MediJane Holdings Inc $MJMD: A Blatant marijuana pump and dump

On May 13th prior to the market open I received the first emails touting MediJane Holdings (MJMD) from Support@DividendOpportunities.com and weekly@nbtequitygroup.com. The emails linked to http://www.undervaluedquarterly.com/mjmd/MediJane2.html. With marijuana stocks and pumps both doing poorly recently and the recent SEC trading suspensions of marijuana stock FSPM and StockTips.com pump PGFY it is very unlikely the the price of MJMD will go up much more.

 

 

Disclosed budget: up to  $400,000 per week (?)
Promoter:  UnderValued Quarterly & David Katz
Paying party: Globalvision Communications LLC
Shares outstanding: 63,000,000
Previous closing price: $1.09
Market capitalization: $68 million

Screenshot of pump page:

mjmd_screenshot

PDF copy of pump page

 

Excerpt from disclaimer:

This is a paid advertisement by The UnderValued Quarterly Newsletter (“UVQ”). UVQ has received $20,000 from or on behalf of Globalvision Communications LLC (“GMS”) in compensation for this advertisement to enhance public awareness of MediJane Inc (“MediJane” or the “Company”).

GMS is managing an online weekly advertising budget of up to $400,000 USD in an effort to build industry and investor awareness, paid to GMS from a shareholder(s) of MediJane.

 

Full disclaimer:

mjmd_disclaimer

MJMD_chart

Disclaimer: I have no position in any stock mentioned above. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

SEC Suspends trading in Stocktips.com pump & dump Pingify $PGFY

This morning at about 9:25 AM the SEC suspended trading in Pingify (PGFY). Trading will reopen at the market open on May 29th. Pingify was the current promotion by StockTips.com, which is by far the most effective currently active stock promoter. The emails from Stocktips.com promoting PGFY disclosed expected compensation of $6.5 million. Stocktips.com used images for disclaimers and has already deleted all mentions of PGFY from their website and has deleted the images. Below is the text of the Stocktips.com PGFY pump email I received at 8:41 AM this morning:

pick_pgfy

Hello StockTips.com Member!

Hey kids. Statler here. Today could be the day I have been speaking about for PGFY!!!

The Tipping point appears to be imminent for PGFY

Remember yesterday I told you about PGFY looking extremely poised for a MASSIVE BREAKOUT???

Well I think PGFY is about to “BREAKOUT

Again, “Remember the 2.00…” I believe you should keep that number very close in your minds eye… As PGFY seems poised to pop and I would not be surprised to see it run to 2.00 starting today!

I think this is the last time we see PGFY at these levels.

Everyone is now talking about PGFY‘s potential breakout…

For those of you living on planet Mars, let me tell you about what I see with PGFY and why I simply love PGFY:

 

  1. PGFY is in a WHITE HOT market. The mobile market, especially after the Facebook acquisition of Whatsapp for 19 Billion (yes that’s billion with a “B”) is one of the hottest in the world. And this is where PGFY plays.
  2. Hot product – The PGFY app addresses the massive problem of information overload. Their app sends messages to users phones called “Pings” that contain short, targeted, relevant messages that help users cut through the clutter and get just what info they want, when they want it.
  3. Super hot timing – The massive successful beta test with Ebay has proven the PGFY concept out. When this relationship begins generating revenue, we could see parabolic gains.

I know that you understand how important timing is when trading stock. If you catch the right window of time on a deal you can make a killing and if you miss that window then you are plain out of luck. So reading emails is fine… Googling around and reading reviews of a deal is fine. All of it is fine… Up to a point. And then you have to act.

So you see if you have been on the fence with PGFY I get it. There were rough waters for a while. But I truly believe in my heart that the storm has past and we could see massive gains on PGFY!

So what are you going to do?

