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Blitzed

02/26/21 4:51 PM

#215666 RE: igotthemojo #215663

a 1 - 5 r/s means you needed a little help getting onto nasdaq...

a 1 - 10 r/s means you needed a little more help getting on nasdaq...

a 1 - 100 r/s means you have no business being on nasdaq...



This has no basis in fact at all. It's just a weird opinion. If there is a 100:1 R/S, the pps is 100 times more and the value remains the same. There is no signal Kim is sending you.

so the float may be about 4.5 mil shares...the average daily trades of kblb can be generously pegged at about 1 mil per day...that would mean about 10k shares traded after the split...



It sounds like to me there will be plenty of shares to trade and if there is not, this will benefit the people who hold the shares because this will cause a bidding war for any shares that are available. The liquidity of the stock will be a nonfactor for owners.

yes it can be of great use...and could help, down the road...but in the meantime, is not likely to anything but bad for shareholders...



If you are helping the company out down the road, you are helping the shareholders out now. Why would you buy a company with no vision?

institutional investors will not give a crap about kblb...down the perhaps...but that will be way down the road...



Maybe they will, maybe they won't. If KBLB truly has a game-changing product and can prove mass-production, my guess is they will want to dabble.

Jakito

02/26/21 5:45 PM

#215682 RE: igotthemojo #215663

But silly to use the current average volume to predict the volume when trading on NASDAQ though don’t you think?

SilkRoad

02/26/21 7:57 PM

#215703 RE: igotthemojo #215663

Some hedge fund or institution with an eye for new environmentally friendly technology coukd take a flyer on KBLB after the split so long as the word gets out. So I disagree with:

institutional investors will not give a crap about kblb...down the perhaps...but that will be way down the road...



MtheMovement, the fashion designer who also has written for The Robb Report about fashion, has been very much about working with environmentally friendly materials which is what attracted him to KBLB’s spidersilk.

Everytime we wash our polyester clothes we are putting plastic into our drinking water. Spidersilk, and Spydasilk, may be a new fiber to combat this plastic pollution. I think this is a very attractive feature to some investors and hedge funds who are looking for environmentally friendly products to invest in. And I think all it will take to generate some interest is one or two research firms to start researching and following KBLB along with some exciting products and prototypes to attract this interest. But if Kim can’t make metric tons this won’t ever happen. I wish he would make a metric ton first, ship silk, and get a prototype or product out before uplist. Then the road is paved and proven. I dunno. Maybe he can do both at the same time.

We’ll see what happens. IMHO

Spydasilk: