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markt1983

03/23/16 12:50 PM

#1542 RE: bigarow #1541

Been watching this company for a few years and the excitement is centered around that profitability is right around the corner and/or already occurring.

Expansion is occurring in terms of infrastructure. 4 depots opened means we can produce enough excelyte for up to 4K wells. EPA approvals for the product are done. Testing is showing significant cost savings for oil and natural gas producers. EP Energy has already committed wells to us and this was the reason for the uptick in revenue. We were at 235 wells by year end, but Infrastructure can handle way more.

Just with the 235 wells, majority of which were only revenue generating towards the end of the year the company turned a revenue in the neighborhood of 460k. Operating costs are about 3m per year, so costs are fairly easy to cover once we get to 600 wells. This is assuming 2 dollar per gallon cost with the average well needing about 12000 gallons per year to be treated. This would translate to an annual revenue of greater than 7m at just 600 wells. Revenue was so low in 2015 because it was done for free for a large part of the year to gain the testing results and customer base.

I am leaving a buffer in between the current 3m operating costs and the potential 7m revenue at 600 wells for further increase of operating costs as they expand. Further testing, employee growth, depot build outs, etc...

EP Energy alone has 1100 wells, so if we just got all of their wells, which seems likely given their satisfaction of the product we could be in the neighborhood of $1.50 per share.

The whole caveat is getting a financial statement that actually shows profitability so that the PE ratio is a positive figure to actually get a fair market valuation.

Hope this helps!

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Garyst

03/23/16 1:33 PM

#1543 RE: bigarow #1541

Nah, nothing that I know at least. PPS hovered around .05-.15 much of the past 2 years short of the recent fall we've seen.
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zzg123

03/23/16 2:28 PM

#1546 RE: bigarow #1541

It seems like the industry for water frac' services is undergoing some major growth, with integrated service providers starting to pop up recently (Select Energy's spin off of non-water frac segments; Rock Water Energy Solutions' formation in 2011; HII Tech's acquisition of water frac' services in 2012; Lux Research's estimate of a 15 X growth in water frac spending between now and early 2020s).

IEVM has a niche in the water-frac industry, and to me it looks like Excelyte could make a good addition to an integrated service provider's portfolio. According to a valueinvestorsclub report, IEVM's management claimed that could potentially sell the company for a $200m+ valuation to a larger service provider.

Other things: the CFO said that IEVM is not running into any competition during the Excelyte roll-out; IEVM's VP of Sales and Ops said that the company is gaining "tremendous" momentum right now (he was the president of Sage Power Solutions - a start-up that had around $2m in sales by the 2nd year of operation before the parent company - HII Tech - filed for bankruptcy); Casey Capital has continued to add to its position over the years, even though the fund's ownership has been diluted through secondary offerings; the portfolio manager of Casey Capital also lists his wife and child as shareholders.