Here's an interesting article. I don't believe it has been posted yet:
December 21, 1999
Dow Jones Newswires
WEB OF DECEIT: Sites Blur Line Between Research, Payola
By SEAN DAVIS
NEW YORK -- Cash Cow magazine promotes penny stocks, and judging by the deals it cuts, this Web site (www.cashcowmag.com) definitely is a cash cow - for its owner, NewTrends Holdings Inc.
One of Cash Cow's "Hot Picks" is VisionGlobal Corp. (VIZG), which says it is developing a high-speed wireless communications network. Click on the word "Legal" in tiny typeface at the bottom of the screen and you'll discover why.
NewTrends "has been retained as a consultant for Website promotions/Website design to VisionGlobal," the legal disclaimer says. "As payment for services to be rendered, a shareholder ... agreed to let (NewTrends) purchase 25,000 shares of stock for $25,000 US - a price deeply discounted from the current market value."
VisionGlobal closed at $2.19 a share on Oct. 25, the day NewTrends says it was hired to promote the Bulletin Board stock. Since then, VisionGlobal has risen to a recent $13 a share, giving NewTrends a paper profit of $300,000, or 1,200%.
With profits like that, it's no wonder stock promotion is a booming business. All it takes to get one of these sites up and running is $70 to register a Web address and $99 for off-the-shelf software that lets a novice build a Web site. No one knows how many Web sites promote penny stocks for pay. Stock Detective (www.stockdetective.com), a Web site that tries to expose Internet stock fraud, lists 76, including Cash Cow.
Not all stock sites disclose their interest in the companies they promote, even though the law requires it. The Securities and Exchange Commission has sanctioned a number of stock promoters for failing to do so. And some disclose this information in small, hard-to-read typefaces.
Stock touts are nothing new. They've been around as long as the markets. But a number of forces have combined to create the current boom.
First, the eight-year bull market has fueled an explosion of publicly traded companies. Today there are about 15,000 companies filing reports with the SEC. Not all these companies can get blue-chip investment bankers to tell their story to the Street. "There is a legitimate reason for stock promotion," says John Woods, who writes about stock fraud for Canada Stockwatch in Vancouver.
Second, technology has made it easier and cheaper to tout stocks. Promoters used to work the phones or the fax machines to get the word out about a client. Now, they can reach millions of potential investors with a Web site or a mass e-mail, known to detractors as spam.
Third, the democratization of the markets has introduced millions of relatively unsophisticated investors to the stock market. While many legitimate brokerages have responded by making their research more accessible to the public, there is still a vacuum of free information that stock promoters have rushed to fill.
Finally, the boom in Internet stock touts can be attributed in part to the success of authorities in shutting down the penny-stock scams of the early 1990s. Back then, unscrupulous broker-dealers filled rooms with cold-callers who used high-pressure sales tactics to generate interest in stocks they controlled. But state and federal regulators shut down many of these so-called boiler-rooms, driving pump-and-dump schemes onto the Web.
Protection And A Bounty
Not all stock promoters are scam artists. Many sites are in the straightforward business of publicizing small companies for a fee.
John Westergaard has been in the securities business since 1957. He was an early proponent of emerging growth stocks, and made his name on Wall Street at Equity Research Associates, a firm he founded in 1960 to fill the void of research on small companies, especially in the technology field.
Now Westergaard heads Westergaard.com Inc. (WSYS), which provides research on companies for a fee of $48,000 a year. It doesn't accept stock, and it discloses its relationship to its clients through a link high on the main page of the Web site (www.wbn.com).
Westergaard's staff is made up mostly of retired Wall Street analysts who work part-time. Each analyst follows a particular company. They are paid by Westergaard, not the companies they follow.
Westergaard says he provides an important service to these small companies. "If you're worried about getting scammed, you're going to need a service like ours to protect you." That protection extends to offering a bounty on anonymous message-board critics. In August 1997, Westergaard offered $5,000 for "the most complete dossier" on a short-seller who had been attacking a Westergaard client.
Westergaard.com's record as a stockpicker is mixed. Premier Laser Systems Inc. (PLSIA) has experienced considerable difficulties, including heavy losses, a dispute with a distributor, an auditor resignation and a five-month suspension in trading of its stock. Another Westergaard.com client, Edgar Online Inc. (EDGR) has fared better. It recently acquired its major competitor. But its losses have widened, and its recent share price of $8 is less than the $9.50 at which it came public in May.
'In Stocks We Trust'
Cash Cow's Web site features a mock-up of a dollar bill. In place of George Washington is a bull in sunglasses and a tuxedo, smoking a fat cigar. The face value of this ersatz greenback is $1 million, and the motto imprinted on its face reads, "In Stocks We Trust!"
Cash Cow's owner, NewTrends, is based in Kelowna, B.C., according to the site's domain-name registration material, obtained from Network Solutions Inc. (NSOL), the major registrar of domain names. The site's administrative contact is Stuart Gray. Attempts to reach him by e-mail were unsuccessful, and the telephone number provided by Network Solutions was connected to a fax machine.
Dow Jones Newswires sent an e-mail to an address listed on Cash Cow's Web site. The person who replied wrote that a "third party shareholder(s) sold us the stock" for VisionGlobal, but didn't provide the name of the shareholder, saying only that it wasn't an officer, director or corporate affiliate. This person wrote that Cash Cow views its profiled companies as long-term investments. The rest of the reply reiterated Cash Cow's disclosure material, including the disclaimer that its articles aren't investment advice, and shouldn't be construed as an endorsement of any stock.
Joe Morgan, a VisionGlobal employee, said one of the company's original investors, based overseas, sold the stock to NewTrends. He declined to give the shareholder's name. "It was one of the money people invested in the company before we got involved," Morgan said, adding that VisionGlobal intended to contact this shareholder in writing to ask about the sale.
As its filings with the SEC reveal, VisionGlobal has a complicated history. It was incorporated in 1986, but until 1998, its operations were limited to the sale of shares to Capital General Corp., a company controlled by convicted fraudster David Yeaman, and the giving of shares as gifts.
In 1998, VisionGlobal agreed to a reverse merger with a Delaware corporation, giving Martin G. Wotton, a 37-year-old former stockbroker from Australia, 10 million shares, or 58%, of VisionGlobal. He became the company's chief executive. Earlier this year, VisionGlobal acquired the intellectual property rights to a two-way radio, paying the owner 100,000 shares and making him a senior vice president.
Since NewTrends started promoting VisionGlobal, the stock's trading volume has risen dramatically. On Oct. 25, 4,200 shares changed hands; two days later, 301,200 shares were traded. Volume has exceeded 500,000 shares three times since then. The latest surge in the stock came on Dec. 10, after VisionGlobal announced it had hired a big ad agency. On that day, the stock rose $5, or 70%, on volume of 697,300 shares.
-Sean Davis, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5294; sean.davis@dowjones.com |