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turokman

11/25/13 9:27 AM

#61402 RE: Snieder #61401

100 net sales was their guidance and it will barely be hit
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dakotaben

11/25/13 9:52 AM

#61411 RE: Snieder #61401

Was that before or after the uplist? Or the share buyback? Or the Medicaid approval?

Point being, there is plenty of very significant things that they have reported in the past leading investors to believe that certain things were going to happen... that just have not seemed to come true. Period.

I have never denied that there is not something special about what is going on here at MSLP, but to continually go and spend a dollar to only make less than a dollar is nothing to write home about. Give me 100M and guaranteed I could make some revenue. It seems that they say they are going to do something and then the words out of their mouths tend to end up not true.

So, it appears that DeLuca and Gregory are selling shares and the other new execs are buying... I don't necessarily think that is bad, but certainly makes for some interesting speculation, which I will continue to do.

On one hand, are these hints that the reigns of power are actually being handed over to seasoned boardroom vets? If that is true AND their heads are in the right place for the company AND themselves, I could see this as a good thing.

On the other hand, does this signify Cory and Jeremy becoming disinterested in the company? I am not really a fan of that. Perhaps Gregory does not belong in the boardroom, but he is a dynamic individual who has been the figurehead for quite some time. And as much as I am indifferent about Jeremy, he has some fairly significant ties in the industry that I don't think would be good to lose.

You can talk about how awesome they are all day long, but the reality is that as a long term investment(over 1 year), thus far, the only thing that MSLP has been is stinker. It has sucked. Put into pre-R/S pps prices, a pound of poop is more expensive and valuable than a share of MSLP.

Is there hope? yes. But put that hope in one hand and put the poop in the other... see which one fills up first. At some point, they need to deliver to shareholders something more than hope.