4Kids Entertainment (NYSE:KDE) Top gestern 11 3/16
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eröffnet am: | 18.01.01 10:47 von: | Blackbull | Anzahl Beiträge: | 5 |
neuester Beitrag: | 20.01.01 14:22 von: | Kicky | Leser gesamt: | 4442 |
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interessant
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witzig
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gut analysiert
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informativ
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Natürlich kann man auch mit 4Kids Glück haben,derzeit laufen vor allem Smallcaps ganz gut.Nur sind darunter auch viele Eintagsfliegen.Du bist hier in einem Bord,wo es unselige Erfahrungen mit Zockeronline und den von ihm gepushten Aktien gibt.Nun ist er offenbar ehrbar geworden und gibt einen Teil seiner früheren Tätigkeit an globemedia ab.Clive McKee,der Direktor von Adelong ,dürfte hier noch vielen in guter Erinnerung sein.Wie hiess sie noch die Goldaktie?ABADOR -und das unselige Interview mit Wallstreet-online in dessen Folge McKee nach Genf entschwand.Die Börse in Sidney sperrte damals Abador nach dem Skandal.Es gibt hier sicher noch einige die sich daran erinnern.
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Anbei einen Auszug:
Hans-Rudi Moser, one of the influential European fund managers whose foreign cash helped fuel the dot com boom in Western Australia, has returned to Perth to pick over the bargains.
Moser, along with fellow European fund managers like Ludger Kohmascher, Thomas Roeggla and Andreas Reitmeier, wrote the cheques for many of Perth's dot com deals which achieved backdoor sharemarket listings via dormant exploration stocks.
Many of those deals were done by a group of corporate accountants headed by Reg Gillard that became well known as "the Balcatta Boys", after the working-class Perth suburb.
During the high-tech boom, the Balcatta Boys were the most valuable networking connections in Perth. Seasoned stock promoters soon learned that enticing a Moser, Reitmeier, Kohmascher or Roeggla onto a share register almost guaranteed an overnight sharemarket run on their shares.
In the wake of the tech crash, however, many of those stocks have returned to their penny dreadful status.
But in an interview with The Australian Financial Review, Moser said many of the individual clients of his Investa AG group, from countries like Austria, Switzerland, Holland, Germany and the UK, had been clever enough to sell their high-tech stocks during the bull run.
"A lot of the clients have made enormous profits ... and a lot of them did realise the profits," Moser said.
"A year ago we had such a strong upturn in the market, a boom that drove prices to record levels, like Davnet being $6, like Shield Equities being about 80¢, Union Capital going up to 60¢, Spinifex going up to 45¢.
"These were levels where a lot of our clients said, 'We have made so much money, let's go out.'
"Of course, if a share price goes up from 10¢ to 60¢, or like in the case of Davnet from 20¢ to $6, then you have to be stupid not to be realising your profit."
Moser said the fact that Investa AG had often invested at a seed capital stage meant his clients weren't as exposed to the high-tech crash as many other punters.
"Some of the clients didn't sell, but as they have gone into these stocks at usually low levels, they are now breaking even, or they are losing up to 40 or 50 per cent. So it's not that bad."
Moser said he also believed the other European fund managers, like Roeggla, had also sold stock into the high-tech boom before April.
"I can't speak for them, but I think they have also realised the profits from many companies," Moser said.
But eight months after the tech crash, Moser is back in town with his satchel of cash, looking for oversold bargains for his European clients in the high-tech and related sectors.
It is understood Moser has invested about $1.5 million in Perth-based legal services group AussieCover Ltd, while Investa AG clients have also increased their collective stake in Davnet via a $4.2 million placement and a $9.5 million share swap.
Quelle: http://afr.com/it/2001/01/02/FFX4LHK0FHC.html
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3) TSO then uses other GOPHERS to raise shares at .50 cents to put money into the company. Their shares are restricted.
4) He then uses the money raised by the company to put into his pocket or to promote the stock to sell his own free shares. He doesn't care about the company. Often he uses money raised by the public company to acquire companies controlled by himself or fronted by his gophers to siphon out money from the company or issue new free shares based on fictitious notes or values.