Happy Trading,

 

Mike Statler
Co-Editor, StockTips

Below is a copy of Stocktips.com’s disclaimer on PGFY (underlining not in the original):

PGFY_disclaimer
(click image to enlarge)

 

SEC suspension press release (PDF)
SEC suspension order (PDF)

 

From the SEC press release:

The Commission temporarily suspended trading in the securities of PGFY because of concerns
regarding potential manipulative activity in Pingify’s common stock that appears to be related
to a promotional campaign currently being conducted through various Internet web sites. This
order was entered pursuant to Section 12(k) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange
Act).

 

This trading suspension was not a surprise to me. I thought it highly likely a few days ago but was too cheap to pay the hard to borrow fees at Centerpoint Securities the last couple days to short. (I am short 1,000 shares at Interactive Brokers).

 

pgfy

 

Disclaimer: I am short 1,000 shares of PGFY. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

SEC Suspends trading in Cannabusiness Group $CBGI

This morning in premarket the SEC suspended trading in Cannabusiness Group (CBGI). It joins PHOTCDFTPTOGAVNE, and CANN on the list of marijuana stocks that have been suspended by the SEC this year.  CBGI will reopen for trading at the market open on Wednesday, May 21st.

SEC suspension press release (PDF)
SEC suspension order (PDF)

 

From the SEC press release:

The Commission temporarily suspended trading in the securities of CBGI because of
questions that have been raised about the accuracy and adequacy of publicly disseminated
information concerning, among other things, the company’s operations.

The Commission acknowledges FINRA’s assistance in this matter.

 

cbgi

 

Disclaimer: No position in any stock mentioned above. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

A Win in court for John Babikian of Awesomepennystocks

John Babikian of Awesomepennystocks.com won a reduction in the size of the asset freeze against him and also had the writs of attachment against his fractional interest in a NetJets plane, two houses in Los Angeles, and his vineyard vacated.

See the document on Scribd:

Case 1:14-cv-01740-PAC Document 36-1 Filed 04/30/14 Page 1 of 3


Disclaimer: I have no position in any stock mentioned above. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

 

Why a paid pump is bad news for Fortitude Group $FRTD shareholders

Most of the people trading (and getting rich on paper) off of marijuana stocks are new to the wonderful, wild, and woolly world of OTC stocks. Let me do them a kindness (that they will almost universally ignore) by explaining how pump and dumps work. Most of the companies whose stocks trade on the OTCBB or OTCMarkets are either failing companies or scams. There are some real companies on the OTC but they are few and far between and many of them are just bad companies. Lighting Science (LSCG) and Noble Roman’s (NROM) are a couple great examples — I made big money selling both of them short in 2007 and early 2008. Both are still below the prices at which I covered. And these are some of the better OTC companies.

 

$78,693profitNROMShort Stock
auto-import all trades old IB account

Posted by MichaelGoode /
http://profit.ly/1MmgQX

$88,401profitLSCGShort Stock
auto-import all trades old IB account

Posted by MichaelGoode /
http://profit.ly/1MmgQE

It is true that some companies do eventually acquire a real stock market listing after being OTC stocks and some of these companies do well. But these companies are even more rare.

Most of the companies on the OTC — if they are not outright scams / set up for the sole purpose of selling shares in a pump and dump — are marginal companies with inept management with little hope of survival without continuous dilutive financing. Management of these companies are usually dumb or inexperienced. Serious people with serious backing do not reverse-merge their companies into OTC shell companies.

There is one thing I can see that can quickly make me very skeptical of a company’s prospects and that is a paid stock promotion. If someone pays for a stock promotion they are desperate to sell shares — if there were plenty of buyers for their shares they would just sell. Instead, they pay promoters to pump the stock and find buyers so they can dump their shares. A sizable stock promotion is a clear sign that a fairly large shareholder is not bullish on the company and they are in a hurry to sell. So when I received emails yesterday morning from a couple stock promoters promoting Fortitude Group (FRTD) I tweeted that that was a bad sign for investors in the company:

 

 

Of course the #wolfpack didn’t see it that way because their idea of due diligence is to listen to some anonymous guy with no particular experience or understanding other than he had the good idea to buy marijuana-related stocks last autumn and early winter. Some of the OTC-traded marijuana companies may do well but I believe they all will fail. The odds are even worse for those companies that have undergone paid stock promotions, including SKTO,  SMVR, NGMC, WBXU, EMBR, PZOO, PLPL, PTOG, XTRM, NVLX, REFG, ICBU, AXXE, PUGE,  ERBB, TRTC. And these are only the paid pumps I found in a quick 5-minute search of my inbox.

