Agree with all. Dilution just gives the bashers am
Post# of 11899
Agree with all. Dilution just gives the bashers ammo and plays right into their hands. With all of the long term fundamental positives for the story, without continuing dilution the basher argument dissapears over time. I think it is just a matter of time. Dilution if done properly can be very beneficial for company growth (operating cash and free cash flow) however if taken to the extreme it can also weigh on investor sentiment causing the panic selling and loyal shareholders to eventually abandon the name which erodes confidence for interested parties who were thinking of possibly getting in, this downward spiral can quickly become a slippery slope, and then when the company really does critically need to dilute to execute some business operation, the stock is so low they are forced to dilute hundreds of millions of shares at triple zero prices to be able to raise any substantial funds. This is exactly what the predatory MMs and market players want because then the "cellar box" is just that much closer to being in reach for them. "Cellar boxing" these kinds of pink sheet plays is exactly the goal for these dark forces in the market because its like a black hole, at that point, it is practically impossible to ever get any momentum going to build a base at certain price points and the MMs can sit and create such a wide spread that each trade that comes through basically makes 100% profit and then printing a 50% loss on the next trade with a few shares becomes commonplace, look at TLAG. This game lasts a while until the stock is been sucked dry of interest and because these stocks never go anywhere eventually all traders and investors go elsewhere to find gains and the volume quickly drops to nothing and that is all she wrote, the end, the company can no longer dilute to raise capital because there are no more buyers because there is no more interest in the company or stock. I have seen this downward spiral happen all too often and it is very easy to begin slipping down this slope. I hope that management realizes this and puts the brakes on the dilution for the sake of all. At some point the company should have enough operating cash to fund the current operations they need to accomplish now. If they need more they should just wait and get done those current operations first and let the market and investors judge performance while the stock recovers and momentum begins again before going for another capital raise to fund the next set of business goals. There is a balance and pressing too hard can smother the delicate flame while too little and the lack of progress will also have the same effect on sentiment over time.
$RFMK!