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Microcap & Penny Stocks : ANTs SOFTWARE.COM (ANTS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Savant who wrote (63)12/27/1999 10:44:00 AM
From: Bobbie Boucher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 607
 
Savant, Thetruthseeker also posts as BradHolingsworth. He has lost any credibility he may have had with bad picks and being a pig. So when this brad comes on be warned it is the truthseeker with a new face.



To: Savant who wrote (63)12/27/1999 2:04:00 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 607
 
Here is a interesting email I received. This is the first part

>>The following market summaries were published by Canada Stockwatch,
>>and are copyrighted by Canjex Publishing. I have copied and pasted
>>the sections relating to Chopp Computer, now known as ANTS.
>>
>>Friday Apr 26 1985
>>Another technology issue, CHOPP
>>COMPUTER CORP. moved up $.50 to $8.37 on 29,000 shares. Chopp
>>used to be called Baz Resources, and changed its name when a
>>new group became involved in the company in February 1985. At
>>that time the stock was trading at $1.00, up from $.45 where
>>it had been since listed (as little more than a shell
>>company) in November 1984. The first member of the new group,
>>Ms. Josephine Hutton was appointed to the board in February
>>1985. The news release at that time mentions that Ms. Hutton
>>has been involved in many public companies - and indeed she
>>has. According to our private research facilities she was
>>once a director of three of Ms. Ann Mark's companies: Mark V,
>>Thor and Mundee. From there she moved on to become involved
>>with another group whose key member was a colourful and witty
>>Vancouver stock promoter, Mr. Harold Charles Moll. The
>>corporate activities - some would say antics - of Mr. Moll
>>make a marvellous tale that we will save for another day; but
>>those companies that Ms. Hutton was associated with were
>>Canzona, Cherokee, Cornwall and Heartland. According to our
>>records, she was also involved with Boville Resources, but
>>that company was unrelated to the first four. Whether or not
>>any of Ms. Hutton's former corporate associates will be with
>>her in Chopp Computer Corp. isn't clear. Chopp has agreed to
>>acquire development, manufacturing and marketing rights from
>>Sullivan Computer Corp. of New York for their "super
>>computer". Sullivan's development centres around the concept
>>of parallel processing, one of the most sophisticated areas
>>of research aimed at making computers smarter. So far, it
>>would appear that some of the people involved in the Sullivan
>>research and development will be joining Chopp and Ms.
>>Hutton.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Monday Jul 1 1985
>>CHOPP COMPUTER CORP. was back trading after
>>its halt. The company is in the process of distributing
>>250,000 shares at a minimum price of $7.00 via a statement of
>>material facts. The closing trade was $10.38 on volume of
>>166,000 shares, so presumably the offering is well underway.
>>The proceeds will be used to finance part of a research
>>agreement between Chopp (the licensee) and Sullivan Computer
>>Corp. of New York (the licensor). In order to complete its
>>end of the deal, Chopp is committed to spend $7 million on
>>the research program and commence marketing a working
>>parallel processor by July 1, 1988. For its efforts Chopp
>>will receive the exclusive rights to Canada, Great Britain
>>and Northern Ireland and the non-exclusive rights to the rest
>>of the world, with the exception of the United States (which
>>appears to remain with Sullivan). There is competition in
>>this field - trying to make faster, smarter computers (the
>>so-called next generation) - one leader of which is
>>reportedly the aptly named Thinking Machines Inc.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Tuesday Dec 3 1985
>>CHOPP COMPUTER was among the most active issues and it moved
>>up $1.25 to $15.38 as 1.3 million shares changed hands. The
>>company has announced its plans to merge with Sullivan
>>Computer Corporation, a Delaware company that is working on
>>developing smarter, faster computers.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Friday Dec 6 1985
>>The top trader in terms of value ($3.5 million) was CHOPP
>>COMPUTER: on volume of 183,000 shares it continued its climb
>>with a $3.13 gain to an even twenty-one dollars. Readers will
>>remember that Chopp's shares were split on a three-for-one
>>basis back in August; that means $63 for old Chopp. Until
>>last April, Chopp was known as Baz Resources. Chopp has been
>>among the VSE's most active issues for the past week now, and
>>it has been advancing steadily each day.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Monday Dec 9 1985
>>Again, CHOPP COMPUTERS was the VSE'S top trader in terms of
>>dollar value; $6.5 million worth of the company's shares
>>changed hands but Chopp took a turn for the worse. As 306,000
>>shares traded it lost $8.00 for a final trade of $13.00. With
>>less than an hour left in the day, trading in the shares of
>>the company was halted pending an announcement. The company
>>disseminated a news release which stated quite simply that
>>there were no material changes in the company - good or bad -
>>which haven't been disclosed already.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Monday Dec 9 1985
>>Again, CHOPP COMPUTERS was the VSE'S top trader in terms of
>>dollar value; $6.5 million worth of the company's shares
>>changed hands but Chopp took a turn for the worse. As 306,000
>>shares traded it lost $8.00 for a final trade of $13.00. With
>>less than an hour left in the day, trading in the shares of
>>the company was halted pending an announcement. The company
>>disseminated a news release which stated quite simply that
>>there were no material changes in the company - good or bad -
>>which haven't been disclosed already.