Below are screenshots of the disclaimers of two of the promotional emails I received this morning on FRTD (click images to see full-size):

frtd_2 frtd_1

I could go into some details on why Fortitude is a bad company and how horribly inadequate their disclosures to OTCMarkets are (the company is not an SEC-reporting company) but I don’t wish to waste any more time trying to convince the marijuana cult members not to drink the hemp Kool-Aid.

Disclaimer: I have no position in any stock mentioned above. I have made money buying and short selling many of the above-mentioned stocks. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

Black River Petroleum $BRPC gets promoted by Capital Financial Media via landing page

With a high price, relatively large market cap, big move on low volume since the pump started, and small pump budget, BRPC is an almost ideal short. There is an online landing page here: http://www2.untappedwealthonline.com/brpc/index.html

StockMister.com has been compensated Eighteen-Thousand Dollars Cash via Bank Wire Transfer by a third party (Speak Easy Media LLC) for a 1 Day Marketing Program regarding WIIM.

More recently I have received emails linking to a landing page: http://www2.untappedwealthonline.com/wiim/index.html

Disclosed budget: $250,000
Promoter:  Capital Financial Media / Rising Stock Advisor
Paying party: Intermix Corp
Shares outstanding: 72,093,414
Previous closing price: $1.09
Market capitalization: $78 million

header

brpc

PDF copy of landing page

 

Excerpt from disclaimer:

 Black River Petroleum,(BRPC), the company featured in this issue, appears as paid advertising, paid by Intermix Corp to provide public awareness for BRPC.

CFM has received and managed a total production budget of $250,000 for this print advertising effort and will retain any amounts over and above the cost of production, copy writing services, mailing and other distribution expenses, as a fee for its services. Rising Stock Advisor is paid $2,500 as an editorial fee from CFM and also expects to receive new subscriber revenue as a result of this advertising effort.

Full disclaimer:

IMPORTANT NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER: This featured company sponsored advertising issue of Rising Stock Advisor does not purport to provide an analysis of any company’s financial position, operations or prospects and this is not to be construed as a recommendation by Rising Stock Advisor or an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any security. Black River Petroleum,(BRPC), the company featured in this issue, appears as paid advertising, paid by Intermix Corp to provide public awareness for BRPC. Intermix Corp has approved and signed off as “approved for public dissemination” all statements made herein regarding BRPC’s history, assets, technologies, current as well as prospective business operations and industry information. Rising Stock Advisor and Capital Financial Media (CFM) has used outside research and writers using public information to create the advertisement coming from Rising Stock Advisor about BRPC. Although the information contained in this advertisement is believed to be reliable, Rising Stock Advisor and CFM makes no warranties as to the accuracy of any of the content here in and accepts no liability for how readers may choose to utilize the content. Readers should perform their own due-diligence, including consulting with a licensed, qualified investment professional or analyst. Further, readers are strongly urged to independently verify all statements made in this advertisement and perform extensive due diligence on this or any other advertised company. Rising Stock Advisor is not offering securities for sale. An offer to buy or sell can be made only with accompanying disclosure documents and only in the states and provinces for which they are approved. Many states have established rules requiring the approval of a security by a state security administrator. Check with http://www.nasaa.org or call your state security administrator to determine whether a particular security is licensed for sale in your state. Many companies have information filed with state securities regulators and many will supply investors with additional information on request. CFM has received and managed a total production budget of $250,000 for this print advertising effort and will retain any amounts over and above the cost of production, copy writing services, mailing and other distribution expenses, as a fee for its services. Rising Stock Advisor is paid $2,500 as an editorial fee from CFM and also expects to receive new subscriber revenue as a result of this advertising effort. *More information can be received from BRPC’s investor relations firm. Further, specific financial information, filings and disclosures as well as general investor information about publicly traded companies like BRPC, advice to investors and other investor resources are available at the Securities and Exchange Commission website www.sec.gov and www.nasd.com. Any investment should be made only after consulting with a qualified investment advisor and after reviewing the publicly available financial statements of and other information about the company and verifying that the investment is appropriate and suitable. Investing in securities is highly speculative and carries a great deal of risk especially as to new companies with limited operations and no history of earnings. The information contained herein contains forward-looking information within the meaning of section 27a of the Securities Act of 1993, as amended, and section 21e of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, including statements regarding expected growth of the featured company. In accordance with the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, BRPC notes that statements contained herein that look forward in time, which include everything other than historical information, involve risks and uncertainties that may affect the Company’s actual results of operations. Factors that could cause actual results to differ include the size and growth of the market, the Company’s ability to fund its capital requirements in the near term and in the long term; pricing pressures, technology issues etc.

