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mullimatt

04/08/08 5:21 PM

#356 RE: mullimatt #355

As well, it is obvious that the company needs money to grow. Any growth-stage company does.

Now, as an investor, where would you rather see that money come from? There are two choices:

1) From a financing company that is only going to buy the shares at a discount and then sell them on the market? (Hence increasing the float).

OR

2) From an invested party (e.g. a distributor like J&G) who has something riding on the success of the company? (i.e. the more cans they sell, the more profit they make).

Personally, I would rather option #2. Wouldn't you?

We know that J&G is not going to turn around and dump their shares into the market. This deal is only the beginning. I mean, Lebanon is only one country. J&G's outreach spans further than just one country. J&G are in this for the long haul, to build a successful, international brand.

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mullimatt

04/08/08 5:32 PM

#357 RE: mullimatt #355

EDITED share value:

5 day VWAP was $0.13

Therefore total stock owned by J&G = 17,000,000 shares

Total price paid by J&G = $500,000 + (7,000,000 * $0.13) = $1,410,000

Therefore, average price of the stock acquired by J&G = $1,410,000/17,000,000 = $0.083

In summary... sure they received shares at a discount to market price... however, these shares will not be hitting the market. These shares will be held for long term growth potential.
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Trinityz1

04/09/08 2:11 AM

#361 RE: mullimatt #355

and that spells more the possibility of pump and dump to me......
which means the investor basically protected themselves and set themselves up in case the SP rises, they can make a bundle by buying at a lower price and then DUMPING....

It doesn't matter what the product is
I've seen this happen a lot
the second thing that happens is the investor never uses the warrants and just dumps and later down the road it ends up being a sham

IDWD played the same game with investors claiming all this wild hooplah about orders and even went so far as to yell buyout with the investor based in the middle east...
That's a BIG RED flag to me.....

BUT
with IDWD if you bought in when it was down around .02 and then sold when it rocketed up to around $1.80 you made a killing and even got some dividend shares that became practically worthless later, but hey...they were free

I have more confidence in that happening right now.
It's happened too many times before
Plus there's the fact that Florida seems to be the land of scams in Pink & OTCBB land right now

I have no problem buying CSUH for .02 and then taking profits if it runs up to $2-$3 per share and keep some free shares then and watch and see if it becomes legit.....I can always buy back in later if it turns the corner and becomes successful and ride the wave.

In Pinkieland and OTCBB land, there's tons of scams and flops.
Therefore the odds are that anything from there is one of these.
What retail investors investors are hoping for is to find a gem in the rough and make some $.
When SP drops like it has with CSUH.....
I'm hearing
DANGER WILL ROBINSON! DANGER!!!
and so I keep lowering my expectations.

CSUH didn't hold at .50 per share....
When it didn't.....that's a big warning: Caution! in my book.

Do I have positive hope? Sure I do.....
But I don't invest in hope.
I am still hoping we have a bottom in sight where I can enter either as a flipper or become a long.

Neither has happened yet really.....

When this investor bought in at .05, I add in market volatility and my bottom moved from .05 to .02 and I base it purely on the past performance of other companies including another one that in recent history went through something very similar.

I just hope it stops between .01 and .02 and then moves in an upward direction.
That is what will seperate CSUH from the pack.
If they have to RS due to dilution.....then all bets are off.