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Pastimes : Investment Chat Board Lawsuits -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (233)5/3/2000 12:54:00 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 12465
 
Solv-Ex Suit Against Investment Firms, Short Sellers Dismissed
Albuquerque, New Mexico, May 2 (Bloomberg) -- A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit brought by Solv-Ex Corp. against Deutsche Bank AG and about 20 other investors that the oil processing company accused of engaging in a stock market tug-of-war that crushed the company's value.

U.S. District John Conway in Albuquerque, New Mexico, dismissed the lawsuit, filed in December 1998, saying he found no evidence of a conspiracy.

Solv-Ex, which is developing technology to extract oil from tar sands in northern Canada, claimed Deutsche Bank and its Morgan Grenfell unit artificially inflated Solv-Ex's stock price, and then short sellers misused confidential information to drive down the Albuquerque company's share price.

As evidence, Solv-Ex submitted electronic mail messages exchanged among short sellers, investors who profit when stocks fall.

``The e-mails and discussions are merely opinions about the relative value of Solv-Ex stock,'' Conway wrote in his order dismissing the case. ``If such discussions were sufficient to prove a conspiracy, then every person in the securities industry would be a potential conspirator.''

Solv-Ex Chief Financial Officer Frank Ciotti said the company's attorneys were still reviewing the decision, which was issued earlier today.

Negative Results

The ruling comes less than a month after another federal judge found Solv-Ex, Chairman John Rendall and Senior Vice President Herb Campbell ignored negative test results regarding their technology and cautions from consultants, then issued press releases and statements to shareholders almost weekly that created ``a misleadingly optimistic picture'' of Solv-Ex technology.

That decision stemmed from a lawsuit filed in July 1998 by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

In its lawsuit against the investment firms, Solv-Ex claims Morgan Grenfell, now known as Deutsche Bank Securities, manipulated Solv-Ex's stock as part of a larger scheme to defraud investors.

Deutsche Bank fired former fund manger Peter Young in 1996 for allegedly disguising his funds' holdings in Solv-Ex and other risky stocks through a series of dummy corporations. Solv-Ex officials maintained they were unaware of Young's activities.

Deutsche Bank ultimately paid $664 million in fines and restitution related to the scandal.

Also named in Solv-Ex's lawsuit were eight investment firms and their principals, who Solv-Ex claims sold the company's shares short. Short sellers targeted Solv-Ex in 1996 and 1997, as the company's shares soared, generating a market capitalization of more than $800 million.

In addition to Deutsche Bank, the defendants in the lawsuit were: Quilcap Corp. and its principal, Parker Quillen of New York; Martin Zweig and New York-based Zweig Advisors; Michelle Sarian and her firm, New York-based Fahnestock & Co.; New Orleans-based Rice Voelker Bros. & Frantzen and its principals, George Voelker and Tim Rice; Mikles/Miller Management Inc. of Santa Monica, California, and its principals, Lee Mikles and Mark Miller; Stanley Trilling and his Los Angeles-based Trilling Partners, as well as their affiliate, Paine Webber Group Inc.; and Manuel Asensio and his firm, Asensio & Co. of New York.

May/02/2000 19:45

For more stories from Bloomberg News, click here.

(C) Copyright 2000 Bloomberg L.P.



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (233)5/3/2000 12:54:00 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 12465
 
``The e-mails and discussions are merely opinions about the relative value of Solv-Ex stock,'' Conway wrote in his order dismissing the case. ``If such discussions were sufficient to prove a conspiracy, then every person in the securities industry would be a potential conspirator.''



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (233)5/3/2000 3:28:00 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 12465
 
******THIS IS WHAT ANTHONY L. TOBIN OF ZSUNE SAID*********

"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."

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: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (233)5/4/2000 8:32:00 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 12465
 
RE Ziasun: David W. McCoy is an officer of Online Investors Advantage.

Dont they teach a course on when to buy and sell securities?

He must have taken the same course as Randy Berg!! Average transaction price $7.50. Todays ZSUNE close $6 1/8

Imagine that the transaction date of 4/20/00 is the same date as the buy report

MCCOY, DAVID W. EMP 25,000 144 4/20/00 - $0.19 - - 5/1/00 source insidertrader.com

tenkwizard.com.

