Hello Phil, Here is a recent email from a mutual Eutro investor with my reply first. Can you answer any of his questions, you've talk with Brad recently?
Well Dave: If your life savings is invested in this company, I will start calling you paranoid. I know where you stand though. I have no idea what Eutro's is doing with any core business and I am starting to get the idea that they don't either. I am generally in good spirits since this mess but I do feel for the investors that lost a lot of money. Your welcome on the TA post, I cannot let up for a minute, I will not allow one new investor that comes my way to spend money without knowing what they are buying. I am going to start a new thread for EuTo on Yahoo. I will give you the link. My web site is in work and it will be a little while before I FTP it.
Thanks for calling, and I will post this email on SI in two minutes.
André
-----Original Message----- From: [SMTP: Sent: Tuesday, December 29, 1998 9:18 PM To: André J. Daedone Subject: Where's Freedom Medical?
Uh, Andre',
Call me paranoid, but I get this uneasy feeling regarding Freedom Medical. On Eutro's web page there used to be a link (and quite a bit of info) regarding Freedom Medical. It isn't there anymore. What the Hell? Now there's quite a bit of info regarding Reddi Form--which appears to be quite a product--and some vitamin supplement a' la mode that may be ordered directly from Eutro's web page. Here's what bothers me: Freedom is taking a sudden back seat to some, er, vitamins. I get the notion that Freedom is some dark little failure that we aren't being told about yet, and perhaps management is hoping no one will notice. Has anyone, other than the usual cast of Eutro pumpsters, talked directly with Freedom Medical? The next concern is: what in Hell is a venture capital/investment banking company doing, selling vitamins on its web page? Don't they realize this is seen as a lack of focus on what they claim to be their core business (investment banking)? I doubt they'll attract any institutional investors with this approach. Imagine Berkshire-Hathaway trying this. If you go to STOCK DETECTIVE or MOTLEY FOOL and look into their info regarding penny stock schemes, you will see that one of the warning signs is any company that continually changes its core business. Eutro seems to fall into that catagory. Oh, thanks for the posting regarding the newest shares increase. It reminds me of that potato-chip commercial "eat all you want, we'll make more!". In this case, it's "buy all you want, we'll print more"!
Yours, Dave
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