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NDOLStrong

05/20/06 3:34 PM

#5540 RE: pschae #5525

The answers you are seeking:

1. This company float is small for many large investors to take a position. They move the market which causes them to over-pay.

2. The financials of the group have not been posted. Many funds have restiction on buying into speculation.

3. Comparing this stock to its closest peers: PKZ, Char, Nelson values this stock at approxmately $2, but these stocks where bought out. Many of the investors did not want to be bought out, they where it it for the long term, and are very disappointed. However, the stocks did trade at 1/2 thier value and more than 100% of the selling price at times the year prior to the sale. Does this mean that the smart money did not understand the stock.

4. This company is entering a new phaze - production. This changes the nature of the sock. It is no longer a speculative stock (at least not for long). This is why I am here. Until they where approved for production, I was not interested. Now They are like PKZ, Char, and Nelson. This means that once the money starts to role the stock will see a steady increase.

5. Many of the investors on this board Knowlege is just as good as the experts at this point with the stock because we have some unknowns. However, we have enough to understand value. At this time, the company is work about $2 per share, and will trade between $1.1 to $2.50 over the next year, most likely. Once some of the unkowns are proved, the stock will start the steady increase.

Most investors would not take the risk that the sock has now, and the stock is not being marketed very well. If and when it starts to be marketed, the financials become known, a history of good revenue and returns is accomplished, reserves are built up and verified by indepndant autitors, you will see the smart money come in. Do you think WB would bother with this stock, he could buy the company, and it would even make a blib on his portfolio. He has bought PTR because this stock he can take a position in without sending it to the roof.

Is this "civil" enough?
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RonnieD

05/20/06 4:16 PM

#5544 RE: pschae #5525

pschae, all those sophisticated groups you mentioned are merely waiting to take a look at Northwest/Nord. They need more information. Your assertion that they have decided not to buy is ridiculous.
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westeffer

05/20/06 5:15 PM

#5549 RE: pschae #5525

psache-You don't have enough money to buy shares of a company with any potential. Everyone can look at your meaningless comments on a few other boards and realize you are a loser that schemes and dreams, but going nowhere. Why don't you go somewhere and communicate with some who cares.
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TopHat

05/20/06 8:24 PM

#5556 RE: pschae #5525

Hey Pschae, take it to RB. Get your shares there.
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ekythump

05/20/06 11:32 PM

#5579 RE: pschae #5525

Nobody has any more information than we have. To think that the experts have more info than we have is making a poor assumption. "Experts" statistically have worse luck, on average, than you would get randomly picking stocks from the leading indices.

I would say that some of us have delved deeper into the DD of this company than any financial institution has. It wasn't until I hit the bottom of what I thought was the available DD out there before I realized how this company works, and how we are undervalued.

Most people get the inkling that it's undervalued, have numbers to show it, but it's not until you understand how the reverse mergers work that you can actually be confident. That takes a LOT of DD to get there.

And yes, once you know who turned the buyout deal down, it makes absolutely perfect sense why they did.

It's like this...

Say you are a Cuban citizen who owns a rare car. You know that you can get $4000 for the car in Cuba, but that there are also collectors in the United States who will pay you $200,000 or more for it.

The only way you can sell the car in the United States, and maximize your profit is if you get help from a U.S. citizen to do so.

You cut a deal with him and say that you'll pay him 10% of whatever the buyer will offer if he helps you sell your car.

Now, shortly after you get your car listed in the United States, somebody offers you $50,000 for the car. Your "broker" is enthralled at the prospect of making $5,000 out of nowhere.

You, however, turn it down because you know what your car is worth in that market, and it doesn't make any bit of difference to you whether or not the guy helping you sell it has just made a ton of money or not, because to you-- you know how much it is worth and you're not going to sell for any less.

Cuban= Majority shareholder of NDOL (Owner of Oil before reverse merger with BTSI)
US Broker= You and me, (Remainder of NDOL Shareholders)
Guy offering $40,000= NWOG