ZiaSun Receives Investment Opinion From Stockreporter

Stockreporter Issues Strong Buy Recommendation

Of $28.50 Year 2000 Share Price Target

SOLANA BEACH, Calif., April 20 /PRNewswire/ -- ZiaSun Technologies, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: ZSUN; Frankfurt/Hamburg: ZIA) today announced that Stockreporter issued a strong buy recommendation on ZiaSun, with a year 2000 target price of $28.50 per share, which, relative to a current trading level of approximately $10 per share, indicates tremendous potential for investors over the short and long term. Stockreporter is a leading European financial Internet publication located at www.stockreporter.de that specializes in the coverage of micro-cap stocks and undervalued companies.

"We believe ZiaSun is a tremendously undervalued stock. Stockreporter believes that ZSUN could appreciate to trading levels in line with other companies in the Internet incubator sector. For example, Internet incubator CMGI is currently valued at roughly $80 per share with a $23.5 billion market cap, despite a net loss of over $300 million for the first six months alone," commented Stockreporter's Torsten Prochnow. "Stockreporter is recommending the purchase of ZSUN for investors who want to establish a position in their Internet incubator sector. We are anticipating that ZiaSun may be one of the top performers in that sector because of its continued strong performance in North America and its focus and early positioning in the Asia Pacific and European markets -- the two regions generating the world's fastest growing Internet user base."

ZiaSun is a profitable Internet incubator with rapid earnings growth and a very strong position in the financial, investment, auction and e-commerce sectors of the explosive Internet industry. Record fiscal 1999 results were posted with earnings of $10.7 million, or $0.49 per share EBIT, on revenues of $27.2 million. It also reported dramatic balance sheet improvements with $20.2 million in total assets and $11.7 million in cash at year-end to aggressively pursue its growth objectives for 2000.

View the complete Stockreporter report on ZSUN, prepared by Christina Skousen, Registered Investment Advisor, at www.stockreporter.de .

About ZiaSun Technologies

ZiaSun Technologies, Inc. is a leading Internet technology holding company focused on international investor education and e-commerce and specialized online support services within North America, Asia and other international markets. The Company's Internet portfolio includes: Online Investors Advantage ( www.i-advantage.com ), Momentum Asia, Inc. ( www.momentumasia.com ), ServiceLive ( www.servicelive.com ), Momentum Internet, Inc. ( www.momentumplus.com ), PINmail ( www.pinmail.com ), MEDIAhits ( www.mediahits.com ), Swiftrade ( www.swiftrade.com ), AsiaEnet Ltd. ( www.asiaenet.com ), Tigertooth ( www.tigertooth.com ), Search Dragon ( www.searchdragon.com ), M Finance (www.mfinance.com -- a top-100 financial website), and a 19% equity position in Asia4Sale ( www.asia4sale.com ).

"Safe Harbor" statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995: Except for historical information, the matters discussed in this news release that my be considered forward-looking statements could be subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results to differ materially from those projected. These include uncertainties in the market, competition, legal, success of marketing efforts and other risks detailed from time to time in the company's SEC reports. The company assumes no obligation to update the information in this release.

SOURCE ZiaSun Technologies, Inc.

CO: ZiaSun Technologies, Inc.; Stockreporter

ST: California

IN: MLM FIN

SU: RTG

04/20/2000 10:06 EDT prnewswire.com



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (233)5/11/2000 9:08:00 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 12465
 
The much-hyped profitability of ZSUNE appears to be in jeopardy. From the most recent version of the 10SB (No. 6 for those that are counting):

"In accordance with the terms of the acquisition agreement for OIA the former
shareholders of OIA are to receive 1 share of the Company's common stock for
each $0.50 of earnings before interest, income taxes, depreciation, and
amortization for the year from April 1, 1999 through March 31, 2000. OIA's
earnings as defined above were $10,910,076. Accordingly, the Company would owe
21,820,152 shares of its common stock at March 31, 2000. The value of the shares
at March 31, 2000 was approximately $250,000,000. This value would be added to
the goodwill on the balance sheet of the Company. The Company is attempting to
renegotiate the terms of the transaction to issue less shares for additional
cash consideration. However, no agreement has been reached at the date of this
audit report".

ZSUNE currently amortizes goodwill over 10 years (Note 2s). If the deal goes through as initially structured and assuming that ZSUNE will amortize the OIA goodwill over 10 years, the annual charge is $25,000,000. That's right 25 million! To put this figure into perspective, ZSUNE reported total revenues of $27,220,240 and net income of $5,979,675 for 1999.



