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Arnold25764

10/08/12 5:58 PM

#120231 RE: anian #120230

Yes audited fins should put all suspicions to rest..IMO
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Hoofman

10/08/12 6:20 PM

#120236 RE: anian #120230

So there is no profits in selling KMAG products and we actually occurred a loss up to 2012 and then only a little over 8% profit of the total sales worth after that....Any one in business or sales will know what this means. Oh yes....This CEO Jeff Reid needs to pay himself and award himself stock for all the hard work and savvy business skills he has demonstrated over the last 6 years. I have a security tag that it only cost 100 bucks to make and then I will sell it for 108 bucks...LMFAO!

Below is a quote I found about stock on the grey market. Read it for what its worth.


Having witnessed literally many hundreds of trading suspensions over the past 22 years, I will share with you, my readers, a secret grey market trading tip that I has never, to my knowledge, been revealed anywhere else.

You see, there’s going to be one final opportunity for a few shareholders who got caught by surprise by the trading suspension and didn’t get a chance to liquidate over the past few days. These would be the folks who were trapped in a mine somewhere or climbing Mount Everest and didn’t have access to a stock ticker with news. It could also be folks who were on a pleasure cruise on that river in Egypt. Regardless of how they got caught holding the bag, when the stock resumes trading, there will be a few days where this short lived strength in the stock exist. I’ve dubbed this secret trend “Liquidating into stupid.”

Liquidating into stupid occurs when some shareholders, unable to accept the reality, actually buy more shares at the reopen in order to bolster their hopes that it’s all a big mistake and that things will get better someday. I’ve seen this occur over and over again and theres a good chance it will happen here too. This is demonstrated by an unexplained willingness of the market to absorb sell orders at prices that seem to the rational person to be too high. I’ve even seen cases where the stock actually trades briefly higher than it was when it was suspended. Naturally, the liquidating into stupid effect is short lived as the number of active buyers rapidly dwindles while the number of folks trying to liquidate increases so hesitation can be costly.