>>
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Tuesday Feb 11 1986
>>CHOPP COMPUTER took
>>number one spot: 117,000 shares traded and it moved up a
>>dollar to $15.75. Chopp is still in the process of merging
>>with a private California company, Sullivan Computer
>>Corporation.
>>
>>
>>Market Summary -
>>Friday Feb 14 1986
>>You've come a long way Baby. CHOPP COMPUTER CORPORATION was
>>resting today - its shares were halted pending a news release
>>- but on Friday it closed at $19.00. That's a handsome price
>>for any stock, but it is only part of the story: you see,
>>Chopp has split itself six times - which is why there are
>>13.7 million shares issued. To put it another way, on a
>>pre-split basis, Chopp is now trading at $114 per share, and
>>the market values the company at two hundred and sixty
>>million dollars. Not bad for a shell company named Baz
>>Resources that was listed on November 2, 1984 after going
>>public at $.17. (It changed its name in April, 1985). A canny
>>investor who spent $170 for 1000 Baz in 1984 now has 6000
>>Chopp worth $114,000. All the excitement is about Chopp's
>>supercomputer, and all the on again-off again-partially
>>completed financings reflect the company's obligations to
>>finance the supercomputer's development. Chopp's trading
>>pattern has had one or two sudden downward lurches on the way
>>to its recent lofty levels - which help to make the stock and
>>the company all the more controversial. The trading volume
>>has increased sharply in the last few weeks (as has the
>>price), so there is every reason to think that Chopp's
>>trading may become more, rather than less, topical. Therefore
>>we have re-printed our complete data base on the company back
>>to the day it was listed as Baz Resources. First read Baz;
>>then read Chopp.
>>
>>
>>Market Summary -
>>Monday Feb 17 1986
>>CHOPP COMPUTER was back trading again but it was off $2.00 to
>>$17.00. The company announced that a private placement which
>>was to have been for 175,000 units has been reduced to 70,000
>>units (before the latest two for one split) at $11.70 per
>>unit. The stock exchange, however, finds the price
>>unacceptable. Further financing is being arranged.
>>(c) Copyright 1998 Canjex Publishing Ltd.
>>http://www.canada-stockwatch.com
>>
>>
>>Market Summary -
>>Tuesday Feb 25 1986
>>CHOPP COMPUTER advanced $.25 to $17.63; volume was 49,000
>>shares. The company is raising funds to finance the
>>development of its super computer. A private placement of
>>175,000 units (which would have netted Chopp over two million
>>dollars) is not going to proceed as planned. However, Chopp
>>recently disclosed that it had arranged another private
>>placement, this time for 70,000 units, which would bring
>>$819,000 into the company.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Tuesday March 18 1986
>>CHOPP COMPUTER has also arranged a private placement;
>>$480,000 will be raised from a Kentucky investor; the money
>>will be spent on the ongoing development of the company's
>>super computer. In terms of dollar value, Chopp was the third
>>busiest issue today: 47,000 shares changed hands and it moved
>>up $.38 to $20.50.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Friday April 4 1986
>>Today, Chopp had
>>one of its horrid corrections: it collapsed $5.88 to $13.13
>>and was halted at the company's request after trading 90,000
>>shares. Is Chopp finished? This stock has had sell-offs in
>>the past, and then it has not only come back to fight another
>>day - it has gone on to new highs; rashly predicting its
>>demise is living too dangerously for our liking. To date, the
>>Chopp knockers have been wrong for a price run that has taken
>>the stock (on an unsplit basis) from $.17 to $120.00. That is
>>some wrong. Unless today's correction has broken the back of
>>the stock - and at this very moment all that is left is for
>>it to start trading again and continue its downward plummet -
>>Choppers should stop trying to guess where it might end and
>>start thinking about how it might end. (Sooner or later all
>>stock promotions come to an end; even Dome Petroleum
>>confirmed that).