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (233)5/11/2000 11:22:00 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12465
 
ZiaSun Technologies Inc. "Pick of the Litter" From Skip Nordstrom's Growth Stock Newsletter - March, 1999
Reprinted with permission,
From Skip Nordstrom's Growth Stock Newsletter
nicstock.com
=============================================

In the Matter of NATIONAL INVESTORS COUNCIL and SKIP NORDSTROM,
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Before the
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
Release No. 7600 / October 27, 1998

ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEEDING
File No. 3-9766

______________________________________

In the Matter of

NATIONAL INVESTORS COUNCIL and SKIP NORDSTROM,

Respondents.

______________________________________

ORDER INSTITUTING PUBLIC CEASE-AND-DESIST PROCEEDING, MAKING
FINDINGS AND ISSUING A CEASE-AND-DESIST ORDER

I.

The Securities and Exchange Commission ("Commission")
deems it appropriate that a public cease-and-desist
proceeding pursuant to Section 8A of the Securities Act of
1933 ("Securities Act") be instituted against National
Investors Council ("NIC") and Skip Nordstrom ("Nordstrom").

II.

In anticipation of the institution of this proceeding,
NIC and Nordstrom have each submitted an Offer of
Settlement, each of which the Commission has determined to
accept. Solely for the purpose of this proceeding and any
other proceeding brought by or on behalf of the Commission
or in which the Commission is a party, and without admitting
or denying the findings contained herein, except that NIC
and Nordstrom each admits the jurisdiction of the Commission
over each of them and over the subject matter of this
proceeding, NIC and Nordstrom each consents to the entry of
this Order Instituting Public Cease-and-Desist Proceeding,
Making Findings and Issuing a Cease-and-Desist Order
("Order") set forth below.

Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that a proceeding pursuant
to Section 8A of the Securities Act be, and hereby is,
instituted.

III.

On the basis of this Order and the Offers of Settlement
submitted by NIC and Nordstrom, the Commission finds that:

A. RESPONDENTS

1. NIC is the fictitious business name for a Newport
Beach, California publishing business owned and
operated by Skip Nordstrom. NIC publishes two
publications on the internet: Skip Nordstrom's
Growthstock Newsletter ("Newsletter") and Portfolio
Picks, both of which are found on NIC's website.

2. Nordstrom is forty-seven (47) years old and resides in
Santa Ana, California. He is the sole employee and
owner of NIC.

B. FACTS

1. Nordstrom operates NIC out of his office located in
Newport Beach, California. Nordstrom writes NIC's
Newsletter and determines which issuers will be listed
in NIC's Portfolio Picks.

2. Portfolio Picks provides an overview of approximately
twelve companies which NIC represents have growth
potential. Persons interested in a particular company
can click on the stock symbol for the company within
Portfolio Picks and receive information regarding
current stock price and volume. A corporate digest
summarizing the company's operations is also available.
The Newsletter profiles small, publicly-held companies
that, in Nordstrom's opinion, have a two to five year
growth potential. The Newsletter is also available to
subscribers via regular mail and has a circulation of
approximately 1,000. Certain companies featured in the
Newsletter have been listed, sometimes concurrently, in
Portfolio Picks.

3. NIC charges a $900 monthly fee for a company to be
listed in Portfolio Picks, for a minimum of three
consecutive months. Under certain circumstances, NIC
has agreed to reduce the monthly fee or accepted
securities as payment. Prior to commencement of the
Commission's investigation, NIC's website contained a
disclaimer that readers should assume that NIC, its
principals, officers, and employees have a vested
interest in the companies presented on NIC's website,
which may have been acquired under terms and conditions
not available to the public.

4. Section 17(b) of the Securities Act prohibits any
person from publishing, giving publicity to, or
circulating any notice, circular, advertisement,
newspaper, article, letter, investment service or
communication which describes a security for a
consideration received or to be received, directly or
indirectly, from an issuer, underwriter or dealer,
without fully disclosing the receipt, whether past or
prospective, of such consideration and the amount
thereof. As a result of the conduct identified in
paragraphs III.B.1. through III.B.3., NIC and Nordstrom
violated Section 17(b) of the Securities Act by
publishing and giving publicity to communications which
described issuers featured in Portfolio Picks in
exchange for consideration, without disclosing the
amount of such consideration.

IV.

Based on the foregoing, the Commission deems it
appropriate to accept the Offers of Settlement submitted by
NIC and Nordstrom.

Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:

A. Pursuant to Section 8A of the Securities Act, NIC
cease and desist from committing or causing any violation
and any future violation of Section 17(b) of the Securities
Act; and

B. Pursuant to Section 8A of the Securities Act,
Nordstrom cease and desist from committing or causing any
violation and any future violation of Section 17(b) of the
Securities Act.

By the Commission.

Jonathan G. Katz
Secretary