"Correct. Once the NASDAQ sells FUSZ shares to the public, your old shares will be valued at the sell price."
That could not be more wrong. Anyone who would buy FUSZ now on some belief that the secondary offering can just arbitrarily set a higher price the market will just got to will be sorely mistaken.
Uplisting to NASDAQ, assuming they can pull it off will have a positive impact on the pps. No argument. But the market itself will determine what that is.
There is no IPO of a new SEC registration. It is FUSZ's S-1 for its existing share class that will be issued out of the AS into the OS.
If what you are describing was even remotely possible the stock would be trading at a MUCH higher pps to reflect that...but it is not...because what you describe is not how it works.
Not even the S-1 describes what you are suggesting.
Here is the reality...
The secondary offering will be priced based on the market. They have no choice. If at the time of Effectiveness the price it at 80-90% of the open market price then stock from the offering will sell into the market...if they price is set at 2x or 10x or more of the open market (as you are suggesting) then the offering will not be bought from and it will fail.
...and given the widening expectation being suggested that somehow AGP can just say this is worth $10 and *poof* the stock will suddenly trade for that...could lead to failure of the offering out of the gate when the reality hits when they price it with a discount to the market just before effectiveness...and people suddenly realize they were wrong.
There is not a single example in the OTC of such a thing as you describe successfully happening, ever.