A MINI-GORE REPORT: **SYCD** ... DISNEY ENTERS THE JAPANESE ANIMATION MARKET (see below)
PR firm has started an email and snail mail campaign to bring awareness.
HERE'S THE STORY: SycoNet (love that name) is amazingly undervalued at 28 cents; was $1.80 in Nov. 1998 and only dropped because investors who got 50 cents stock sold on the first day of trading in Nov. and the MM's created a selling panic.
It ran it from 28 to 68 cents last month, with a couple of plus million share days, but it is quiet again. Meanwhile float and O/S is low, and they are the number one Internet company in this $225 million and growing Japanese Animation market with video sales doubling from last year. They have an e-commerce website, are fully reporting soon, and a mature company. Japanese animation will be an estimated $500M market in by end of year 2000.
Deals recently entered into with Orion Pictures, MGM, and Bandai, the largest toy company on earth.
***** Don't think Japanese Animation is exciting? Read this!
The largest grossing movie in the history of cinema, Princess Minoka, a Japanese animation movie, made $2.9 BILLION in Asia!
And DISNEY is re-making it for the U.S. Market this year. Now what do you think that will do for SYCD....a little attention maybe?
Also see otcfn.com, altvidwar.com, and sycodistribution.com
CONTACT: SyCoNet.com Sy Picon, Chief Executive Officer 703-366-3900 admin@altvidwar.com or OTC Financial Network Geoffrey Eiten 877-663-0266 / 781-444-6100 ext. 13 geiten@otcfn.com
from a recent release: SyCo is a key player in the rapidly expanding Anime industry. This market segment is projected to grow from $225 million in 1997 to $500 million by the Year 2001. SyCo Distribution is the second largest catalog distributor to independent retailers and recently earned the title of #1 distributor of Japanese Anime and licensed Anime products on the Internet. The company boasts over 800 Anime titles, lines of popular licensed Anime toys from Irwin Toy, DVD, CDs, hard to find videos and a wide range of other products for both retailers and consumers. |