>>Let's go back in time to 1980 and (until Chopp) one of the
>>biggest promotions the VSE has ever seen - March Resources.
>>March, if you weren't around then, ran - on an unsplit basis
>>- to $60.00 a share. Although March was in the oil business -
>>it ran on a dry hole called the North Lost Soldier well - and
>>Chopp is in the computer business, there are enough
>>similarities to make a comparison worth while. Like March
>>then (oil), Chopp now (computers) is in a business that is
>>especially popular with investors; both stocks have been
>>exceptionally liquid traders; both ran to extraordinary
>>prices; both have some people in common. The clearest sign
>>that the March promotion was getting long in the tooth lay in
>>the company news releases, and there was a blizzard of them.
>>There had to be: the company was drilling a well and the
>>stock was flying all over the place. Everytime it made a big
>>move up or down the stock exchange demanded a news release.
>>The higher it got, the more volatile it got, and the more
>>frequently the exchange said news release please. Now, if you
>>have to keep issuing a news release every third day about the
>>same project, eventually there won't be much new news. And no
>>matter how artfully the writer puts it, after several of them
>>they read like no new news. Few things will chip away at the
>>edges of a highly promoted stock more surely than a series of
>>news releases giving the impression that there is nothing
>>new. Sooner or later, this promoter's predicament becomes
>>impossible to avoid on stocks like March and Chopp because
>>the easy solution - control the stock so that it has no major
>>price gyrations - is impossible. With 13 million shares
>>issued and a big speculative premium attached to the price,
>>volatility is inevitable; not even Chopp's expert market
>>makers can avoid it. So it will be "news release please". The
>>only other solution is to have a never ending stream of new
>>news to meet each request with - and that requires a never
>>ending stream of new money. Whether it's drilling for oil or
>>designing new computers, it costs a fortune to get those
>>newsy results. The only way to avoid the volatility problem,
>>and therefore the news release dilemma, is to keep the price
>>of the stock down through stock splits - Chopp has now split
>>itself in six - but even that causes trouble because
>>eventually there will be so many shares issued that the stock
>>won't be able to get out of its own way. Also there is the
>>added problem of the shareholder who bought 1000 shares
>>because he wants 1000 shares - not 6000. That man will be a
>>seller. Ah, it's a tough life, being the promoter of a $.17
>>stock that (until today) was effectively trading at $120.00.
>>Whatever will the Choppers do? Probably they'll issue a news
>>release.



To: Savant who wrote (63)12/27/1999 2:06:00 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 607
 
Part 2

>>Market Summary
>>Monday April 14 1986
>>On a decidedly less happy note, CHOPP COMPUTER sold off $3.63
>>to $11.63 on 213,000 shares. It is a tribute to the company's
>>market makers that the slide in price has been such an
>>orderly affair (although doubtless not what the shareholders
>>had in mind). The absence of margin calls is a sign of
>>stability in the Chopp market that many observers wouldn't
>>have expected. When twenty dollar stocks lose close to half
>>their value the result is usually a debacle.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Tuesday May 6 1986
>>CHOPP COMPUTERS lost $.50 to $7.88 on volume of 87,000
>>shares. A recent news release outlines Chopp's schedule of
>>events at an upcoming national computer conference in Las
>>Vegas; it will be the company's first major exposure to the
>>supercomputer world.
