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Re: Timo33 post# 176

Saturday, 04/02/2011 12:01:32 PM

Saturday, April 02, 2011 12:01:32 PM

Post# of 309
Trust is a fleeting non-commodity for sure. I have always been a bit of junk and scrap collector, one mans junk is another's gold. Sometimes junk turns out to be junk, but the herd effect and peak fear often leaves golden opportunities behind for those who can figure out how to find them and time buying them. Just look at tickers like F, GE, HIG, BRY, and how well they have done after the Panic in 09.

I am not much for trying to board a moving train or rocket on the way up (or a falling knife or rocket on the way down for that matter), but I do know that shorts will cover, and do so in a panic when a stock under short attack bottoms hard and turns up. Instead of buying high flier stocks in a gamble that they will go forever higher, I have learned that it is better to take the market for what it is, as it is, and find stocks I would not mind holding long term, and look to buy them cheap after a massacre, or nasty panic sell off, especially if the fundamentals are sound, and the company is sound.

Call me an opportunistic capitalist!!!! LOL

I have one question for the group here to ponder. The recent attacks on this stock claim they lied about bio-diesel production rates. But they did show a real, built bio-diesel plant. The shorts did not claim that the plant did not exist, they just claimed that the plant was idle, based on what they claimed was no truck traffic in and out (I will say again, they did not post the entire video, just pieces of what they claim were weeks of 24 hour video, why is that?), and who of us would sit and watch the video for the next 2 months, to make a buy / sell decision? I think they rigged the game, knowing no one would have time to watch it all. But I must also ask, why would they buy and add capacity to an idle plant? Why would they sell new shares to expand idle biodiesel capacity, when the CEO owns 1/2 the outstanding shares?

Many plants here in Texas use pipelines to receive and deliver product, and do not use trucks for delivery. Do we even know if they use pipelines versus trucks at that plant?

I guess we won't know the truth until the dust settles, and the company comes up with an answer that shorts can't deny or throw more mud at.

Does anyone here know how to search the China online patent records to verify the patent application numbers this company lists on their web site? I would love to see an english version of those applications. I am familiar with the American and European versions, not China's.

I am still thinking of buying here for the first time next week.



KPMG?

Ambition with out knowledge is like ship in dry dock. Going nowhere fast!

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