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Inorout

03/18/15 10:59 PM

#40423 RE: fmeded #40421

I consider any newbie management team idiots when they don't know how to manage their share price. Smart managers don't raise investor expectations with nonsense and then fail to meet expectations. In SLTD's case management pumped it's 3D technology in order to hype shares and then failed to deliver on a 3D product, or even provide any guidance on its 3D technology. I'm beginning to think this whole 3D technology is a red herring designed to pump more interest and create more new issuance. Overhype and fail to deliver and the market will punish you because folks lose trust. Now SLTD is experiencing loss of trust in management and folks are losing confidence as the PPS goes lower and lower and lower, all while management does nothing but repeat the same old PR's again. Blah, blah, blah. No point in PR'ing information that has already been PR'd. Repeating stuff everyone already knows. Meanwhile as the PPS goes lower and lower on a daily basis, management does nothing to lend any support to the shares. Ask yourself, if SLTD was really oversold and undervalued at these levels, why isn't SLTD buying back shares at these levels? Why isn't management buying a significant amount of shares personally? If SLTD has 12 million plus in cash, why wouldn't they use some of that cash to stabilize the PPS here and lend some support to a trend reversal? If insiders don't see value at these levels, I'm not sure why any retail shareholder would see any value either. So my advice to JN would be that if SLTD has $12 million plus of cash, perhaps deploying a million or two over the next couple weeks buying back more shares could stop the slide and create a reversal in investor psychology. I'm not suggesting blowing your whole wad on buybacks but at the margin, a million or two could be the trick. Gotta realize that with say 17 million shares outstanding, a $1 dollar move would increase your market cap $17 million bucks. So ask yourself, would it make sense to spend $2 million to increase your valuation by $17 million? Don't need a Wharton MBA to figure it out. Should be an easy decision, even for idiots.