>>
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Thursday May 22 1986
>>CHOPP COMPUTER
>>was steady at $8.37 ($50.22 pre-split) on volume of 23,000
>>shares. Chopp, its directors, and Mr. Frank Mathews have been
>>rudely attacked in the Superior Court of California by a
>>shareholder named Mr. Robert McGinnis. Mr. McGinnis' chief
>>gripe appears to be that a stock promotion is taking place;
>>he's very annoyed about the alleged use of celebrities' names
>>in connection with private placements. He also claims some
>>far-fetched happenings: he says that the Choppers had Chopp
>>issue to them (for little or no consideration) millions of
>>shares which they then re-distributed to U.S. shareholders in
>>violation of U.S. securities laws. Mr. McGinnis says that
>>they kept some of that money for themselves and returned some
>>to Chopp or Sullivan Computer Corp. The balance of the funds,
>>says Mr. McGinnis - five or ten million dollars - is
>>squirrelled away with a Vancouver brokerage firm where it is
>>used to manipulate and artificially maintain a high market
>>value for Chopp shares. The arithmetic used in calculating
>>shareholders' losses leads Mr. McGinnis to conclude (hope)
>>that treble damages from the Choppers could exceed $400
>>million. After his fuzzy recounting of events, Mr. McGinnis
>>gets to what he really wants, particularly: no more selling
>>or distributing Chopp shares in California until they are
>>qualified under California securities laws; and the return of
>>any trading profits made by the defendants. If nothing else,
>>the suit may have some nuisance value; the Choppers say none
>>of them have been served with the document yet. Suits of this
>>nature sometimes represent the activities of zealous
>>shortsellers.
>>
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Monday Jun 16 1986
>>Tuesday is the day that the VSE releases its weekly short
>>report.
>>A surprisingly small position, is CHOPP
>>COMPUTER with a modest 68,000 shares short. Considering how
>>controversial the company is, and how loudly the principals
>>holler about the shorts attacking them, it seems like a
>>relatively small position.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Monday Aug 4 1986
>>On volume of 93,000 shares, $0.75 was chopped off the price
>>of CHOPP COMPUTERS, leaving it at $4.15. The VSE's most
>>controversial listing isn't being allowed a moment's peace by
>>the editors of The Durant Livermore Cutten Bliss Report.
>>There is now more news about Chopp from this source than
>>there is from the Choppers. In response to Chopp's threatened
>>legal action against what it described in its July 8 news
>>release as poison pen letters, the Durant Report has
>>thoughtfully offered to print, for the benefit of its
>>subscribers, any comments that the Choppers might have on
>>their reporting. Although the Choppers seem to have allowed
>>that opportunity to pass, the Durant Report reveals that on
>>June 21, 1986, they filed a complaint in California court
>>seeking to muzzle their noisy critic. They sought, in a 500
>>page complaint, a restraining order to prevent the Durant
>>Report from publishing information about Chopp. While the
>>Choppers complained that the Durant Report was wrecking their
>>chances of raising the money they need - presumably the
>>unhindered run from $0.17 to $120.00 (pre-split) wasn't
>>sufficient to facilitate financing - the Durant Report
>>claimed that (1) what it says is true, and (2) that it is
>>seeking to establish a reputation for itself "by being the
>>first to call public attention to the largest financial
>>swindle since Equity Funding." (No matter what your views of
>>the Chopp promotion are, the thinly veiled comparison with
>>Equity Funding seems both misleading and inflammatory to say
>>the least. Durant cagily avoids a direct comparison.) After
>>listening to the adversaries call each other names, Durant
>>says that the judge ruled that the Report was free to carry
>>on business as usual - which it did, by promptly comparing
>>Chopp's claims for producing a working model of its super
>>computer by the second quarter of this year (for $1.4
>>million) to those of a used car salesman who promises to
>>develop a new racing auto that would beat all competitors at
>>the next Grand Prix - to be delivered in one month, at a cost
>>of $9.95.
>>This is the fourth brief report we've had about the Choppers.
