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Timboslice08

01/31/15 8:02 PM

#275372 RE: ChitownMike #275371

why?
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ChitownMike

01/31/15 8:03 PM

#275374 RE: ChitownMike #275371

A/s is maxed out. Reverse split or share hike coming.
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Finga On Da Trigonometry

01/31/15 8:03 PM

#275375 RE: ChitownMike #275371

horse shit made up crap.

No evidence of this anywhere, purely made up. Not on OTC markets, not anymore, totally bogus.

NTEK
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Jim01

01/31/15 9:30 PM

#275392 RE: ChitownMike #275371

RE: NTEK Share Prices...
IMO we are witnessing an extended NTEK 'Bear Raid'...

From Investopedia:
"BEAR RAID

The objective of a bear raid is usually to make windfall profits in a brief time period through short sales. If the bear raid works and the target stock plunges, short sellers can buy the shares cheaply on the open market. These shares would be used to replace the ones that were borrowed earlier and sold at a much higher price, with the short sellers pocketing the difference as their profit.

In a typical bear raid, short sellers may collude beforehand to establish massive short positions in the target stock. Since the huge short interest in the stock increases the risk of a short squeeze that can inflict substantial losses on the "shorts," these short sellers cannot afford to wait patiently for months until their short strategy works out. So they embark on the next step in the bear raid, which is akin to a smear campaign, with whispers and rumors about the company spread by unknown sources. These rumors can be anything that portrays the target company in a negative light – allegations about accounting fraud, an SEC investigation, an earnings miss, financial difficulties and so on. The rumors may cause nervous investors to exit the stock in droves, driving it down further and giving the short sellers profits on a platter.

The repeal of the uptick rule in July 2007 is regarded by some experts as having made it easier for short sellers to embark on bear raids. In fact, the collapse or near-collapse of a number of leading financial institutions in 2008 is attributed in some circles to bear raids."


http://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/bearraid.asp
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Jim

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