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Further
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Online Trading: 7 Success Secrets - Juanita Bellavance Getting ready to do some online trading? Get the facts on options and arbitrage trading before deciding on your trading technique. Join a live teleseminar at www.surefireonlinetradingsuccess.com. Here are some things to consider in preparing to...
12 Easy Ways to Organize your Work or Home Life (or both!) - Heather Diodati 12 Easy Ways to Organize your Work or Home Life (or both!) By: Heather Diodati, DDesign You have permission to publish this article electronically or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are included. A courtesy copy of your publication...
How Multiple Server Hosting impacts your website's uptime - Godfrey E Heron This article describes the technology behind multiple server hosting and how you may utilize it to maximize your site's security and uptime Hosting of web sites has essentially become a commodity. There is very little distinguishing one hosting...
Stop Spinning Your Tires and Grow Your Business - June Campbell Does operating your business these days remind you of spinning your tires? Are you generating a lot of activity but not moving forward? Believe it or not, this could be a good sign. It could mean that you are ready to move from one stage of business...
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Exit Strategies for Public Companies
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Written By:
William Cate
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Exit Strategies for Public Company Insiders By William Cate Published January 2001 [http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/] [http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/globalvillageinvestmentclubwelcome/]
There are three ways that public company insiders can convert their equity into cash.
1. They can sell their stock to the public. This is the goal of the insiders in most OTCBB and Nasdaq Small Cap Companies. It's summarized in the axiom "Pump & Dump." The stock is promoted as the insiders sell their shares into the public buying. The SEC has spent 60 years trying to stop this practice. We have insider trading rules that ban it. Yet, the insiders' goal, in over 80% of the OTCBB companies, is to dump their stock on the public. This strategy is unprofitable for the promoters. It's not that the promoters face undue risk from an SEC investigation. The odds of a high flying turkey being investigated are about one-in-ten. The profits for insiders in "Pump & Dump" schemes are small. It costs money to promote stock. The insiders illegally pay outside promoters with part of their free-trading shares. The average "Pump & Dump" company insider nets less than $150,000 from the stock promotion. For example, the Canadian media believes the Bre-X Scandal was the biggest mining stock scam in history. These newspapers reported that only one insider made more than a million dollars from it.
2. The insiders can create an industry giant. It will qualify to trade on the New York Stock Exchange. The insiders and their heirs can live off their dividends and the occasional sale of a few shares of their stock. This is the Capitalist ideal. The insiders will retire multimillionaires. Since 1945, a few companies, like Microsoft or Apple, have made this journey to success in less than a decade. For most companies, it'll take them a lifetime to reach their goal. The insiders of these companies have better odds of success in Las Vegas. This appears to be the "Impossible Dream" of about - continued below ...
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5% of the companies trading on the OTCBB.
3. The insiders can groom their public company as a takeover target for an industry giant. Our spinoff test insiders are creating a multi-dollar share price to allow them to fund their company. The equity cash infusion will be converted into cash-producing business income. The strong share price will be used to acquire cash-producing assets. In five to seven years, the company should have a hundred million dollars in assets. An industry giant will buy the public company based upon its share price. The insiders will retire multimillionaires.
The odds of arranging a merger are better than the odds of creating an industry giant. It takes less than ten years to become the perfect merger candidate. It usually takes over 20 years to become an industry giant. It makes sense to strive to be a merger candidate.
In ten years, a promoter can run about four "Pump & Dump" public companies. These promotions could earn the promoter about a half-million dollars. The promoter could create one real company and groom it as a merger candidate. In ten years, the promoter can walk away as a multimillionaire.
The most profitable strategy in going public is to build a company and seek a friendly merger. It's this group of merger oriented entrepreneurs that I want to help.
To contact the author: Visit the Beowulf Investments website: [http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/] Or, visit the Global Village Investment Club Website: [http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/globalvillageinvestmentclubwelcome/]
About the Author He has been the Managing Director of Beowulf Investments [http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/] since 1981 and is the Executive Director of the Global Village Investment Club [http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/globalvillageinvestmentclubwelcome/]
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