Leave the posting to someone else if you don't even know how to do the math. Also you're wrong anyway. The outstanding (not FLOAT) shares would be MAXIMUM 323 million if the price went to zero, NOT "minimum 360 million". You're wrong on both counts. They can't get more than 210 million as you are stating. The deal was setup so they get a maximum # of shares. The higher the shareprice goes, the less shares they get. If it went to zero, the most they get is 210 million. Don't make it out worse than it actually is. That being said, it's bad enough with that many shares for only $3.5 million. If you want to turn out the lights & leave this board, I'm sure nobody will complain.