Millionaire.com Is No Blue-Blood Company: Christopher Byron 8/16/0 0:1 (New York)
(Commentary. Christopher Byron is a columnist for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own.) Weston, Connecticut, Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Everyone knows it's great to be a millionaire. But forget about Regis Philbin for a minute and just think instead about how much greater your life would be if you could celebrate your seven-digit financial status by owning a magazine devoted exclusively to the greatness of millionaire-dom itself. Impossible? Well, a mere $5.26 million looks to be the current going price for exactly that opportunity -- to see your name at the top of the masthead, as owner, editor, publisher, or whatever you might want to call yourself, of what else but Millionaire magazine. Does that sound like a deal to you? Since Millionaire magazine happens to be owned by a company calling itself Millionaire.com, whose 8.76 million shares outstanding are currently selling for 60 cents each on Nasdaq's OTC Bulletin Board market, the prize would appear to be within the grasp of the lowliest wretch clinging to the bottom rung of the millionaire ladder. Think of it. A mere $5.26 million and you'll not only get 100 percent ownership of a magazine that features Bo Derek on its current cover and is speckled with ads for all the stuff presumably to be found in your typical millionaire's toy box, but you'll also get a functioning Web site bearing the name of what else but Millionaire.com. There's even an actual bona fide auction ``venue'' in South Carolina in the deal. This is where millionaires presumably can come from far and wide to auction off the diamond encrusted Patek Philippe watches they no longer want. `Get Me Ivana' In short, you could be the person who fills the shoes left empty by the departure of the late, great Malcolm Forbes, and lift high the media world torch for rich folks seeking life's true meaning in a Streetrod golf cart with a tilt steering wheel and a Kenwood CD/cassette stereo rig in the dash. You could be the publishing world reincarnation of Robin Leach. You'll get to pick up the phone and say, ``Get me Wayne Huizenga ...'' or ``Get me Ivana Trump ...'' and then get yourself invited to lunch to discuss cover possibilities. You'll get to approve layouts, say witty things, hire a secretary named Tiffany who doesn't wear underpants. You'll get to ``take a lunch,'' schedule an ``investigative piece'' on Bohemian Grove, talk about your friends at Allen & Co. You'll get to claim to be pals with Tina Brown. It'll be champagne kisses and caviar dreams 24/7 (or was it the other way around?). Whatever. It'll be great. First, however, there are a few things you should know. As is the case with many penny stocks, this one is connected to people you most definitely won't be wanting to put on the cover of Millionaire magazine, and once you step in what these folks leave behind them, you'll never get the stink off your shoe. We're speaking in this case of one Abraham Salaman of Philadelphia. Yiddy Bloom's Friend If the name Abraham Salaman rings the faintest of bells with you it is perhaps because of a story I did on the old goat back in December of 1997 when the market was really beginning to boil and penny stocks everywhere were making new highs. For anyone too young to remember the infamous Magic Marker Corp. stock swindle that shook Wall Street a quarter century ago, Abe was one of the men behind it. Back in those days Abe headed a Philadelphia brokerage company called Delphi Capital Corp. His buddies included Harry Blumenfeld (a k a ``Yiddy Bloom''), a top- ranked money man for the mob in Miami, who in turn was a friend and business associate of the Mafia's ultimate Mister Moneybags himself, Meyer Lansky. With these resources, Abe helped to set up and run a price- rigging conspiracy that eventually involved over 20 individuals who artfully -- and illegally -- manipulated the price of Magic Marker's shares from $6.50 to $30 over a 10-month period beginning in 1971. Nolo Contendere In time, the conspiracy collapsed and Abe wound up pleading nolo contendere to a 31-count criminal indictment brought by prosecutors for an organized crime strike force in Philadelphia. He was charged with conspiracy, mail fraud and other related charges. His nolo plea got him three years' probation, a $5,000 fine and a three-year ban from involvement as a broker-dealer in the securities industry. Since then, of course, Abe has returned to the securities business, and has been one way or another linked to a number of penny stocks that have soared to nosebleed heights, then abruptly crashed. He hasn't been charged with anything, and is doubtless as pure as new-fallen snow. Yet he just keeps turning up in these curious deals. There's been an outfit called Neurocorp Ltd., which soared from $1.13 to $20 in 1995-96 on plans to open a chain of memory loss treatment centers. As soon as it hit $20, the stock keeled over and collapsed, and is today selling for roughly $2.50 a share. Abe was a big investor in the stock. American Interactive Media In addition to his investment in Neurocorp, there's been his involvement in American