"uh huh .. i'm specifically talking about the 200k
Post# of 43064
I don't doubt games are being played all the time. However whether 200k was some sort of trick or whether it was someone just selling stock, it makes little difference. If a person feels game-playing have driven the price down well below the real value then they've been given a buying opportunity. If artificially driven high then it's a great selling opportunity.
I will say that *typically* tricking people out of their money efficiently seems to involve getting them to exchange their cash for something worthless...like shares in a company while lying about the capability of the 'technology'. Conversely if someone tricks people into selling and removing their cash from the market, that cash flows back into investors' pockets making it harder to access, meaning getting a payoff is more risky. For example if market makers somehow fool investors into selling shares to them at low prices, they have to hope more investors come back in to buy those shares...for JBII they would have to hope and pray that no PIPE investor drops a two-million share block on the top of their head while they're pulling the scheme.