>>The first, under the headline "You've Come a Long Way, Baby",
>>was on February 17 when Chopp was $19.00; the second was on
>>April 7 at $13.00, and contemplated how the promotion might
>>end, pointing out the similarities to March Resources; the
>>third was May 23 at $8.37 and offered some details about a
>>$400 million lawsuit against the Choppers and Mr. Frank
>>Mathews; the fourth is today's update on the Durant Report's
>>escalating efforts to promote the price of the stock down.
>>We'd like to know what our readers think about the role of
>>the Durant Report in the Chopp promotion because it seems to
>>us to be particularly controversial - one group trying to
>>promote the stock up, another one trying to get it down. And
>>both using publicity tactics that are usually only employed
>>by the first group - letters to shareholders, newsletter
>>recommendations, etc. Please send your viewpoint to Letters
>>to the Editor at our mailing address. Durant, by the way, has
>>pulled out all the stops in its last letter. It does this by
>>discussing its overall philosophy in a paragraph that is
>>actually unrelated to Chopp. In the unrelated paragraph, it
>>allows as how it is unhappy about its clients referring to
>>its editors as "scambusters", and that contrary to some
>>reports, no criminal conduct is required before issuing a
>>short report. The insinuations must be obvious to even the
>>dimmest reader, and to our thinking are close to scandalous.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Friday Sep 12 1986
>>And for the Choppers it was a good day for them too. Their
>>favourite company, CHOPP COMPUTER, has been enjoying a good
>>rally since it got the Durant Livermore Report off its back.
>>Today it was up $1.25 to $7.25 on volume of 140,000 shares.
>>The Durant Report - if anybody is unfamiliar with it - is as
>>keen on promoting the price of Chopp down as the Choppers are
>>of promoting it up, and has devoted several of its recent
>>issues to that end. Each side is wonderfully rude about the
>>other: insults galore and allegations of nuthin' there from
>>Durant - howls of protest from the Chopppers. Not
>>surprisingly, the shouting quickly moved into California
>>court where it seems the Choppers have (temporarily at least)
>>been able to gag their tormentor. One of the parties - we're
>>not sure which - sent us an enormous 500 page copy of the
>>court proceedings. Biggest news release we've ever had, and
>>interesting reading too. Thanks. Interestingly, a new
>>newsletter from the same part of California that Durant is
>>mailed from has appeared. It bears the title Air Stock Index
>>and - you guessed it - thinks selected issues are too high.
>>Chopp is not one of the companies that it refers to as air
>>stocks.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Thursday Feb 23 1989
>>There seems to be a spot of trouble brewing. Though the VSE
>>index began our review week on a positive note - up three
>>points to 820 on volume of 15 million shares - all eyes were
>>focused on one stock going the other way.
>>\WCN Investment\ fell from $9.75 to $5.25, was halted, then
>>resumed trading and rallied its way back to a $6.50 close.
>>Or, for those who prefer to keep today's prices relative to
>>WCN's $0.35 public offering in 1986, (and ignore the six
>>splits), WCN fell from $58.50 to $31.50, was halted, then
>>resumed trading and rallied its way back to a $39.00 close.
>>That, coincidentally, is where WCN closed two weeks ago on
>>Friday, February 10. Then, we were wondering if the company
>>might soon be taking its place with the other members of the
>>VSE's over-fifty club - stocks that go past $50.00 - and if
>>it did, how might the VSE best be able to protect itself from
>>another potentially unhappy public relations experience. The
>>VSE's over-fifty club includes \March Resources\ which Mr
>>Frank Mathews and associates took to $60.00 in 1980, based on
>>a dry hole named The North Lost Soldier; \International
>>Tillex\, which Mr Sam Ford and associates took to $75.00 in
>>1986, based on a phony insurance deal; \Chopp Computer\ which
>>Messrs Frank Mathews and Donald Hutton took to $120.00 in
>>1986, based on a never-finished super computer; and \Skyhigh
>>Resources\, which Mr Donald Fraser took to $72.00 in 1986,
>>based on the never-completed Edgington Oil acquisition.
