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Millenium323

04/09/15 8:50 PM

#61411 RE: votrade #61410

They don't seem to promote the stock. That might make the stock go up so that rules that out. They don't seem to tell anyone about the stock. They didn't seem to tell people at Whole Foods or some of the employees there or they would have been buying. They didn't seem to tell their distributor to buy the stock even though that company trades on the NASDAQ and has a $7 billion mkt cap. They didn't seem to tell family or friends to buy the stock because none of them seem to be buying. No one in the Atlanta area seems to have bought the stock despite that being their headquarters. No one from Coke is buying the stock despite Quirks connections there. No one from the beverage industry is buying the stock, which in itself is a bit baffling, especially considering the stock only has $150,000 market cap. No one from EXPO West bought the stock despite them making a big deal about the natural foods expo. No bloggers are buying the stock either. So this all would lead one to believe that they don't really want anyone to buy the stock. Instead it seems like they would rather allow the financiers to continually drive the share price down to abnormally low market cap levels so the financiers can convert an ever increasing amount of stock at the expense of the common shareholders. This stock should have been trading north of .30 after the Whole Foods deal was announced. There were only around 7 million shares outstanding at the time so at .30 the stock would had only had a $2 million market cap. But obviously that didn't happen. All in my opinion

Its too bad because one of the advantages they could have had over Chuice was to have a bunch of shareholders all over the country buying the chewy juice. Chuice isn't a publically traded company so they don't have shareholders to buy their Chuice. But because this company treated their shareholders so poorly and basically used them strictly as a dumping ground they don't have that competitive advantage and don't have a lot of shareholders to buy their chewy juice like they should. If they had played their cards right they could have had hundreds of shareholders buying their chewy juice and they wouldn't have to worry about selling out product. But now they have to do it the hard way and sell it all on their own. This is all in my opinion too.

fink

04/09/15 11:49 PM

#61419 RE: votrade #61410

We all have different end games.
Mine never materialized. Now I just got a bunch of shares.

But got some time till I swing into another.
It's all about timing.

Whole Foods intro was a bust.
Now it's a gamble of sales numbers.
Maybe big talk of another distribution deal out West.
More in the O/S means most will bail on any micro run.
retail has been abused.

I sense a problem with management and common shareholders now.