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Non-Tech : GENI: GenesisIntermedia.com Inc -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: surelock who wrote (55)5/11/2001 12:52:12 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 574
 
enesisIntermedia Soars With Help of a Disbarred Stockbroker

Van Nuys, California, May 11 (Bloomberg) --GenesisIntermedia
shares soared as much as 42 percent this week after a buy
recommendation was circulated by Rafi Khan, a disbarred
stockbroker now on probation for income tax evasion.
The four-page report, titled ``The Genie in Genesis
Potentially a Mega Blow for the Shorts,'' suggests a short squeeze
will drive up the shares of the money-losing company, which
operates Internet kiosks in shopping malls.
GenesisIntermedia shares, which traded as low as $1.75 last
year, traded as high as $16.25 yesterday, up from $11.48 last
Friday. They closed up 93 cents, at $15.79.
Khan recently spent several days meeting with
GenesisIntermedia executives, said Robert Bleckman, director of
investor relations. ``He was here last week and Monday.'' Bleckman
said. ``He said he has the ears of several financial
institutions,''
Bleckman expressed surprise upon learning that Khan is a
convicted felon, barred from the securities industry.
``This is all news to me,'' he said.
Bleckman added of Khan's report, ``We have to emphasize -it's
not endorsed by us.''
Khan, reached at his home in La Canada, California, declined
to comment.
The report, which bore the name of no firm, was distributed
to investors by fax and e-mail. It warned that pessimists who
shorted GenesisIntermedia stock would wind up losing ``tens of
millions of dollars or much more.''
In 1999, Khan pleaded guilty to income tax fraud in Los
Angeles and was sentenced to six months of house arrest and three
years of probation.

Securities Fraud

Last year, Khan, 50, settled a civil complaint for
securities fraud filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission
by agreeing to be ``barred from association with any broker or
dealer.'' He also agreed to a permanent injunction forbidding him
from committing securities fraud in the future, without admitting
or denying the SEC's allegations.
The SEC alleged that Khan orchestrated stock manipulations in
the early and mid-1990's with ``wildly exaggerated earnings and
price projections'' and by ``promoting a short squeeze scheme.''
In a short squeeze, investors who have lent shares to others
demand them back. That forces the borrowers to buy shares, driving
up the price of the stock and creating losses for the short
sellers, who bet the price would fall.

Short Squeeze

GenesisIntermedia shares are vulnerable to a short squeeze,
because the number of shares held by the public is less than the
number of shares sold short. Only about 2.6 percent, or 564,973,
of the company's 21.4 million shares are held by the public,
according to the company. That's about one third of the 1.58
million shares sold short, according to last month's short
interest report.
The company's loss widened four-fold in 2000 to $33.5 million
from a loss of $8.3 million in 1999. Revenue increased to $42.3
million from $31.7 million.
Although GenesisIntermedia had a negative net worth of $7.4
million on Dec. 31, the market valued the company's 21.4 million
shares at $342 million, at its recent price of $16.
To stay afloat, the company borrowed $20 million from
Ultimate Holdings, LTD, its largest outside shareholder, earlier
this year. That's in addition to the $30.4 million
GenesisIntermedia had already borrowed from Ultimate as of Dec.
31. Ultimate owns 43.6 percent of GenesisIntermedia, according to
Bleckman.

Kashoggi

Ultimate Holdings' president is international arms dealer and
financier Adann Kashoggi, whose name is sometimes spelled
Khashoggi. He is wanted by police in Thailand on suspician of loan
fraud in connection with the collapse of the Bangkok Bank of
Commerce in May 1996, according to the Economic Crime Division of
that nation's police.
Ramy El-Batrawi, chief executive of Genesis, said in a
January interview that he has known Kashoggi for about 15 years
and worked with him ``on deals'' between 1988 and 1993. He said
the two speak ``almost every day,'' and Kashoggi has visited the
company's California office.
El-Batrawi is in New York on a roadshow, meeting with
investors, and was not available for comment.

--David Evans in Los Angeles through the New York newsroom (212)
318-2300 or davidevans@bloomberg.net with reporting by Anuchit
Nguyen in Bangkok/tm/dd

Story illustration: For a history of GenesisIntermedia.com's
recent stock price, see {GENI US <Equity> GPC <GO>}.