>>Each of these over-fifty stocks was an over-promotion that
>>has cost the Vancouver stock exchange and its members a
>>fortune in lost credibility and lost business. In fact, two
>>of them, International Tillex and Chopp, are still dragging
>>their way through the courts; and one - Chopp - has already
>>resulted in a decision against a brokerage, which, (unless
>>successfully appealed), could set a precedent that might
>>someday be used to bankrupt a VSE member and dig deep into
>>the brokers' contingency fund. (That decision awarded $36,000
>>to a client of McDermid St Lawrence who had not been made
>>fully aware of the risk she was taking buying Chopp Computer.
>>She was not given the negative information that was available
>>about the company.)
>>Because each of these four over-promoted stocks has cost the
>>VSE and its members many times more in negative publicity
>>than it generated in commissions, the pure dollar and cents
>>lesson ought to be: cool down the over-promotions. The
>>exchange need not destroy the promotion; nor need it hurt the
>>company (in fact it can help it); nor need it hurt the
>>shareholders (it can help them also). But the VSE should try
>>and protect itself from fallout from any future over-fifty
>>collapses. It can. The best way would be to see that the next
>>collapse does not have so far to fall, is less dramatic -
>>both on the upside as well as the downside - and is less of a
>>media event.
>>\WCN Investment\, being the only active member of the
>>over-fifty club, will have to be, as we said two weeks ago,
>>our example. Since then, WCN has not just become more
>>topical: it has become Vancouver's most topical. (This is not
>>a discussion about WCN's business; it is about volatile
>>stocks in general, and ones that passed $50.00 in
>>particular.)
>>As WCN roared past $50.00, the company found its affairs
>>featured prominently in both The Vancouver Sun and The Globe
>>and Mail; and other stories are probably coming. WCN's story,
>>which has political overtones, may still be building. By the
>>time it is old news, it will have as controversial a profile
>>as Chopp's but, unlike Chopp, a profile gained mid-promotion
>>rather than post-promotion. If worst comes to worst, and the
>>promotion runs into difficulty (pray it does not) there will
>>be no explaining WCN away as "something that happened three
>>years ago". Its affairs, business as well as promotional,
>>will go under a microscope.
>>All-in-all, these fifty dollar stocks have the potential to
>>pose problems for the VSE. Can these problems be avoided? We
>>think so. Let's see what happens on Monday.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Friday Mar 17 1989
>>For the VSE and its members, the squeeze is on. During the
>>rest of 1989 they may find themselves trapped: from above, by
>>the fallout of exploding shells (see last night's CBC story
>>about Chopp Computer or The Fifth Estate's soon-to-be-aired
>>show about funny companies)
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Thursday Dec 28 1989
>> On January 19, Justice Kenneth
>>Meredith, in a precedent-setting court decision, ruled
>>against McDermid St Lawrence Ltd and Mr Kenneth Hope in the
>>Chopp Computer case, ordering them to shell out $35,000 to a
>>client who bought the stock in 1986. The implication for
>>broker-promoter relationship was ugly. The press had a
>>field-day.
>>
>>Market Summary
>>Wed 26 Jun 96
>>TEN YEARS AGO the indices disappeared in the excitement surrounding Howe
>>Street's entrants in the annual Nanaimo bathtub race, so we can go straight
>>to the rest of the CHOPP COMPUTER CORP debacle. (No, the Howe Streeters did
>>not win.) Before Ms Hutton spoke of her husband's appointment to the board,
>>and the $7-million scientific research tax credit financing, she had asked
>>the VSE to halt trading, and the exchange, as fond of halts then as now,
>>had done so. When she made those announcements she also said that the
>>company had closed the revamped 250,000 share private placement at $5.50 to
>>Randall Jackson, and arranged a public financing of at least 250,000 shares
>>through an undisclosed broker. The exchange, alert enough to recognize a
>>rigged deal, then said it would not reinstate trading until it had accepted
>>a statement of material facts for the offering.
>>Trading started again on July 2,1985, after acceptance of an SMF for at
>>least 250,000 shares at a minimum of $7 by Canarim Investment Corp. A
>>set-back at the end of July, when the VSE halted trading as the stock
>>plunged, (explained by Mr Hutton as being due to an imbalance of orders
>>caused primarily by stop-loss orders), gave him the opportunity to say
>>there were no material changes and no negative facts to disclose. The
>>design of the first working model was virtually complete and he expected to
>>have it to show to the world within the next nine months to a year. Mr.
