Please share where I said that Priceline was an OTC stock. You seem to make statements, get proven wrong, and then make completely new statements to try to recover.
Priceline has never been an OTC stock nor had convertible debt or rampant dilution.
You and Smurf offer that a RS will wipe out current shareholders. That is only true if they decided to do a RS before wiping out debt - especially toxic debt. If there is no dilution to come, then it is just a stock restructure - no different than cutting a pizza into less slices.
As for your...
Once again the amount of convertible debt is higher at the end of 2025 than it was at the beginning. It is not going down.
That is just ignorance. I am guessing you are only referring to convertible loans, not convertible notes nor preferred C's - which were for the most part, convertible debt exchanged for convertible preferred stock - these other forms of debt and debt that looks like equity have all improved tremendously. But lets look at the one aspect - convertible debt:
Right before the last runup, there was a ton of stock dumped slowly. Then over a 3 day period, there was a concerted effort to drop the stock price - a quick dump with volume. You probably remember it because I have mentioned it maybe 30 times. What happened was the stock was being shorted by the lender - you have called it "shorting the box." It is basically selling shares that are owed before they are converted. This is done in an effort to lower the stock price to benefit from the toxic mechanism of 70% of market price conversion. The lower the price, the more shares converted - compounded by a discounted conversion price.
Well, that dump got the price down substantially. Enough that HMBL refused to pay and defaulted on the shares requested. HMBL then faced a lawsuit or a payment of the default price originally negotiated. Instead, the company negotiated a fixed price conversion. This kept HMBL from going out of business over toxic games such as this until the company gave up. It was a powerful shift. HMBL agreed to double it's then outstanding loan amount in return for a conversion rate of .00001177 for most of the debt. There is your "debt is going up" argument.
In reality, the dollar amount of convertible loans went from $1.2mil to $2.4mil as of last Q, but the company eliminated the toxic debt on those loans and negotiated a fixed conversion rate. Like debt consolidation from credit cards to a straight loan with easy monthly payments. A substantially better deal for the company.
Further, convertible notes were paid off in 2025 - $1mil paid. Convertible loans related party was paid off - $385k BRU deal - a hidden convertible note deal was paid off - savings of millions AND, 9000 preferred C's were paid.
Those preferred C's were the topic of conversation by you and tiebow as the ultimate destroyer of any chance HMBL had because it would add anywhere from 30bil to 90 bil in dilution. Turns out, it didn't add anything. So much for the sky falling.