they are in final reverse-merger negotiations with a USA base cell phone recycling company. The key word here is reverse merger. Why? (Read definition at the bottom of this message.) In consideration of the reverse merger, URWL is being swallowed up by the larger private recycling company in order for them to become a public company under the UWRL incorporation charter. This opens the door for the GOIG merger with the USA based recycling company, which is now a public called US Wireless. As a investor in both of the public companies, I stand to gain from increase PPS from the merger(s) if it pans out the way I described, or as individual mergers of their own. I just wanted to share my observation of the connecting of the dots between the three companies so that you as investors have a better idea of what Mina Mar Marketing does for their clients. IMO if you own shares in either company UWRL or GOIG your share value is going to go up significantly once the mergers are complete for many solid reasons. One is the fact that the remaining company GOIG, will be much larger in capitalization. This alone will allow them rise from the Pink Sheet to the OTC trading. The second big reason is the launch of the Go800 business GoIP has going for them. UWRL will soon be a thing of the past. Share holders will receive a cash offering (after reverse merger with recycling Co.) from GOIG, which in my opinion maybe in the $0.01 PPS range. Maybe more depending on what value the recycling company has brought to the table. (The cash buy-out scenario is fact stated thru GOIG PR, not my opinion.) The next week or two is certainly going to be exciting for share holders of both GOIG and UWRL. GLTA Schlumpy Reverse merger allows your private company to go public. Reverse merger financial transactions are becoming increasingly popular and accepted. It is an alternative means for private companies to go public. The public shell is a vital aspect of a reverse merger transaction. A public shell is a publicly listed company with no assets or liabilities. It gets the name "shell" because the only thing remaining from the current company is its corporate shell structure. When a private company merges into this entity it becomes a shell. There are several benefits to a reverse merger when compared to an Initial Public Offering (IPO). You will often receive a higher value for your company and the company won't have to have an underwriter. Another few benefits are that it is much cheaper and less time consuming to go public this way. Also with a reverse merger the ownership control will not be as diluted as with a regular public offering. More businesses qualify for a reverse merger because a long and stable history of income is not required to qualify. The lack of an earning history will not keep a privately-held company from going public this route.