TPAC MRVB -- Publication No. 2 View this email
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Welcome to the Next Publication for the
Master Regenerative Virtual Bank.
What is an MRVB? Why is TPAC focusing on an MRVB? How can an MRVB benefit TPAC? How will TPAC use an MRVB? I don't understand how the MRVB will help TPAC? How can the MRVB help me trade?
These questions have frequently been asked by shareholders. This issue will detail how infusing the MRVB platform within TPAC's financial structure will be one of if not the primary reason why TPAC will see expansive financial growth.
Revenue Conditions (Conservative Target: $100K Generates $1.2M/YR)
Starting position fund of $2797
--Transferred PF of $155K
--2nd Transferred PF of $21K
--Presently Regenerating at $49K
For years, the most profitable industry in America has been one that doesn't design, build or sell a single tangible thing.
Illustration by Joost Swarte
(New Yorker)
What Makes The MRVB A Game Changer For TPAC?
Consistent Revenue
-- Once the system is configured for 4x leverage level, revenue is channeled daily.
-- AFS Traders and Currency Miners extract from a reservoir of Wall Street revenue flows.
-- Since TPAC's MRVB is isolated from its contractual revenues, there is no negative impact financially.
How Can The MRVB Increase And Secure The TPAC Stock PPS?
Directing Revenue
-- Providing a revenue stream directly to the Share Reduction Competitive Loop
-- Providing capital as investment revenue with a high-profit margin. This can be used for the earnings-per-share
When Will Shareholders See Results?
Immediate and Live
-- Account View of daily acquirements/settlements broadcasted in real time
-- Account View of Day Trade Buying Power (DTBP)
-- Share Reduction Competitive Loop displays TPAC acquisitions real time
-- Registered shareholders immediately see the progress
-- Profits noted in 10K and 10Q
Can The AFS/MRVB Be A Total Solution For TPAC's Financial Needs?
Indeed it Can
-- Goal for TPAC's business units depends on their ability to acquire currency for working capital, cash-on-hand or profit dollars.
-- MRVB’s extract and reallocate currency with ease utilizing less overhead, shaping the bottom line to be more attractive.
-- Shareholders may believe big dollar contracts are the only way to move PPS...no longer true.
-- Solid revenue streams with high-margin low-cost can add to the earnings-per-share more than contracts that use 85 percent or higher cost basis.
-- An internal currency generating source for revenue and credit.
-- If TPAC never obtains another contract, the MRVB would still expand currency multiplying the position funds and raising the Day Trade Buying Power thereby establishing a revenue reservoir.
-- This could be worth millions in cash-on-hand and credit power
The Mechanics Of It All
- The first MRVB publication referenced that the heart of the bank is its position fund (currency designated for expansion).
-- The system is initially set as margin, meaning there is a credit scenario built into the platform. Most call this leverage.
-- Leverages range from 2x to 6x but normally start with a 2x factor -- $100 in becomes $200 to acquire marginable stocks. TPAC Global's current leverage is that of 4x -- $100 in becomes $400 dollars to acquire marginable stocks.
-- Not every stock is 100 percent marginable and is dependent upon the brokerage platform chosen.
Now moving past this point, leaving the platform and entering the mind and tools of Trader/Currency Miners. The system recognizes three types of real world traders within two categories (The technology is not configured for Buy and Hold Investors):
TYPES OF TRADERS
Scalp trader. Scalpers attempt to act like traditional market makers or specialists. To make the spread means to buy at the Bid price and sell at the Ask price, in order to gain the bid/ask difference. This procedure allows for profit even when the bid and ask don't move at all, as long as there are traders who are willing to take market prices. It normally involves establishing and liquidating a position quickly, usually within minutes or even seconds. The role of a scalper is actually the role of market makers or specialists who are to maintain the liquidity and order flow of a product of a market.