Disclaimer: I have no position in any stock mentioned above. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

Mining Minerals of Mexico $WIIM gets a landing page pump

Mining Minerals of Mexico (WIIM) had been promoted via email by crappy pumpers for awhile — my first emails were in premarket on April 1st, 2014 by Stockmister.com:

StockMister.com has been compensated Eighteen-Thousand Dollars Cash via Bank Wire Transfer by a third party (Speak Easy Media LLC) for a 1 Day Marketing Program regarding WIIM.

More recently I have received emails linking to a landing page: http://www2.untappedwealthonline.com/wiim/index.html

Disclosed budget: $400,000
Promoter:  M3 Profit Accelerator and List Data Solutions
Paying party: Duvana Holdings
Shares outstanding: 108,403,327
Previous closing price: $0.346
Market capitalization: $37 million

wiim_chart

PDF copy of landing page

 

Excerpt from disclaimer:

Mining Minerals of Mexico Corp.,(WIIM), the company featured in this issue, appears as paid advertising, paid by Duvana Holdings to provide public awareness for WIIM. Duvana Holdings has approved and signed off as “approved for public dissemination” all statements made herein regarding WIIM’s history, assets, technologies, current as well as prospective business operations and industry information. M3 Profit Accelerator and List Data Solutions (LDS) has used outside research and writers using public information to create the advertisement coming from M3 Profit Accelerator about WIIM.

LDS has received and managed a total production budget of $400,000 for this print advertising effort and will retain any amounts over and above the cost of production, copywriting services, mailing and other distribution expenses,as a fee for its services. M3 Profit Accelerator is paid $2,500 as an editorial fee from LDS and also expects to receive new subscriber revenue as a result of this advertising effort.

Full disclaimer:

