News Focus
News Focus
icon url

Kadolor

09/16/10 4:18 AM

#18340 RE: narekm13 #18336

Usually, to learn how to trade, you have to loose money to have the good reflex.

As I already told, you can't "invest" in an OTC or Pink the same way you invest in a share quoted in NASDAQ or NYSE.

Usually, the shares quoted on the NASDAQ or NYSE have a real project, a real product or provide a service, earn money or loose money, but they sell "something".

In the case of an OTC or a Pink, usually they don't sell anything or in a small quatity, they have so many projects (gold, oil, software, real estate,) and in fact they have "so many projects" that no one is ok.

So buy OTC or pink at a low level, a stock with volume, and wait untill the next jump. Then sell!

If the stock continues to jump, too bad, let's find another one.
if like MMUH the stock goes back to the same level, try to buy at 0.0003 or 0.0004.

icon url

tnzalu

09/16/10 8:50 AM

#18345 RE: narekm13 #18336

With all the prognosticating about OTC stocks and companies on the MMUH board, let's bring it back home to MMUH. Like many OTC stocks, MMUH the ticker has a history. The fact is that it is a lot cheaper for a 'going concern' company to take possession of a pinksheet shell than it is to initiate a new ticker. Smart investors realize these changes and adapt their trading accordingly.

What has occurred with MMUH is a real business offering a highly viable product in a burgeoning industry has taken possession of the MMUH ticker, heavily diluted to gain control over the share structure and bought up its own shares.

So with respect to pump and dump, considering our new support is 2x our dilution low, and now holding, and now basing higher, and now setting new post-dilution highs, what say we give new leadership the benefit of the doubt while we measure their say/do ratio.

For example, if they aren't accumulating shares, let's take that into consideration. But it appears to me that shareholders are being concentrated, and I am accumulating so that I can be part of the distribution phase. The rules are no different here than any bigboard stock. The stakes are simply higher.