I would respectfully have to disagree, and say basically that you are wrong twice.
Adam's phone calls, and mine, to the transfer agent indicate that dilution is not happening at all in the last three months.
And since you have no evidence to support your statement about a "dead" roofing company, it's hard to take that statement seriously.
Per the last PR, NSMG has been doing roughly 600,000.00 or more every month, if you figure on a 6-day week, then that's an average of 25,000.00 a day in sales, that's about 4-5 roofs on the average home COMPLETED per day, since it usually takes 2-3 days depending on whether you are doing tear-off or not, that means they would need pretty much 9-12 crews working constantly 6 days a week.
That doesn't sound "dead" to me, as a de facto partial owner of this company, it makes me quite happy in fact!
350 million in hail damages in Denver alone, Pueblo got another 100 million, and we are standing by here in Texas to get pounded this winter/spring. The traveling automobile paintless hail-ding guys make a grand a day easy here from the dealerships after a big storm, that's another sideline for NSMG right there, remember it's National STORM Management, NOT National Hurricane Chasers, lol!
For me as a long, this is outstanding news, EXACTLY what I want to hear, they have changed their business model, to a less seasonal, and more consistently profitable one. As a LONG, that's what I want. I daytrade and scalp as much as the next guy, and I understand the frustration of losing what was a great momo play when the hurricanes come to town, but since this company is still a responder, i'm sure it will get some play on future ones, but probably not as much percentage-wise as previously, because soon the price will go up, and you won't get the subsequent dips to trade on.
Right now is VERY possibly the last time you are going to find this stock at this price, JMHO of course. And at less than a penny, surely you or anyone can afford to hold a few core shares?
Dragynn