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Georgia Bard

09/05/01 6:13 PM

#2853 RE: Bixmann #2852

hehehehe, I made a few calls on your last crock on nonsense. I talked to Kaufman himself and made a few more inquiries and find highly interesting that your off-topic site is no longer up.

Again, you are consistent at getting egg slammed in your face on this stock.

You continue to show you know nothing and I mean absolutely nothing about International trade synergy, Product Life Cycle of Trade, Mature markets (entry and exit barriers) from your last nonsense I can;t even tell if you know the difference of Import and Export or what marketshare to relate to or anything else. You just like to stir up trouble and thread disrupt.

It takes Bart months to get this and you can discount it with one call posing (falsehood) as a venture capitalist? And now because you could not get a distributorship it is not real?

You are so unbelieveable at times. The old saying is never fall in =love with a stock but you should never hate one as much as you do this one. You can;t even find good slams or things to refute. But here goes on the refute.

Ever heard of China Intel and considered the assembly factor or why companies import and export. Apparently you do not understand that companies trade internationally for strategic export and import advantages or incentives such as:

Exporting:
1. Use of Excess Capacity
2. Reduced production costs per unit
3. Increased markup
4. Spread of risk

Importing:
1. Cheaper supplies
2. Additions to product line
3. Reduction of risk of nonsupply
4. Cost Reduction
5. Greater Profitability
6. Risk Spreading
7. Trading in the Internationalization Process

In a price war China always wins is a saying I heard over the pass few days. But the Product life Cycle is in a decline as with all the news of IBM going toward service HP/Compar merging to try and make it. SO here is the basics as the cycle is starting over again.

The Product Life Cycle Theory:
Thus the production location for many products moves from one country to another depending on the stage in the product’s life cycle.

Stage 1: Introduction
* The introduction stage is marked by
*** Innovation in response to observed need
*** Exporting by the innovative country
*** Evolving product
*** Location and Importance of Innovation
*** Exports and Labor

Stage 2: Growth
* Growth is characterized by
*** Increases in exports by the innovating country
*** More competition
*** Increased capital intensity
*** Some foreign production

Stage 3: Maturity
* Maturity is characterized by
*** Decline in exports from the innovating country
*** More product standardization
*** More capital intensity
*** Increased competitiveness of price
*** Production startups in least developed countries

Stage 4: Decline
* Decline is characterized by
*** Concentration of production in least developed countries
*** Innovating country becoming net importer

C'mon Bix no matter how you try to attack this you seem to be alone consider CNNfn knows what it means and so does a lot of the media. Now this nonsense so I guess you feel no one is intersted in tapping into China.

I would not hold my breath Bix... Its only been a few weeks.







:=) Gary Swancey