[ale] OT: corporate finance 101
rob hoppe
hoppe at mindspring.com
Wed Jan 23 00:11:51 EST 2002
Chris Fowler wrote:
> Many reasons. I've worked for a few public companies and can say never in
> my life have I learned to scam like those guys. I have a saying.
>
> When you are a child you believe money grows on tress.
> You grow up and realize that is false.
> Then, you work for a public company. You know somewhere there
> must be a damn tree with money growing on it!
>
> This is especially true for companies who have little sales.
>
> How do they do this. Easy, fools that want to invest. If you had a crazy
> brother that wanted to star his company you would give him say $100.00. He
> would ask for $100.00 each week. Sometime you ask. "When am I going to get
> my return?"
> When investors ask this, it is time to find another fool.
>
> Stock Prices. These could be used for many things. Lets say you had $0 in
> the bank and you wanted to buy another company. You in agreement with that
> company decide to give them 100,000 shares at a value of $40 per share.
> Before the deal is closed the price goes to $20. Now you have to fork over
> 200,000 shares. Or maybe the deal goes null and void. I believe that stock
> is good for the economy but so many companies fail in 3 areas.
>
> 1. Management
> 2. Innovation
> 3. Sales
>
> I believe they can fall in that order but someone correct me or add to the
> list. When you are public your books become public knowledge. When sales
> fall you it reflects in your quarterly statements. Read some of a failing
> company. Read the press releases you can sense the death or failure.
> Basically 2 and 3 are a bad cycle. Without innovation no one buys. Without
> sales you can't pay development costs. You then spiral like a plane out of
> control until you crash. So you try to recover. You do the following.
>
> 1. Fire Management
> 2. Hire New
>
> You Hire New to pump faith into investors on the future of the company.
>
> 3. Recruit investors
> 4. Pump out press releases that fluff your company
>
> This will continue until you pull out of a spin or hit the ground. Problem
> is there are fools wiling to invest. Too many fools. It is a slow and
> painful death for you and your employees but the company somehow manages to
> go on. This is the way it is with many public companies that are in this
> environment.
>
> How do you fix it? SCAM!
>
> Find any rule you can get around or break that makes those quarterly reports
> look good. Hint, reports are due 45 days after end of quarter. If you
> invested in a company that released theirs on that last day they can only be
> 2 reasons.
>
> 1. Laziness (Unlikely)
> 2. Loss of $$$
>
> If a report looks good the faster it is released the better the stock price.
> You can basically be loosing money but if you can keep the price up, you can
> get investments. Oh yea, keep the business plans pumping out of the works.
> Create
> a new for each loss of investor. If you like drama, become an office in a
> public company that is a failure.
>
> Sometimes a company can't get investments. If the price is too low they
> have to pump out major amounts of sales to pay bills, pay salaries. Every
> time they do this it can dilute the shares owned by shareholders. Not a
> nice thing.
>
> Feed on this. You need 2 elements to break rules or laws.
>
> 1. Opportunity
> 2. Time
>
> How to become a .com billionaire.
>
> 1. Find a dumb investor
> 2. Build a pseudo company
> 3. Market the hell out of vaporware
> 4. IPO
> 5. Wait till you bloackout time is over
> 6. Sell your stock or live a nice lifestyle
> 7. Bankrupt the company
>
> Many did the above correctly. It was too late for LinuxOne.
>
> Enron had both.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: James P. Kinney III [mailto:jkinney at localnetsolutions.com]
> Sent: Monday, January 21, 2002 8:29 PM
> To: Atlanta Linux User Group (E-mail)
> Subject: [ale] OT: corporate finance 101
>
> Why do companies panic when their stock price falls? They are not the
> ones selling it. Unless they are in IPO, or have a new release. The
> stock buyer pays the stock seller. The only time the company gets the
> money is when they are selling. Someone please enlighten me as it makes
> no sense.
>
> I've been reading on the Enron mess and it stinks.
Enron hid everything in false sales much as other companies I have been witness
to. Some looked great on falsefied books. Look at the product and the need for
that product. Cars were a great stock until everybody made one.
I heard on the radio a new power source is coming and the inventor will not tell
who he is or how it works until he can get out the working models. A demo of
the product is running a set of light bulbs off of a set of batteries using the
new! power source and the batteries or still charged after hours of on-time.
The cold-fusion process probably worked well but the people were quieted due to
killing the oil companies. If this new power source works would you buy oil
stocks?
--
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_/ Rob Hoppe (Atlanta)
_/ 770-995-5099
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_/ 154*32*21121 Nextel Radio
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