I think I figured out a little bit of shareholder
Post# of 43064
I've been constantly befuddled as to why JBI's investors don't e-mail to ask the company what obstacles still stand in the way of processors #2 and #3 running near capacity. To me it's like deciding not to check whether a safety harness is attached when all it takes is a quick glance.
I suspect there's a combination...of investors being daunted at the prospect of sending an e-mail to the company coupled with investors liking the 'game' more than any potential returns on their portfolio.
It struck me because of the 6,800,000 shares still available from JBI at $0.10 with options thrown in to sweeten the deal. Shareholders could ostensibly contact the company, get shares and turn around and sell them for $0.18 for a quick 80% return and still keep the options. When I brought it up, only one person said that was a good idea and that he would do it...but that person was all about the talk...and recently stated he would still be buying in the open market. He obviously decided not to contact the company for the $0.10/share + options in spite of it being a much better deal.
Shareholders seemingly would rather pay, hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars rather than contact the company. They would rather not know why processor #2 and #3 are idle, to the detriment of their investment decisions, rather than contacting the company. I still don't know why e-mailing JBI is daunting to them or why they don't seem to care about returns but I think I'm closer to understanding.