IMPORTANT NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER: This featured company sponsored advertising issue of M3 Profit Accelerator does not purport to provide an analysis of any company’s financial position, operations or prospects and this is not to be construed as a recommendation by M3 Profit Accelerator or an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any security. Mining Minerals of Mexico Corp.,(WIIM), the company featured in this issue, appears as paid advertising, paid by Duvana Holdings to provide public awareness for WIIM. Duvana Holdings has approved and signed off as “approved for public dissemination” all statements made herein regarding WIIM’s history, assets, technologies, current as well as prospective business operations and industry information. M3 Profit Accelerator and List Data Solutions (LDS) has used outside research and writers using public information to create the advertisement coming from M3 Profit Accelerator about WIIM. Although the information contained in this advertisement is believed to be reliable, M3 Profit Accelerator and LDS makes no warranties as to the accuracy of any of the content here in and accepts no liability for how readers may choose to utilize the content. Readers should perform their own due-diligence, including consulting with a licensed, qualified investment professional or analyst. Further, readers are strongly urged to independently verify all statements made in this advertisement and perform extensive due diligence on this or any other advertised company. M3 Profit Accelerator is not offering securities for sale.An offer to buy or sell can be made only with accompanying disclosure documents and only in the states and provinces for which they are approved. Many states have established rules requiring the approval of a security by a state security administrator. Check with http://www.nasaa.org or call your state security administrator to determine whether a particular security is licensed for sale in your state. Many companies have information filed with state securities regulators and many will supply investors with additional information on request. LDS has received and managed a total production budget of $400,000 for this print advertising effort and will retain any amounts over and above the cost of production, copywriting services, mailing and other distribution expenses,as a fee for its services. M3 Profit Accelerator is paid $2,500 as an editorial fee from LDS and also expects to receive new subscriber revenue as a result of this advertising effort. *More information can be received from WIIM’s investor relations firm.Further, specific financial information, filings and disclosures as well as general investor information about publicly traded companies like WIIM, advice to investors and other investor resources are available at the Securities and Exchange Commission website www.sec.gov and www.nasd.com. Any investment should be made only after consulting with a qualified investment advisor and after reviewing the publicly available financial statements of and other information about the company and verifying that the investment is appropriate and suitable. Investing in securities is highly speculative and carries a great deal of risk especially as to new companies with limited operations and no history of earnings. The information contained herein contains forward-looking information within the meaning of section 27a of the Securities Act of 1993, as amended, and section 21e of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, including statements regarding expected growth of the featured company. In accordance with the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, WIIM notes that statements contained herein that look forward in time, which include everything other than historical information, involve risks and uncertainties that may affect the Company’s actual results of operations. Factors that could cause actual results to differ include the size and growth of the market, the Company’s ability to fund its capital requirements in the near term and in the long term; pricing pressures, technology issues etc.

Disclaimer: I have no position in any stock mentioned above. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

A Rare manipulative trading win for the SEC

The SEC slaps the wrists of a couple brokers and a trader in a case that covered multiple charges, but the most interesting is the manipulative trading charge against Joseph Dondero. See the administrative proceeding (PDF).

Below is an excerpt that explains Dondero’s manipulative trading (emphasis mine):.

G. DONDERO’S MANIPULATIVE TRADING SCHEME

21. During the Relevant Period, Dondero repeatedly manipulated the markets of U.S.
listed and over-the-counter stocks by engaging in the practice of layering. Layering concerns
the use of non-bona fide orders, or orders that the trader does not intend to have executed, to
induce others to buy or sell the security at a price not representative of actual supply and
demand. More specifically, Dondero placed buy (or sell) orders that he intended to have
executed, and then immediately entered numerous non-bona fide sell (or buy) orders for the
purpose of attracting interest to the bona fide order. Dondero placed these non-bona fide orders
to induce, or trick, other market participants to execute against the initial, bona fide order.
Immediately after the execution against the bona fide order, Dondero cancelled the open,
non-bona fide orders. He typically then repeated this strategy on the opposite side of the
market to close out the position.

22. Using this strategy, Dondero induced other market participants to trade in a
particular security by placing and then cancelling layers of orders in that security, creating
fluctuations in the national best bid or offer of that security, increasing order book depth, and
using the non-bona fide orders to send false signals regarding the demand for such security,
which the other market participants misinterpreted as reflecting true demand. Dondero’s orders
were intended to deceive and did deceive other market participants into buying (or selling) stocks
from (or to) Dondero at prices that had been artificially raised (or lowered) by Dondero.

Example of Layering by Dondero

23. Dondero’s trading in the stock of First Capital, Inc. (FCAP) from 9:34:24 to
9:54:09 on May 8, 2009, illustrates his pattern of layering. At 9:34:25, Dondero placed an
order to buy 100 shares of FCAP at $16.20 per share. Prior to Dondero placing his order, the
inside bid was $14.01 and the inside ask was $17.00. Dondero’s buy order raised the National
Best Bid (“NBB”) from $14.01 to $16.20. At 9:34:29, Dondero placed an order to sell 2,000
shares of FCAP at $16.21 per share. This order did not change the National Best Offer
(“NBO”) because Dondero used an order type that allowed him to not display his order to other
market participants; thus, the NBO remained at $17.00.

