It’s a very old, and very obvious strategy, to
Post# of 11802
And you obviously do not know what you are looking at, and certainly do not know what the facts are or what you are writing about, you are only trying to sow discontent. Former shareholder are you? Opportunist are you? By your own admission you own no shares. By my own admission, you belong on the iHub board where others of your ilk post.
The truth is that DECN large investors cannot short against the box because they have lock-up agreements with the company and agree to penalties, if for example they want to convert their instruments early. These small funds also have voting agreements but that is another story for later.
By virtue of the lock-up agreements, the investors, all three small to medium funds, that either own a convertible Note that requires company approval to convert, a one to three year holding period, or both, and during the holding period the funds are barred by the lockup agreements from converting without company BOD approval each time and every time. When these funds are allowed to convert and sell shares, their lock-up agreements hold all selling to a small percentage of a days trading. On light trading days the institutions aren't allowed to sell and shares. By the way shgorting against the box is illegal and it is enforced by FINRA.
I have done these types of agreements in the past and despite the anger and reproach exhibited by DECN flips and traders who hold grudges, these small institutions buy these special DECN securities, and hold them because they are not interested in small pops of a penny or two in the stock price. And these institutions also do not post lies and innuendos on message boards in an attempt to sway the masses.
Now, and this message is for the troubled flip and trading masses in (or were) in DECN stock, these small funds typically invest in OPPORTUNITY. And they will exercise their conversion abilities if, for example, an extraordinary event occurs that would drive up the price of DECN stock, say a large settlement of the lawsuit. In that case, or say in the case of an M&A transaction, these small funds will be allowed to convert shares and sell them into the hyper market created by the event. And that is only fair. you hi-there as a trader and a flip, can buy and sell any time you want. The company's real investors cannot.
And in the case of an M&A transaction, by virtue of a voting agreement, those conversions, if there are any, will vote with the BOD, not with penny traders and flips who would sell out the company, its management, even their mothers, for a few pennies.
You know what, it sucks to be a DECN or former DECN penny trader or flip. They are all cowardly winners and sore losers.