Maybe the low interest funds can be borrowed on a no exploration licence, no listed company whose financial statements are ten years in arrears, no hope collateral basis from the Mudville Bank of America (the MBA).
I suggest yet again you research what happens to shares after they are relegated to the grey sheets.
Understand that, and you will also understand why this claim can not possibly have anything at all to do with EEGC shares:
It is a death sentence. There is no more EEGC. There will be no more funding in EEGC.
The shares will soon find their way on minuscule volume to near zero, and then cease trading altogether. Eventually EEGC's registration will be revoked by the SEC.
This is not a prediction. It is a certainty. It is what happens to Grey sheet scams, like this one.