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To: StockDung who wrote (350)11/10/2001 7:07:22 PM
From: blebovits  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 574
 
LOL All the way to the bank $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

October 26, 2001
Volume IV, Issue 92

Email : info@otcjournal.com
URL : otcjournal.com
To OTC Journal Members:
Riskless Rebound Portfolio- Special Announcement

As we mentioned in last weekends' edition, we are planning to publish a list of technology stocks trading well below both their cash and book values. These stocks are the fallen angels of the tech wreck.

We view some of these ideas as nearly riskless as the stocks are oversold to the point where they are trading below the cash they have per share with little or no debt. While they are all losing money, one can assume these stocks have the potential to rebound to at least their cash values with the NASDAQ surging nicely.

We have delayed the release of this exciting edition as several of the companies had yet to release September quarterly financial statements. We want to present these ideas based on the most current balance sheets. Some of them have begun moving up in sympathy with the NASDAQ's stellar performance this week, but we believe there is plenty of upside room.

Our mid week edition will provide some perspective on the state of the businesses of these companies, and our riskless rebound ideas will be published next weekend.
Energy Power (OTC BB: EYPSF) - More Related News


We continue to receive boatloads of email traffic on this stock. It is is a stand out for us in a difficult year. The stock was trading at $2.34 on October 3rd, and made a breath taking run to a high of $5.37 on October 11th. This is a net move of 130% in an 8 day period- a throwback to 1999 and early 2000. Click Here to read our updated profile.

If you haven't made money on this stock don't blame it on us. This is the fourth major high volume surge the stock has enjoyed this year, and we believe there is more to come.

After the meteoric rise to $5.37, the stock pulled back to the $3.50 level, and has now stabilized just under $4. Up or down from here is anybody's guess in the short term, but high volume surges to the upside are the norm for this stock, and positions can still be established on pullbacks.

While the short term trading activity is exciting, the long term prospects for the company's future improve everyday. As a result of international turmoil and President Bush's fears of war related interruptions of Middle Eastern oil, Bush's is energy policy favors development of Canadian natural resources. Our friends to the north are affectionately referring to this mega trend as the Bush Push.

Media coverage is fueling the increased volume in Canadian natural resource stocks. An article appeared in last Sunday's Toronto Star which we believe is a must read for anyone following Energy Power. Early in the article there is reference to Bush and Prime Minister Jean Chrétien discussing new drilling initiatives in Alberta, and area where Energy Power is currently exploring for natural gas.

For inquiring minds who want to know, here the lead in and a link to the whole article on the web:


Toronto Star, October 21st edition
Fears fuel Bush's energy agenda
Fortress America worries about imports - even though Canada is principal supplier
William Walker
Washington Bureau

"OSAMA BIN LADEN'S next weapon of terror against the United States could be an attack on its Persian Gulf oil suppliers, a fact President George W. Bush knows all too well.

That's why he's counting on Canada, in part, to play a crucial role in helping defend America from such devastating circumstances." Click Here to read remainder of this important article.



To: StockDung who wrote (350)11/11/2001 11:17:30 AM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Respond to of 574
 
Did someone say "1st Net Technologies, Inc" (FNTT)? I guess you just can't put a good tout down. There's an entire thread here on SI exposing these guys. Here is one post from it:

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Cybertouts often have a way of stretching the truth
DON BAUDER

02/14/99

The San Diego Union-Tribune

Page I-2
(Copyright 1999)

Late in December, the online tout service, www.superstockpick.com, boasted that its best selection of the year was Virtual Gaming Technologies of San Diego.

The online Internet tout had recommended Virtual's stock at $3.50 in March, and it had soared to $11 in June. In late December, however, superstockpick.com (from now on to be called SSP.com) did not point out that at that very time, the stock was down to $3.75.

SSP.com had a juicy motive to make its original recommendation highly bullish: Virtual Gaming, which operates online gambling, had forked over 36,000 shares of its own common stock to SSP.com in return for the plug. "We have no relationship with them (SSP.com) now," says Bruce Merati, chief financial officer of Virtual Gaming. "We are now hosting our own Web site." Merati thinks it was somewhat misleading for SSP.com to boast of its March pick in December without mentioning that the stock had come back down. SSP.com is one of many similar operations in the world of cybertouts, or Web sites that promote shares of companies in return for some of those shares and other considerations.

