Now then, careful! My sources are my own affair. Anyway they are reasonably accurate (and cost me a fortune). But they are usually up to date. In fact I insist that it was 110,000 not 11,000 that were crossed. As far as timing was concerned I had trouble writing my own message. I had it in about 4 or 5 minutes.
By the way (I am sure that you have already guessed it), I am not a broker nor a GTE employee - just an interested investor looking for an undervalued and misunderstood situation.
Anyway all this is beside the point. I need techies like you to lead me through this puzzling trading morass. I can't take seriously comments (that others have made on this site) that Yorkton (or Porkton) are goosing the price at the close. Any trader would tell you that, ultimately, this leads nowhere. Probably all this signifies is that there are a few performance minded institutions around who are getting itchy having bought the stock at $0.90 (wasn't it?) and want to show their patient investors that they still have the magic touch.
All this stuff distorts the real point of the exercise. GTR, partly through happenstance and partly through skill, seem to be positioned strategically in the fastest growing segment of the entire computer industry. Why? Because, I think, that nobody in North America really realized that kiddy video games have already outdistanced the big US players such as Intel in microchip technology and will be in a position soon to take on all the Midian hosts of Wintel (i.e Windows technology). Kiddy video games is big business - however much we cringe from this. Just look into PlayStation II's interconnectivity solutions with the PC, TV and video cameras. It is more powerful than even the Pentium II and will retail at less than $500.
Because of this skepticism, therein lies the real inherent value of GTR. |