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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Zia Sun(zsun) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Frank_Ching who wrote (7030)3/18/2000 11:15:00 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 10354
 
Spirit of co-operation rules in Web business
scmp.com
Monday January 25 2000
Spirit of co-operation rules in Web business

At first glance, there was nothing unusual about the Capital Growth Report when it arrived in Backspace's snail-mail box. Of equal parts financial jargon and hype, the report - which charges US$78 for a year's subscription to what appeared to be four badly laid-out pages per month - seemed a typical tech-stock newsletter.

What made Backspace choke on his morning coffee was the pick of the month: an obscure public Internet company called ZiaSun Technologies. ZiaSun was known as Momentum Internet when it was based in Hong Kong. Three years ago, a magazine called The Dataphile revealed that Momentum was behind a stable of porn Web sites and phone chat lines that promised Bangkok Babes and China Dolls. Thousands of spam messages advertising these services were sent from Momentum's free e-mail service.

While not admitting the spamming, Momentum and now ZiaSun president Anthony Tobin told Technology Post last year that the company no longer ran sex-related businesses. Instead, ZiaSun has latched on to other Web trends. It has an Asian search engine, a stock-trading portal, a financial news service, an advertising network and an auction site called AsiaForSale. It moved to San Diego in 1998 when it began trading over the counter in the US, while keeping most Web operations in Asia, mainly in Hong Kong and Manila.

While the company claims to be profitable on modest revenues - $9 million in the second quarter last year - it has been
criticised by day traders and investors in the US, who have tried to puncture those claims. Mr Tobin had ZiaSun respond by suing several day-trading and investment sites for alleged defamation.

While ZiaSun likes to hype its Web sites - 45 press releases last year - it doesn't appear to be making much money. Most of ZiaSun's revenues came from two off-line subsidiaries, a Philippine-based printing business called Momentum Asia and a US learn-how-to-day-trade seminar which charges $3,995 a head, according to Mr Tobin.

So Backspace was puzzled why the editor of Capital Growth Report would hold such an optimistic view of ZiaSun's
prospects. 'The company has a dominant position in the exploding Asian Internet market . . . We expect that ZiaSun
stock will soon be valued with that of profitable peers such as CMGI, now trading in the [US]$80 range.' A visit to Capital Growth's site (www.capitalg.com) shows it is designed and maintained by Momentum Internet and that Capital Growth offers ZiaSun's Swiftrade stock-trading service to subscribers. Isn't co-operation and alliance-building among Web companies heartening?

scmp.com

business.scmp.com.



To: Frank_Ching who wrote (7030)3/18/2000 10:33:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10354
 
You want something more specific? Here it is you worm and it spells DOOM for all the little hatchlings associated with your buds:

"Those running, buying whateve on these shells are in for a rude awakening soon. You could be throwing away
perfectly good money.

Shell Shock Going Public Gets Tough

By Rebecca Ramsay

The sound of slamming doors can be heard around the nation as the SEC and Nasdaq launch a new
initiative to regulate companies wanting to go public. Small companies could save thousands of dollars and
months of waiting on legal paperwork by merging with a shell company, a process that was not exactly
legal, but not exactly enforced. Today, that process has come to a screeching halt thanks to a letter from
the SEC's Richard Wulff in January.

A letter stating that small private companies wishing to go public through a reverse merger into a blank
check, or shell company, could be denied. Some companies may already have paperwork on hold by
Nasdaq without knowing why.

A blank check company is basically an idea on paper for a company with no assets, no income, no
business plan and no products. But what it does have is permission to trade on the open market, amassing
a solid shareholder base and free trading stock - an asset worth more than gold to these small private
companies, which need fast cash infusion to get off the ground.

Protecting the Public

According to SEC officials, too many incidences of shell fraud were hurting investors, who lost the liquidity
in their investments. Both the SEC and the investors were unable to differentiate between real operating
companies and fake shell companies. Subsequently, these small companies must now fully register all
shares with the SEC, a process that can delay a company's trading status for up to a year.

On Nov. 1, 1999, Ken Worm, of Nasdaq's Small Business Division, asked for guidance on this matter in a
letter to the SEC's Richard Wulff. In a reply letter dated Jan. 21, 2000, that has just now surfaced, Wulff's
letter has enraged the promoters, public relations firms, lawyers, small-cap companies and OTC BB
community.

Because of the severe manipulation of the already trading companies, known as shells, the SEC is now
actively enforcing its stance against the issuance of freely tradable shares that have not been registered
with the SEC.

Instead of preventing scam artists from misuing shells to sell shares of nonexistent companies, the
government has stopped the blank check shell filings altogether.

Ultimately, this enforcement by the SEC could clog the
pipeline to shareholder funding, which forces the small company to file an IPO - a process many
entrepreneurs cannot afford. If the financial fuel of small companies is no longer flowing into the market,
the consequences could be far reaching.

Unfortunately, many of the people who were hired to perform the reverse mergers for these formerly
private companies, never informed the companies about the potential dangers of the shares not becoming
fully registered.

Many of these small companies expecting to receive cash from investors for those tradable shares, to
reward their investors, are now being rejected and may need to find alternative means of funding.

Distress Calls

How do companies now trading on Nasdaq, know if they can continue trading? How do investors know if
their shares will be frozen indefinitely?

Small start-up companies created 3.1 million payroll jobs in 1998 alone. Without adequate funding, proper
business operations never get off the ground. Take away or reduce the amount of small business
contributions to the American economy and there could be serious repercussions. There were 500 blank
check filings in 1999 and 300 in 1998. Some of those filings were from companies now worth millions of
dollars.

But why now, early in the 21st Century, almost 70 years after the Securities Act, is the SEC deciding to
take action? It could be connected with the latest surge in dot coms. Thousands of small companies, many
born from the latest Internet craze, have acquired publicly tradable shares in three to five weeks time,
allowing their ground floor investors to reimburse themselves almost immediately.

Others think it could all be due to an article that appeared in the Wall Street Journal last October about
one man's ability to take 101 companies public and make millions doing it. "If anybody was so stupid as to
be interviewed by Wall Street Journal for taking 100 companies public, they deserve to be locked up and
put away," one securities lawyer said. "Reversing into a shell that's not fully registered is as illegal as
robbing a bank."

Other securities lawyers argue that the Securities Act allowed this transaction as long as the reverse
mergers were properly structured.

Will lawyers continue to fight this case for the hundreds of small companies that will be affected? Could
this mess go to the Supreme Court? Are investors in danger of losing all of their money? To find out more,
read the complete, in-depth story, found only in the upcoming June issue of Financial Sentinel. If you don't
currently receive the Financial Sentinel, click here to subscribe - www.worldmicrocap.com .

Taking a company public is expensive. Here are some cost estimates on the various phases of "going
public." (These estimates are only approximations and are subject to change constantly. Rates vary
between lawyers.)

S4 = $75,000 to $125,000
6 to 8 month wait for free trading shares

10 SB = $10,000 to $35,000
Fully reporting, publicly traded company with no free trading shares

SB 2 = $25,000 to $50,000
6 to 8 month wait for free trading shares

S&P Manual Exemption = $5,000
(Required of all companies.)

Or

Cost of a traded shell = $150,000 to $350,000, plus 5% to 10% of all shares 3 to 5 week wait (prior to the
SEC letter with free trading shares)

Looks like another wrench tossed into the reverse mergers in an effort to cleam up a lot of this stocks that are
being run through the roof and have nothing what so ever in them and no full registration statement.

This could affect a lot of OTC companies. Boy the witch hunters are going to go NUTZ!!!

Gary"

Message 13156396