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jeunke22

11/30/22 8:08 AM

#123902 RE: LightwaveLong #123899

Institutions have to make sure they maximize the turnover speed of their money. It’s like a factory using its fullest capacity 24/7 to maximize their return on investment. They will accumulate shares and make money 24/7 by loaning them out to shorts in and by share price appreciation. No risk for them, the risk is transferred to the shorts. A catalyst like an unexpected announcement of a deal/ revenue will tip the balance and a call back of their shares. JMHO
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x993231

11/30/22 8:34 AM

#123906 RE: LightwaveLong #123899

No not so, the shorts would absolutely love for you to think that. Just like everything in life after a while folks start to think it will never change then wham, oops, end of game.

I think you are younger so let me think, Oh like housing prices over the past year they were going up every week. Mortgage rates under 5 or 10 percent for years, that was not real and had to end. You may or may not remember stock market bubbles. Oh how about crypto, how about Moores law, dirt cheap airfare, Enron, Silver prices (hunt brothers) remember game stop that had 1/100 the immediate need as Lightwave I can go on and on.

They are called short because that is what they do, and while they can do it for years the world needs this stuff now.

It will end, they do need to exit, they do not even know if they made any money until they bought back the shares. This has far and away too much promise for it not to end with a big ol bang.

Xster I don't mind shorting, it is the dishonesty to take money from people is what I don't like. I'd bet that if you dropped your wallet in front of tehm in a store, they would tap you on the shoulder and tell you then look at their kids and put $100 of in the salvation army on the way out of the store. But yet they make up things about folks they have never met and think it is an honest way to make a buck. Just because it is legal doesn't make it moral, but that is how the world is headed.

Hang in there they are providing discounted shares to those that have powder. I'll send you a patent message in a few minutes.
Bullish
Bullish
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tedpeele

11/30/22 10:11 AM

#123926 RE: LightwaveLong #123899

With over 100 million shares in the hands of retail, isn't it possible that retail has the most control over the price on a day to day basis?

How much of retail is not committed to the long term? Even if the answer is 20 million, doesn't that compete pretty strongly with the portion held by shorts and the institutions that also are not committed to the long term?

Management owns some 7%, which leaves around 100 million on the hands of the public -- is there any way to know how much of the public holdings are under lock and barrel vs how much is being freely traded?