| <a ZSUN must read> financialweb.com 
 Sunburn
 
 ZiaSun says it will be Asia's gateway to the online world, but
 could it simply be headed into the sunset?
 
 By Lynn N. Duke, staff writer
 
 ZiaSun Technologies Inc. (OTC BB: ZSUN) seemingly came out of nowhere in the
 past month,
 trading more than 2.3 million shares in four days while its share price more than
 tripled.
 
 What's behind this upstart? Not much, so far as we can tell besides a slew of press
 releases and
 some pretty outrageous hype.
 
 ZiaSun claims it will be Asia's portal to the Internet, and promises to offer everything
 from online
 auctions to free email. But the recent meteoric rise of its stock price and volume hit
 several notes
 on the Stinky Stock scale.
 
 We got a little nervous right off the bat when it turned out the company's "world
 headquarters"
 shared a phone number with a Vancouver, B.C.-based stock promoter, Veritas
 Group. Several
 people at Veritas, which is handling the company's investor relations, were unable to
 answer some
 pretty basic questions about the company's stock structure or its business plan.
 
 But here are the bare bones: ZiaSun was acquired by a shell corporation more than a
 year ago in
 what is commonly known as a reverse merger. There are 10.5 million shares
 outstanding, 2.5
 million of which are in the float. For a rundown on the status of the closely-held shares -
 are they
 restricted, under what terms, etc. - we were referred to ZiaSun CEO Tony Tobin, who
 lives in Hong
 Kong.
 
 Tobin did not respond to our questions, either through Veritas or a direct email. So
 much for
 informing investors.
 
 Trading Frenzy
 
 More than 5.3 million ZiaSun shares have changed hands since March 29, with more
 than
 two-thirds of that volume trading in just eight days. The heavy trading was preceded by
 a number of
 press releases announcing mostly non-events, and some included ambiguous
 information that
 could lead investors to believe the ZiaSun had some very important business
 partners.
 
 For example, this excerpt from a March 29 press release about ZiaSun's customer
 service center
 and how it can save companies money:
 
 "America On-line discovered this fact when they developed a pilot e-mail response
 center in
 ZiaSun's Clark facility in 1997. AOL has expanded their own center to over 300
 people, which
 according to AOL management will save them US$15 Million per year.
 
 "AOL proved to us that we were onto a worthwhile idea, and we believe other high
 traffic web site
 owners would be glad to offer ZiaSun a profit margin in return for saving them large
 amounts of
 dollars.
 
 "High traffic websites like AOL, Yahoo!, E-bay, E-Trade, etc, could save millions of
 dollars a year
 by using a service like ours. The Internet is global, and companies which take
 advantage of the
 benefits of this globalization will have the edge in the future."
 
 Thinking that maybe ZiaSun is handling some of AOL's customer service offsite in the
 Philippines?
 Guess again. AOL established its own customer service program in the same facility
 ZiaSun uses,
 but there is no customer service-based business relationship between the two
 companies,
 according to Jason Birmingham, one of ZiaSun's account reps at Veritas.
 
 Earlier this year, ZiaSun told investors it would file its form 10SB with the U.S.
 Securities and
 Exchange Commission by the end of March. In March, the company said the numbers
 would be
 out in 60 days.
 
 In the meantime, ZiaSun has released financial information on two of its recently
 acquired
 subsidiaries - Momentum Asia and Momentum Internet. But the information is
 incomplete and
 unaudited, so it is of little value to investors trying to get a handle on ZiaSun's true
 financial
 condition.
 
 And, again, investors are fed ambiguous information, like this Nov. 17 press release
 touting
 six-month financial results from Momentum Asia, Inc:
 
 "Assets grew 262% to $2,100,000 from the FY1997 posting of $800,000. The
 increase in assets
 was due to retained earnings, paid-in capital by owners, and increases in the value of
 investments
 held by the company."
 
 This statement isn't entirely clear. Do they mean that these items - retained earnings,
 paid-in
 capital and increases in investments - are assets? Probably not, since they belong
 under
 shareholder's equity. Or are they simply referring to them as reasons for an increase
 in assets?
 
 One other sticking point is the inclusion of "increases in the value of investments."
 Generally
 Accepted Accounting Principles do not allow for writing up the value of equity
 investments, unless
 your firm's primary business is investing in the securities of other companies.
 However you can
 write off the loss if share value goes down. But, without knowing exactly what the
 "investments"
 are it's impossible to tell whether the write up was appropriate.
 