Web source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scalping_(trading)
Swing trader. A swing trader attempts to capture gains in a stock (or any financial instrument) within an overnight hold to several weeks. Swing traders use technical analysis to look for stocks with short-term price momentum. These traders may utilize fundamental or intrinsic value of stocks in addition to analyzing the price trends and patterns.
Web source: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/swingtrading.asp
Day trader. A day trader is a trader who adheres to a trading style called day trading. This involves buying and subsequently selling financial instruments (e.g. stocks, options, futures, derivatives, currencies) within the same trading day, such that all positions will usually be closed before the market close of the trading day. Depending on one's trading strategy, it may range from several to hundreds of orders a day. There are two types of day traders: institutional and retail. Day traders use retail brokerages and generally trade with their own capital Both institutional and retail day traders are described as speculators, as opposed to investors.
Web source: http://www.babylon-software.com/definition/Da...er/English
Web source:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day_trader
CATEGORIES
Institutional Day Trader. Institutional day traders work for financial institutions and have certain advantages over retail traders due to their access to more resources, tools, equipment, large amounts of capital and leverage, large availability of fresh fund inflows to trade continuously on the markets, dedicated and direct lines to data centers and exchanges, expensive and high-end trading and analytical software, support teams to help and more. These advantages give them certain edges over retail day traders. Auto trader’s use of computer programs and other tools to enter trading orders automatically. Because this all happens with the help of the computer algorithm, it is also called algorithmic trading.
Web source:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day_trader
Institutional Investor. An institutional investor is a nonbank person or organization that trades securities in large enough share quantities or dollar amounts that it qualifies for preferential treatment and lower commissions. Institutional investors face fewer protective regulations because it is assumed they are more knowledgeable and better able to protect themselves. Examples of institutional investors include pension funds and life insurance companies.
Web source:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day_trader
TPAC's MRVB AFS Traders/Currency Miners track global commodities such as oil, gold, silver, and natural gas. These are world staples and for most people are considered real money. Their daily usage makes them perfect as a source to extract daily currency from Wall Street revenue flows where trillions upon trillions flow through daily.
What Is The Difference Between An AFS Trader And An AFS Currency Miner?
-- AFS Traders are retail traders and in this scenario trade at 2x/3x leverage. They swing trade and day trade to support the Share Reduction Competitive Loop.
-- AFS Currency Miners are institutional traders and only trade in the 4x leverage and power trade their acquirements alongside other institutional traders.
-- They use different tools and methodologies to make the acquisition and exit as well.
-- Currency Miners are trained to use institutional systems. These systems allow the Currency Miner to mimic how institutional traders buy and sell before retail traders can determine what has occurred.
-- Institutional Traders are responsible for creating 90 percent or better of the daily volume in the markets. Their tools allow them to buy up and slowly sell off multimillion-dollar positions before the rest of the retail market traders can react to what they are doing.
-- Currency Miners use order flow technology that gives them the same edge as Institutional Traders to buy up and sell off in their markets.
What Else Can The MRVB Support?
-- Master Regenerative Virtual Banks function similar to commercial banks. A user can open a bank account that feeds to and from their brokerage account.
Online banking is easy and convenient.
A variety of features is available with each bank account, including Online Bill Pay to help manage, move and access currency.
ATM Fee Reimbursement Program allows account holders receive a refund on ATM fees.
No account set-up or maintenance fees
No minimum balance requirement for interest-bearing accounts
-- The leverage can be used as credit to purchase more than securities. (Additional detail in next publication).
-- TPAC can extend it services by providing credit as a venture capitalist
A venture capitalist is an investor who provides funding for start-ups, early stage firms and companies with growth potential. These types of firms seek out venture capitalists, as they are too small or too new to have credit profiles, making them ineligible for bank loans and other forms of raising capital.
Although risky, venture capitalists invest in firms as there are very lucrative returns on their investments when the company they are investing in is successful. Furthermore, venture capitalists will often invest in a range of firms rather than just one or two, in order to mitigate risks if the investments are unsuccessful.
