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Non-Tech : Titan Motorcycle Co. of America (TMOT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth V. McNutt who wrote (207)6/19/1999 7:41:00 AM
From: WallStBum  Respond to of 219
 
Gotta be a pretty rock solid foundation by now! (g)



To: Kenneth V. McNutt who wrote (207)4/20/2000 3:31:00 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 219
 
Motorcycle maker Titan sputtering
Auditors say future is in doubt for firm
azcentral.com
Tracy Hayes/The Arizona Republic

A new machine gets a test ride after rolling off the assembly line at Titan Motorcycle. The company reported an $8.1 million loss for 1999. Its CEO and his wife also recently sold 340,000 shares of stock.

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By Max Jarman
The Arizona Republic
April 20, 2000

Mounting cash flow problems, exacerbated by a just-reported $8.1 million loss for 1999, has prompted auditors of Titan Motorcycle Co. of America to raise questions about the 6-year-old company's ability to survive.

Also troubling is the recent sale of 340,000 shares of the Phoenix company's stock by Chief Executive Officer Frank Keery and his wife, Barbara, a director. The Keerys each sold 170,000 shares on March 31 at $2.31 per share. After the 1999 loss was reported April 17, the stock was trading at $1.25. The Keerys each now hold 6,592,878 shares.

"I'd be concerned," said Craig Columbus, president of Insiderscores.com, a Scottsdale company that tracks insider trading.

Securities and Exchange Commission regulations prohibit officers from trading stock if they have material information about their company that is not generally known, he said.

Frank Keery said some of the proceeds from the sale were used to secure additional financing for the company.

Founded in 1994, Titan carved out a niche for itself with its high-end, American-made, V-twin engine motorcycles selling for $30,000 to $50,000.

Titan's 1999 loss, which translates to 47 cents per share, contrasts with a $237,000 profit, or 1 cent per share, reported for 1998. Revenue was $26.93 million for the year compared with $27.9 million the year before.

According to a delayed 10K filing with the SEC, the company reported a Jan. 1 cash balance of $34,000 and an accumulated deficit of $9.8 million.

"These factors, among other things, may indicate the company will be unable to continue as a going concern for a reasonable period of time," the company said in the filing. Update
Monitor the market performance of Titan Motorcycle Co. of America by clicking on the Go button.

TMOT



Titan said it is working on possible solutions that include negotiating a larger line of credit; a private equity placement of $3 million to $5 million; and increased operating efficiencies. In January, the company laid off 40 employees, or about 17 percent of its workforce.

But the introduction of a lower-priced line, produced on an assembly line, left the company vulnerable to production problems. Based on a strong initial demand for its cheaper, $25,000 motorcycles, Titan projected it would sell as many as 1,500 units in 1999.

That would have generated revenue in the $40 million range.

But production delays, related in part to the company's liquidity problems, resulted in the sale of only 1,001 units, nine fewer than the year before.

The delays, combined with the expense of gearing up for higher production, eroded the company's gross profit margin from 15 percent in 1998 to a negative 1 percent in 1999. Adding to a $338,931 production loss were operating expenses that soared to $6.88 million from $3.48 million the year before.

The company attributed the higher costs to an increase in wages and salaries, and higher advertising and promotional expenses.

CEO Keery characterized 1999 as a year of substantial investment aimed at positioning Titan for growth and profitability.

"While we are clearly disappointed with our 1999 results, we are confident that the company is currently back on track after an extraordinarily difficult year," he said.

Bob Lobban, Titan's chief financial officer, said the company is making progress in its negotiations with new lenders and is optimistic its production problems have been solved. Pending the resolution of the cash flow issue, Lobban estimated the company should show an operating profit in the second quarter of this year.




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To: Kenneth V. McNutt who wrote (207)2/22/2013 2:49:31 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 219
 
.Scottsdale man accused of stock fraud
Comments



By Ken Alltucker The Republic | azcentral.com Sat Feb 16, 2013 6:02 PM
A Scottsdale man is part of a group accused of orchestrating a “pump-and-dump” stock fraud that authorities allege took in at least $30 million from more than 20,000 investors by manipulating share prices in small publicly traded companies.

Mark Harris, 56, of Scottsdale, was involved in two trading schemes, according to two related criminal cases unsealed last week in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. Harris, who was arrested last week, is described as a stock promoter and managing member of Scottsdale-based investor-relations-firm Apache Capital LLC.

The indictments said the individuals targeted small firms such as pharmaceutical and hair-restoration companies, promoted those firms through marketing and sham news releases to increase trading volume and share prices and then sold the shares to investors who were unaware of the stock manipulation.

The two cases involved criminal indictments of 15 individuals. Harris, who did not return a call last week, is one of five individuals named in both indictments.

Regis Possino, 65, a former Los Angeles County deputy district attorney, was also involved in both cases and was a ringleader in one case, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles. Sherman Mazur, 63, of Los Angeles, was the lead defendant in the second related case. Neither Possino nor Mazur could be reached last week.

Hollywood personalities Pamela Anderson and Eric Roberts appeared in infomercials and other television shows to tout the companies targeted by the individuals, but neither celebrity was accused of wrongdoing.

One indictment focused on deals involving two companies called GenMed, a generic-drug distributor based in the Netherlands, and Clearwater, Fla.-based Biostem, which offered stem-cell therapies and hair-growth technology.

The indictment showed numerous examples of how the individuals sought to drive the companies’ share prices higher by issuing new releases and having celebrities tout the companies on television.

Before one actor’s appearance on the program Access Hollywood, two individuals involved in the promotion discussed how the television appearance could drive GenMed’s stock to reach 50 cents by the end of the day.

In a conversation with one investor, Mazur described Biostem as “ a shell with a lot of shares out, with nothing in it ...” according to the indictment.