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Post# of 4274
Most charts of OTC companies are similar in showing years of decline, which is from a combination of retail selling, company dilution, and also includes a whole lot of shorting with most of it being from offshore crooks and MMs. It's simply a numbers game. I liken it to owning a life insurance company. You and I would sell a policy to every individual in the US if we could. As we collect the daily premium checks (like NSS of OTC), we know that eventually we'll take a hit when we have to pay out a death benefit. With the OTC, the criminal crews along with a few dirty MMs short virtually every OTC stock. Eventually a company will execute and perform. That's followed by a cover. Overall, the shorted shares have brought in billions and billions through naked shorting, but they know that every once in awhile, they have to cover (like a death benefit with our insurance company) and they take a hit. They don't 'Burn Shorty or Shorty's Gonna Get Killed' as you always read. They'll take their hit while shorting the next 100 OTC companies. Very simple to understand, and those that argue it doesn't happen, are straight out liars or 100% clueless. NSS has been going on for almost 30 years.
So even though NSS in ORFG would be difficult to establish without a forensic shareholder count, rest assured that they is a sizable short. It's no use to focus on it though, as the crooks will only cover when they no longer find it profitable to stay short. If they continue to short with the attempt to outlast the demand, they will be short a lot more shares that when they began with the increased selling, supply vs demand. When the underlying company executes and delivers, that's when the cover begins, when they decide to cover, not when you want them to cover. It's a numbers games based on years and years of deception, fraud and theft of shareholders. In the long run, they win........ just like a life insurance company with their business plan....... bank on most all, and pay out once in a while.