 An even more recent announcement holds few clues. An April 19 press release
 heralds earnings of
 $0.11 per share (earnings of $1.15 million on revenues of $3.53 million) through the
 end of 1998,
 and a 2-for-1 stock split. But that's it. The auditor isn't named, there are no actual
 financial
 statements or anything else to give investors a sense that the figures are grounded in
 reality.
 
 Again, Tobin is the man with the answers, but he's been silent.
 
 Growing at the Speed of Hype
 
 ZiaSun boasts that two of its subsidiaries are actually making money. But there's no
 indication
 about how ZiaSun plans to finance its ambitious expansion plans. Some of its
 better-heeled
 competitors are already sinking billions into similar deals. In fact, one of ZiaSun's
 press releases
 cites a $13 billion public-private cyberport project being developed by the Hong Kong
 government
 and private business partners, including Microsoft.
 
 Momentum Asia handles the nitty-gritty side of ZiaSun's Internet business - customer
 service,
 database management and direct mail - while Momentum Internet is involved in the
 more
 high-profile online areas - email service, a banner advertising network, a search
 engine and a portal
 for brokers.
 
 ZiaSun also says it will offer online auction services and a business-to-business barter
 center, and
 it recently added Online Investor Advantage to its stable. Online Investor Advantage,
 not be
 confused with the magazine Online Investor, appears to be a Wade Cook seminar
 copycat, offering
 people the formula for wildly successful trading - for a price. The actual price isn't
 clear, since it's
 not posted on the company's website and a query to Online Investor Advantage for
 information
 went unanswered.
 
 Although ZiaSun is traded in the U.S. and says its headquarters are in San Diego, the
 company's
 focus is on Asia, a region many have pegged as the next area for explosive Internet
 growth. But
 that distance creates its own set of problems, making it difficult for investors to get
 hold of
 company officials (there's a 13-hour time difference), and almost impossible for U.S.
 investors to
 spec out ZiaSun's operations.
 
 But there's no shortage of information on the company, nor lack of effort to promote it.
 ZiaSun pays
 at least two promoters - Veritas and Interactive Business Channel - to hype the
 company. Veritas
 receives $5,000 and 5,000 shares of stock each month for its services. IBC was paid
 50,000
 free-trading ZiaSun shares. And then there's all of the coverage ZiaSun's gotten on
 Stockhouse's
 Inner Circle site, apparently a branch of Veritas - but you'd never know that without a
 lot of digging
 and a little luck (the obscure disclaimer link doesn't always work).
 
 And yet there's really not much to promote.
 
 Shareholder Hide-and-Seek
 
 Other areas of concern include ZiaSun's trading site, Swiftrade, and its affiliation with
 Amber
 Securities Corporation.
 
 ZiaSun's claims about Swiftrade have been shifting almost since it was launched. At
 first it was
 pitched as the only place to trade on the Hong Kong and New York exchanges from
 one website.
 Now it's being touted as the only site that focuses on overseas investors. Perhaps, but
 overseas
 investors have access to the U.S. exchanges through any number of brokerage firms,
 not to
 mention Internet-only traders like E*Trade. And U.S. investors also have avenues to
 trade overseas
 through their computers.
 
 Swiftrade operates through Amber Securities, which along with its sister company,
 Amber Capital
 Assets Ltd. in Hong Kong, has raised the ire of several investors.
 
 One reader in New Zealand said he was lured into buying ZiaSun stock by an ACA
 lackey, but
 when he wanted to sell those shares a short time later he got the run around. First he
 was told he
 couldn't sell until he physically had control of the stock certificates (which the salesman
 said could
 take three months), even though our reader was assured that the shares were being
 held in his
 name at Amber's offices. The hold up, according to Amber, was the transfer agent,
 whose name
 he would not reveal. Even then, our reader was told that he'd have to sign the
 certificates over to
 Amber's California headquarters before he could sell them on the open market.
 Fortunately our
 friend smelled a scam, threatened action with the SEC and voila! his shares
 immediately became
 accessible.
 
 ZiaSun is an unproven entity that talks big but comes up short on facts and figures.
 
 As always, tread lightly……………………….
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