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supernova23

12/31/20 1:50 AM

#1002 RE: Badge04 #1000

For what it's worth, I truly believe the Company will be rocking in 2021 with significant customer engagements. KULR's technologies work. I'm going off on a bit of a tangent here, but I've spent time with Dr. Knowles and KULR's engineers and have a good understanding of the Company's technologies and why they can displace traditionally used solutions in the marketplace. KULR's technologies aren't cost prohibitive and for products like TRS, is in a league of its own in terms of efficacy, size, and weight advantages. The recent CPSC report and NASA's use for space applications is a testament to this.

Product development has been a time consuming process (Covid-19 didn't help either) but KULR is making tangible progress. The Company currently has engagements with world-class companies with potential for significant commercialization.

If the investor group from Monday's offering is dumping shares as you and I believe out of sheer habit and/or ignorance, I don't imagine it will take long to burn through what is now just under 6M shares???, especially if volume can continue at this pace or even increase with significant news/catalysts to spark additional buying interest. Sucks in the short-term, but I suppose the silver lining in the cloud is that investors can now buy at relatively low price levels.


**Disclosure: This information does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of offers to buy any securities of KULR. As a moderator (supernova23) of this board it is my duty to disclose to you that my family has invested in KULR and that I'm personally acting as a consultant for KULR and have been compensated in shares for that role. I'm not a licensed financial professional. I have performed extensive research on the Company and believe KULR has real potential to displace conventional thermal management or "cooling" solutions for the electronics and battery industries. This is my opinion and you should always perform your own complete due diligence before making any investment decision. There is obviously risk of loss when buying or selling securities and generally even greater risk associated with buying or selling micro-cap stocks. Some real challenges faced by micro-cap companies include raising capital, increasing liquidity, attracting institutional investors, gaining analyst coverage, and general mistrust of the micro-cap market. Micro-cap companies also tend to lack in resources and often struggle to commercialize their products or services in a meaningful way.