Interactive Media Inc., which yo-yo'd between $1 and $10 throughout the mid-1990s on plans to ``allow consumers to access the Internet over their television sets.'' Shares in the New York based company have since collapsed and are now selling for 14 cents apiece. The company was founded by Mr. Salaman's son, Michael, and Abe himself hired a Florida stock promoter to pump up the shares. There's likewise been World Wireless Communications Inc., which rose from $2 to $12 in 1997 on a telecommunications story, then crashed and is now selling for $3. Abe held a big chunk of that one too, as he did with others that erupted out of nowhere, spurted into orbit, then crashed. Now, it turns out, Abe was instrumental in putting together Millionaire.com as a public company, helping to arrange for the magazine, headed by one Robert White (the original creator of Robb Report magazine), to be merged into an OTC Bulletin Board company bearing the name Charter Investor Relations of North America Inc. The deal was announced in December of 1998 and the company's stock soared almost instantly thereafter from $4 to almost $26 per share. Then just as abruptly, it crashed, and 20 months later is now selling for 60 cents a share. `Fully Reporting' Abe and a man who has turned up in various other Salaman deals -- one Lynn Dixon -- were investors in the deal ... all of which we may know thanks to the company's filing of a so-called 10-SB form with the Securities and Exchange Commission last December. Through the filing, Millionaire.com, based in Hilton Head, South Carolina, is requesting to become a so-called ``fully reporting'' company, which is to say, to avoid being thrown off even the OTC Bulletin Board and get dumped into the so-called ``pink sheets'' where the most dubious investments on all of Wall Street are to be found. But whether the SEC will grant them full-filing status is not yet certain. Subsequent to the December filing, Millionaire.com has filed three separate amendments to the document, the most recent of which is dated July 20, suggesting that the SEC keeps raising questions about what it is being told by the company. SEC Investigation There's good reason to do so, too, since even a casual canter through the latest document reveals activities about which investors in these shares might want to know more. It turns out, for example, that Millionaire.com is currently the focus of an SEC investigation. Company documents have been subpoenaed and testimony from employees has been taken. Investors might want to know what that's all about, but the 10-SB filings give no further details. For what it is worth, my own hunch is that the SEC probe has to do with the bizarre run-up -- and equally sudden collapse -- in Millionaire.com's shares between December of 1998 and March of 1999. At around that time, the Wall Street Journal reported that Millionaire.com had been using the services of a Florida-based stock promoter named Steven Samblis to handle its investor and public relations, and noted that Mr. Samblis had earlier been sued by the SEC for allegedly saying he was an independent stock- picker when he was in fact getting paid by companies. What the Journal did not report -- doubtless because it didn't know of it -- was an apparent link between Mr. Samblis and our old friend Abe Salaman. The evidence? An autumn of 1997 newsletter published by Samblis that contained a glowing write-up on Abe's son's company (the above-mentioned American Interactive Media), suggesting that it could be ``the next Microsoft.'' Thereafter, American Interactive began a rise that carried it from around $3 to almost $9 a share, before crashing. The Financial Numbers As revealed in the 10-SB, Millionaire.com's financials are exactly what you'd expect from a company with a total market value of barely $5.26 million. The company has $578,000 of cash, roughly $600,000 of negative working capital, and no net worth at all. In the year ended December 1999, it collected net revenue of less than $3.4 million and 20 percent of it went straight into the pockets of the top four men as cash compensation and bonuses. In the process, the company racked up operating losses of $6.2 million as $3.8 million of operating cash flew out the window. So it comes down to this: For $5.26 million you can become a pint-sized Malcolm Forbes and run around celebrating the triumph of seven-digit wealth. And for a whole lot less than that you can piggyback aboard the efforts of Mr. Robert White and his fascinating backers to do precisely the same thing. Just remember, you'll be buying into more than you're ever likely to read about in the pages of Millionaire magazine -- a lot more. --Christopher Byron through the New York newsroom at cbyron@bloomberg.net or (212) 893-4307. Story illustration: To graph the performance of Millionaire.com over the past year, enter or click on {MLRE US <Equity> GP D <GO>}. Company news: MLRE US <Equity> NURC US <Equity> AIME US <Equity> XWC US <Equity> NI Codes: NI BYRON NI COLUMNIST NI COLUMNS NI US NI FEA NI TOP NI WIN NI CT NI STX NI NY NI INTERNET NI MED NI PUB NI SC NI PA -0- (BN ) Aug/16/2000 0:57 GMT EOS (BN ) Aug/15/2000 20:57 85 -0- (BN ) Aug/16/2000 4:01 GMT |