Wow! I thought that seemed far-fetched. It is close, though.
I don't know what the peak was in June of last year.
Given a current price of .0047, to achieve a current value of $30, one must have 6,383 shares.
Prior to the last r/s, that would have been 2,234,050 shares.
In order for those shares to have cost $1M, the share price would have been .4476. I know there was a spike, but I don't know if it got that high.
However, I do know it went to 30 cents. Using a 30 cent purchase price, the 350:1 r/s, and a current price of .0047, that brings the value of a $1M purchase at 30 cents last June to a current value of $44.76.
So, the difference of $14.76 on a $1M purchase is irrelevant. Therefore, your statement is essentially accurate.