5) Once the dump is finished, the company goes dormant or bankrupt, so that he starts again.
6) Whatever the company owns belongs to the TSO.
7) He hides behind the corporation, he uses gophers to do the job for him, so the money trail stops at the company. He hides behind a battery of attorneys.
8) He gets other people to guarantee loans or assume debits from the public companies. He then uses threats, lawsuits, rules to kick the individuals off the company
bei ragingbull gefunden
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"Shild Kursverlust 86,5 %
Surfboard 84,8 %
Third Rail (AMX) 83,5 %
Davnet 83,2 %
Adultshop 80,3 %
Global Doctor 76,5 %
Spinifex Gold 75,8 %
Union Capital 72,3 %
My Casino 58.0 %
wenn amn folgenden Artikel bei ragingbull liest,kommt man auf schlechte Gedanken:By: InvestigateIntl $$
Are you a charistmatic, greedy, scum-sucking bottom feeder who can just as easily screw over your own grandmother as a perfect stranger? Do lie detectors spontaneously combust when you?re in the room? Do you want to make a million bucks cunning, cheating and scamming gullible fools eager to make a quick score? Is a puddle of drool gathering at your feet at this very moment? If so, you are qualified for a career in investor relations or, in layman?s terms, stock promotion.
I know what you?re thinking: The stock boom is over and we missed it. Well, you?re wrong. Sure, the dot-com craze has faded and tech stocks are taking a beating, but so what? There will be another bubble, another craze. And besides, there are more investors than there have ever been and they?re all motivated by one thing ? avarice. There are still plenty of suckers out there, some greedier and dumber than others. It?s your job to find them.
There are a few things you need to know. A promoter must have an office and it has to be downtown because that?s where the action is and where you make your contacts. It?s also crucial for the sake of appearances, and appearances create the illusion of credibility. You?ll also need it once you?ve snagged your first deal, so get it set up right away.
You probably won?t have much capital at the start, so the best option is a packaged office. There are plenty downtown. For a monthly lump sum you?ll get an office, phone lines, furniture, a boardroom, a receptionist and various perks based on the space. Try to get the slickest space available, so when you lure suspicious investor types or potential contracts into your web they?ll be impressed, which means you?re already halfway to fleecing them. It?s also much easier to make a midnight move if all you have to do is grab your computers and run ? and believe me it?s important to be mobile in this business.
So now you?ve got an office, phones (at least four or five) a fax line, computers for your database and business cards. Don?t over-look the business cards, and get the best-looking ones money can buy. As I?ve already said, appearances are everything and that?s all you?ve got to offer. So what?s next? You?ve got to be able to talk the talk. You don?t have to be an expert. Just read some of the hot investor magazines and the newspaper business pages, and get up to speed on the high-tech and Internet worlds. Then go practise on your friends. If they get a glazed look in their eyes as you talk, you?ve got it down. If they get excited, put them at the top of your list and devour them like little bunnies once you?ve got a
deal.
?Friends? are vital in this business, and you?ll need a lot of them. To begin making contacts, find the watering holes where your new buddies consume copious amounts of alcohol to deal with their stress and guilty consciences.
As I?ve already said and will say again, appearances are everything. Look sharp. Get an expensive and hip suit. And don?t wear a cheap pair of shoes. There?s no bigger giveaway than a guy in a great suit wearing a pair of shoes he bought at Wal-Mart. People will look at your feet ? they?re not invisible so don?t be a lame ass. And make sure you have a cell phone. Get a good one.
You should also acquaint yourself with some lower-profile stock deals that have done well. Make sure they?re not locally based because when you start referring to them as past deals you?ve worked on, someone might trip you up. Even then you might get caught out but it?s unlikely. It?s important to have a track record, so make one up. If people think you?ve had some winners, they?re likely to do business with you. Remember it?s all about greed; no one?s
going to do anything for you because you?ve got a great personality?though a healthy dose of charisma is essential.
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