Venture capital (VC) is a type of private equity, a form of financing that is provided by firms or funds to small, early-stage, emerging firms that are deemed to have high growth potential, or which have demonstrated high growth (in terms of number of employees, annual revenue, or both). Venture capital firms or funds invest in these early-stage companies in exchange for equity-an ownership state-in the companies they invest in. Venture capitalists take on the risk of financing risky start-ups in the hopes that some of the firms they support will become successful. The start-ups are usually based on an innovative technology or business model and they are usually from the high technology industries, such as information technology (IT), social media or biotechnology.
Web Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venture_capital
On the other hand, vulture capitalists are a type of venture capitalist, which provide a final attempt at gaining funding. Whereas venture capitalists seek firms with growth potential, vulture capitalists usually seek out firms where costs can be cut in order to increase profits. Mostly, these firms are distressed and on the brink of bankruptcy. Due to this reason, vulture capitalists are able to buy these firms at a much lower price than if they had been profitable and expanding.
Once the firm is acquired, vulture capitalists can attempt to increase efficiency in order to turn the company around. This is often done by cut-downs costs wherever possible, which in part is likely to be accomplished by firing workers where possible, reducing benefits or both. With reduced costs, the firm becomes profitable or at least raises the probability of this eventually happening, thus raising the share price and the worth of the investors' holdings. Lastly, the vulture capitalists sell any equity they own, making a profit. But vulture capitalists can also choose to divide and sell off the entire company in pieces if this should increase the attractiveness of each individual piece to its purchaser and thus allow the vulture capitalist a net profit.
Web source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulture_capitalist
Aerospace & Aeronautical Industries Are Facing Financial Challenges
BOEING NEWS
Boeing Co (BA.N), for example, is stepping up efforts to conserve cash, cut costs in its supply chain and trim inventory of parts in its factories. They are expressing to vendors that it will take longer to pay bills, Boeing and aerospace industry executives said.
Under the new terms, Boeing is taking up to 120 days to pay, rather than 30 days as in the past. The new payment schedules are being rolled out this year.
Boeing also is reducing its factory inventory and is relying on suppliers to hold parts instead, these people said. The moves come at a time when investors are closely watching Boeing's cash flow.
Many suppliers have already accepted the changes.
At a mid-sized machining shop in Washington State that makes parts for Boeing, payment terms shifted this spring.
"We went a whole month with no receivables from Boeing," said the owner, who asked not to be named because of concern about damaging relations with Boeing.
When payments resumed, about 10 percent of the company's annual revenue remained unpaid, he said, adding that Boeing now pays in 60 days, not 30, and pays twice a month, not weekly.
"We're having to change the way we manage our cash flow and change the way we pay our suppliers," the owner said. "It is preventing us from buying equipment."
Boeing said small suppliers in the United States are exempt from the new payment terms and that it is trying to accommodate suppliers overseas.
Other suppliers also reported changes in Boeing's terms, along with further price reductions, said Christian Schiller, a managing director at investment bank Cascadia Capital in Seattle who works with mid-sized suppliers.
Web source:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/boeing-slows-pa...ector.html
TPAC has a working knowledge of Boeing and its supply chain. Vendors that have these challenges can use the financial support created by TPAC Global. This is a new market for TPAC and could lead to quite a profitable scenario.
What Can All This Do For TPAC Shareholders?
TPAC Shareholders see firsthand how the system works.
-- Currency Expansion and Credit Line
-- View AFS Traders and Currency Miners Expand Revenue
-- View How the Expansion Compounds in the Bank
-- View Daily Stock Picks
-- System Presents FREE tools to TPAC Shareholders: Market Depth, Investiv and Alpha Reports
-- Shareholders can learn how to trade moderately to expand or regenerate their own platforms.
TPAC on the downside? Seeing Red? No Worries. Swing trade with AFS to recover losses and get back in the green -- all from TPAC.