24. At 9:34:31, Dondero placed two orders to buy a total of 1,000 shares of FCAP at
$16.20. He immediately cancelled these orders and placed another order at 9:34:35 to buy 100
shares of FCAP for $15.10. The NBB at this point was still $16.20, established by Dondero’s
open orders. At 9:36:49, Dondero again placed two orders to buy a total of 1,000 shares of
FCAP at $16.20 and then immediately cancelled those orders. At 9:36:51, Dondero placed an
order to buy 100 shares of FCAP at $16.10 and then cancelled his only other outstanding buy
order at $16.20. At this point, the NBB was $16.10, representing Dondero’s open orders.
Apparently realizing that his bona-fide sell order was not getting executed, he then cancelled his
outstanding sell order of 2,000 shares at $16.21. At 9:36:56, he placed a new non-displayed
order to sell 2,000 shares of FCAP for $16.11 per share, one cent higher than his current order to
buy. At 9:36:57, he placed four orders to buy a total of 2,000 shares of FCAP at $16.10,
cancelling one of those 500 share orders. At 9:36:59, 500 shares of Dondero’s outstanding sell
order were sold at $16.11 per share. At 9:37:00, he then placed three additional 500 share buy
orders at $16.10. At 9:37:01, 300 shares of his 2,000 share sell order were sold at $16.11. He
then proceeded to cancel most of his outstanding buy orders.

25. For twenty minutes, Dondero’s orders constituted the best bid, dropping it over
time to $16.00. He cancelled buy orders during this time, but always had at least one buy order
open. The purpose of maintaining an open bid appears to be that it prevents the best bid from
falling substantially. During this time, he placed non-displayed sell orders near the best bid in
the range of $16.01 to $16.21. He managed to sell 1,700 shares for an average price of $16.06.
He purchased no shares during this time. When Dondero cancelled all of his remaining buy
orders at 9:54:07, the NBB returned to $14.01. The best offer was $16.50 at this time. During
this time, Dondero placed 36 buy orders while only placing 9 sell orders. Dondero covered his
short position the next day yielding him approximately $2,919 in profits.

26. Dondero engaged in this manipulative strategy repeatedly, placing hundreds of
thousands of orders during the Relevant Period with the intent to change the NBB or NBO while
at times cancelling greater than 90 percent of his orders.

27. The manipulative trading comprised almost 100 percent of Dondero’s profitable
trading and resulted in profits of $984,398.

So what we have here is not a guy showing a large bid / offer a few times, but rather a person whose only real trading strategy involves placing scores of fake bids and offers, literally hundreds of thousands of orders. And what penalty does he pay?

M. Respondent Dondero shall, within (10) days of the entry of this Order, pay disgorgement of $1,102,999.96 plus prejudgment interest of $46,792 for a total of $1,149,791.96 to the United States Treasury. If timely payment is not made, additional interest shall accrue pursuant to SEC Rule of Practice 600.

Dondero pays back all his ill-gotten gains and a little bit extra to account for interest. That is barely a slap on the wrist.

Disclaimer: I have no position in any stock mentioned. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

The Confusing case of the Overseas Shipholding $OSGIQ bankruptcy

I follow LongShortGreek on Twitter and have found his information and thoughts about bankrupt stocks to be good and actionable. When he tweeted that the bankruptcy plan would give current OSGIQ shareholders $2/share worth of new equity I was intrigued by the seemingly obvious short.

See the most recent OSGIQ 10-K for the total share count:

As of March 3, 2014, 30,677,595 shares of Common Stock were outstanding.

See the most recent bankruptcy plan (dated March 7th, 2014).