>>Hutton did not mention that Baz originally said they would attempt to have
>>a working prototype within a year from the end of April.
>>The set-back was soon overcome, and early in August the shareholders
>>approved a three-for-one split, which gave the company an issued capital of
>>6,717,600 shares, with 2,250,000 of them in escrow. The public offering
>>closed in mid-August, not very successfully, as Canarim was able to sell
>>just 86,700 shares at an average price of $9.65 (pre-split). That bad news
>>was overcome by the good news of two more private placements, one of
>>300,000 post-split units at $4.08, the second of 450,000 units at $6.19
>>($18.57 pre-split), the latter announced in mid-September. The same
>>announcement saw the end of the scientific research financing, due to the
>>company's inability to satisfy certain conditions, but management was
>>satisfied that the two placements would provide enough money to pay for the
>>super-computer program.
>>The first of those two placements closed late in October, but only for
>>150,000 units, and the company never again mentioned the other. The rest of
>>the year saw a successful attempt to revive a flagging market with a
>>proposal to merge with its licensor, Sullivan Computer, and by early 1986
>>the shares were trading at $21.25 ($63.75 pre-split). The optimistic Mr
>>Hutton said he expected to have the working model completed in the second
>>quarter, and that he would have a product to sell by 1987, that would
>>immediately produce revenues and earnings.
>>Late in January Chopp split its shares again, this time two for one, and Mr
>>Hutton said that design improvements had increased the capacity of each
>>mode so much that if the first working model consisted of 20 modes, it
>>would have an effective speed of 1.6-billion instructions per second, 15
>>times the speed of the competitor Cray XMP. He also said all the legal and
>>tax problems relating to the merger were solved, that he expected it within
>>60 to 90 days, and that a Nasdaq listing would follow.
>>In mid-February, with the stock at $19 ($114 pre-splits), Ms Hutton
>>revealed that the 125,000 share private placement at $5.50 to Mr Jackson
>>had not closed, that the company had substituted a placement of 70,000
>>units at $11 in its place, and that the private placement purchaser of the
>>150,000 units at $4.08 had exercised its warrants. The VSE did not think
>>much of the proposed $11 (pre-split) price, but soon accepted an amended
>>price of $18.63. The lucky buyers, who got the equivalent of 140,000 units
>>at $9.32, when the stock was trading at $20.12, were Michelle Tomera, with
>>60,000, and Marlon and Carol Johnson, with 10,000.
>>The stock reached its high of $123 (pre-split) at the beginning of April,
>>and was at $114 on April 4 when Ms Hutton spoke glowingly of increased
>>credibility, recent technical advances, and the imminent arrival of a draft
>>merger proposal and a Nasdaq listing. She also said it was apparent from
>>her description of the advances that the company was involved in a very
>>complex project. She did mention a target date for a working model, and
>>that, plus the complexity, may have spooked the market, because for Chopp
>>it was then all downhill. In July, after two more trading halts when the
>>stock plunged, it traded at just $53.25 pre-split. Mr Hutton said he
>>expected Sullivan to complete one demonstration node of a proposed 16 node
>>machine by the end of the year, and issued a lengthy news release howling
>>about poison pen letters by The Durant Livermore Cutten & Bliss Reports,
>>from a post office box in the West Indies.
>>By August Chopp was down to $25.50, even though it had obtained an interim
>>injunction against the bad-mouthers. The stock bounced back to $63 in
>>September just before Sullivan filed its take over bid, offering four
>>Sullivan share for three Chopp. By mid-November more than 96 per-cent of
>>the shareholders had accepted the offer, and the VSE delisted Chopp, at the
>>company's request, on November 19, with the last trade in Vancouver at $54.
>>Sullivan changed its name to Chopp and in 1990 Herbert Sullivan was still
>>talking about the CHoPP concept, but not about its computer, and Mr Hutton
>>reported a judgement in California, against many of those involved in
>>slagging the company back in 1986, for over US$48-million. Whether the
>>company ever received any money is a mystery, but it is unlikely, because
>>Alex Laurins, the chief defamer and short-seller, had been in jail since
>>1987 on an unrelated matter. There never was a computer that worked.