I seriously think the offers are improving significantly due to the multitude of irons that Tom has in the fire (I would say that most of those "irons" have not been made public information yet)
Given my opinion stated above, equity investor/s will/would not have a problem coming in at the 300-400% elevation (of said debt) if they see that the value is there (within the company itself).
I will use the house themed example again
Lets say Im looking to buy a house worth $500,000 with a loan of 100,000 against it, amortized over 5 years at 20%. Lets say that loan was structured as such that early payoff was not an option and the entire amount of the interest to be accrued over the 5 year term had to be paid in full (whether the house was paid off in a month, or went the full five years).
Sounds like a pretty toxic situation right?...Right!
But, If the house is worth $500,000, what the hell do I care as a buyer?
I would gladly pay the toxic interest in lieu of the bigger picture.
In other words...If the value is there, who cares.
In short, I simply believe that that true value of this little gem of a company will soon be revealed and investors will have NO problem buying out Bravatek's debt at the previously mentioned inflated prices.
In other words, Bravtek's debt will seem paltry compared to its actual value.