SSP.com's parent, 1st Net Technologies, is based in Rancho Bernardo and has three other online newsletters. Like many of the stocks it recommends, 1st Net is on the Bulletin Board. The stock has climbed from $1.50 in late December to the recent $4 level.

The Denver company that publishes SSP.com merged into 1st Net last year. The chief executive of 1st Net, Gregory D. Writer Jr., who spent most of his career in the Denver speculative stock snake pit, has quite a record. It's available from the National Association of Securities Dealers, or NASD, and the Colorado Division of Securities.

Among many things, Writer was barred from the securities business by the NASD in 1990 for quarterbacking the upward manipulation of a stock, selling stocks through unregistered accounts, failing to inform customers of material facts and making "false, inaccurate and misleading
statements to the staff of the NASD," according to the NASD. Writer was censured and fined $200,000 as well.

Three years later, despite that ban, Writer was prohibited from any further solicitation or violation of Idaho securities laws.

Before the 1990 ban, Writer had been suspended by the NASD for distributing a misleading fund solicitation letter and, earlier, for failing to keep accurate books and records.

His license was also revoked in Kansas, and he was slapped by the NASD for advertising a brokerage while the application was pending.

Before that, he had pleaded guilty to charges of possession of marijuana. According to Colorado records, he was growing plants on his balcony in 1981.

Writer and his wife, Mary E. Writer, who is 1st Net's registered agent, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Colorado Springs in 1987.

1st Net's attorney, R. Blair Krueger II, correctly points out that SSP.com reveals its financial ties to companies it promotes and was not included in the Securities and Exchange Commission's enforcement actions against cybertouts last fall.

Gregory Writer denies that he made false statements to the NASD and manipulated the stock in the incident that got him banned. He says the Idaho misadventure actually happened before he forfeited his NASD license. He also denies falsifying loan information and making excessive markups that got him in trouble in Kansas. He blames the poor bookkeeping on an employee.

And, he says he no longer smokes marijuana and regrets the incident, adding that the bankruptcy was a result of medical bills.

How does 1st Net rake in all those shares of stocks it plugs? For enthusing that Engineering Power Systems Group, a builder of barge-mounted power plants, is working on "the most exciting and far-reaching business project of any we have ever encountered," SSP.com received 150,000 options on the stock, exercisable at $1 and $2. For lauding the "unparalleled" management of AXYN, a Y2K fix-it company, SSP.com got 16,000 shares. For plugging LDDI, a reseller of long distance service, the cybertout got 200,000 shares.

Last month, SSP.com gave a rave review to San Diego-based Laforza Automobiles, which assembles an Italian sports car here, and is selling four cars a month for $45,000 to $60,000, says president David Hops. SSP.com got 300,000 shares of Laforza at 50 cents a share and five Laforza cars. It's also getting $5,000 a month. "They raised $700,000 for us, did our Web page, handled our investor relations. We have a great relationship," Hops says..

Gregory Writer "told me up-front about the bad times in Denver," Hops says. In the bullish reports, SSP.com takes pains to sprinkle a few caveats among the plaudits. "They package their featured stocks to make them look like independent recommendations," says columnist Susan
Antilla of Bloomberg News.

She hoots at claims that followers of the reports can make 100 to 300 percent in 12 to 18 months.

Just recently, 1st Net put on what it billed as "the first live, Internet video/audio multimedia presentation" using software provided by InterVu of San Diego.

Also, 1st Net has a radio show on KCEO AM 1000, but it doesn't plug stocks. "It's an educational show," says Jeffrey Chatfield , 1st Net's vice president of investor relations and a former San Diego broker. The new radio show is called the "Angel Network Radio Hour."

Don Bauder's e-mail address is don.bauder@uniontrib.com

Message 8431640

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There is a thread devoted to stocks FNTT touted, which includes this post by TheTruthseeker showing how FNTT touted UPCA, the company that claimed to have a cure for AIDS (but in reality their "doctor" was in jail for attempted murder rather than curing patients in a lab; he's now back in jail). See: Message 8442773

- Jeff