From page 27 in the bankruptcy plan (emphasis mine):

(k) Class E1: Subordinated Claims and Old Equity Interests in OSG.
(i) Classification. Class E1 consists of all Subordinated Claims and
Old Equity Interests in OSG.
(ii) Treatment. Effective as of the Effective Date, on, or as soon as
reasonably practicable after the Initial Distribution Date, each Holder of an Allowed Class E1
Claim or Allowed Class E1 Old Equity Interest shall receive, in full satisfaction, settlement,
discharge and release of, its Allowed Class E1 Claim or Allowed Class E1 Old Equity Interest,
as the case may be, a pro rata share of Reorganized OSG Equity equal to $61.4 million, subject
to dilution on account of the Management and Director Incentive Program, the Rights Offering,
and the Commitment Premium Shares and Warrants. The Reorganized OSG Equity to be
distributed to each (x) Domestic Holder of an Allowed Class E1 Claim or Allowed Class E1 Old
Equity Interest shall be in the form of Reorganized OSG Stock, and (y) Foreign Holder of an
Allowed Class E1 Claim or Allowed Class E1 Old Equity Interest shall be in the form of a
combination of Reorganized OSG Stock and Reorganized OSG Jones Act Warrants, as necessary
for Reorganized OSG to comply with the Jones Act.
(iii) Voting. Class E1 Claims are Impaired and the Holders of Allowed
Class E1 Claims and Allowed Class E1 Old Equity Interest as of the Voting Record Date are
entitled to vote to Accept or reject the Plan.

So the shareholders of OSGIQ will receive shares in the new company equal to $61.4 million. Divide that by the number of shares and you get a value of $2.001 per share of OSGIQ.

For a contrary viewpoint see the shareholders’s response to the plan on February 26th (PDF).

Here are a couple recent filings by the debt & equity committee that bode well for the plan being approved:

http://www.kccllc.net/osg/document/1220000140328000000000011

http://www.kccllc.net/osg/document/1220000140319000000000010

So what is the catch? There are currently 170,000 shares of OSGIQ available to short at Interactive Brokers (FTP link to full short list) and the borrow rate is only 3.45% APR. That would indicate that there is something I am missing otherwise the borrow rate would be higher. For past obvious bankruptcy shorts like EKDKQ (Kodak) or EXMCQ (Excel Maritime) the borrow rates were way over 20% APR (closer to 60% if I recall correctly, and the effective borrow rate on each was well over 100% due to their low share price).

OSGIQ|USD|Overseas Shipholding Group Inc|10859|XXXXXXX81053|-3.37|3.45|1700000|

Equity holders have until April 4th to review and file objections to the plan. On that day the judge will review it (as I publish this I think that date has been delayed two weeks).

See this page for updates from the bankruptcy court.

For a contrary view of OSGIQ take a look at this random person’s tweets. I am thoroughly confused right now so I closed for a loss my original short position that I took two days ago.

osgiq

Disclaimer: I have no position in OSGIQ and I may short or buy at any time. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

SEC Suspends trading in fourth (and largest so far) pot stock $CANN Advanced Cannabis Solutions

This morning in premarket the SEC suspended trading in Advanced Cannabis Solutions (CANN). CANN joins CDFTPTOG, and AVNE on the list of marijuana stocks that have been suspended by the SEC over the last month. PTOG reopens for trading tomorrow at the open.

SEC suspension press release
SEC suspension order

Unlike the other marijuana stocks that were suspended for questions over adequacy of disclosures, the SEC suspended trading in CANN because of alleged illegal sales of restricted shares. From the press release:

 

There are questions regarding whether certain undisclosed affiliates and shareholders of Advanced
Cannabis common stock engaged in an unlawful public distribution of securities. Advanced
Cannabis common stock is dually-quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board and OTC Link.

Trading in CANN will resume at the market open on April 10th, 2014.

cann

Disclaimer: No position in any stock mentioned above. I have no relationship with any parties mentioned above. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.