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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Edscharp who wrote (80133)9/13/2002 8:31:22 PM
From: mmmary  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 122087
 
No one is 100% objective

To honestly believe that you or anyone can post 100% objectively is delusional. All of these posts are just our personal opinions. Read the TOS, refer to legal cases.

I believe in freedom of speech. If I like or dislike an idea, I can state my opinion. I can also go and back up my opinion with links, independent research, SEC docs....if I so choose to engage in deliberate debate. It's not mandatory. I can say I think Tony is innocent of the 911 charges. I can then post all his pro-American posts, anti-terrorist posts...but I don't have to. This is not a court of law. I don't have to "prove" my every thought or try to convince everyone here that I'm correct. You will believe what you want to believe and that's that. Tony could be found innocent of all charges and you Ed can continue to believe that he's guilty of everything and then some. You can even post that until you're blue in the face. It's a free country. Do as you please.

You really make yourself out to be a holier than thou poster. It's very telling of your true nature.



To: Edscharp who wrote (80133)9/14/2002 2:06:32 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
ADNAN KHASHOGGI AND CO->The operator of what could be the biggest scam syndicate in the world is a Filipino, authorities in various countries say.

Just 30 years old, Amador Apungan Pastrana, has become the face of 21st-century high-tech fraud. According to authorities here and abroad, he is the brains of a global network of boiler room operation that have duped hundreds of thousands of investors with little knowledge of the financial market, but with lots of money to spare.

Pastrana's alleged victims include 4,000 people who lost $35 million they invested in one of his shell companies, thousands of retirees in Australia and New Zealand, and nearly 700 South Africans who lost a total of $28 million, of which $5 million belonged to businessman Lino Leoni, one of the owners of the renowned DeBeers diamond company.

Accounts in the Internet and Australian newspapers say Pastrana has already amassed some $6 billion in a mere eight years, a wealth accumulated largely from running at least 150 boiler rooms in nine countries. But his operations have also earned him the ire of the police and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in the Philippines, Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Canada and in some European countries. None, however, has managed to catch up with the slippery Filipino.

Pastrana, who maintains posh homes in Manila and Los Angeles, is now on the watchlist of authorities in many countries, including the Philippines. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has also begun to investigate his activities. Police in Austria want to talk to him, as well as to US national Regis Possino, a disbarred lawyer convicted of fraud and drug dealing, and shady Saudi Arabian businessman Adnan Khashoggi. Media reports say the three men were members of a consortium that bought a small Viennese bank without a brokering license, and then turned it into a boiler room.

But Tomas Syquia, acting director of the Compliance and Enforcement Division of the Philippine SEC, says building a case against the international syndicate is difficult because of the complexity of the modus operandi. Most of the victims are all overseas, making it hard and costly to gather information and court evidence.

As of this writing, the PCIJ has yet to hear from Pastrana or his legal representatives in Manila, to whom it sent a written list of questions.

Still, James Martin, director of Sydney-based Stock Investigation Research Society (SIRS), a network of victims of boiler room operators, says, "He (Pastrana) is the Henry Ford of boiler rooms. He has taken it into mass production scale like no one else."

Called "boiler rooms" because they usually work out of cramped office spaces with desks and telephones and apply high-pressure sales pitches on their victims, operations like that of Pastrana's can be found in practically every continent. Each office has an army of telemarketers that call up retirees, pensioners, lottery winners — anybody who's neither a banker nor a broker — who are thousands of miles away, and more than likely in another country. The glorified telemarketers then pitch stocks of "pinksheet" companies, or those whose shares sell for a fraction of a penny, listed on the unregulated Over-the-Counter Bulletin Board (OTCBB) of the US NASDAQ.

These boiler rooms hire expatriates with Western accents who present themselves as hotshot brokers of securities firms that have impressive-sounding names such as Morgan Lynch (a cross of US investment banks J.P. Morgan and Merrill Lynch), Griffin Securities, Muller & Sons, Dukes & Company, and Knowle & Sachs. They send out glossy newsletters, put up Internet sites and pester the potential victim with follow-up calls until he agrees to part with his savings and buy the stocks. Clients, who plunk down amounts that range from $1,000 to $5 million each, then receive instructions on how to send the payment by telegraphic transfer to a bank overseas.

The companies collapse their operations after six months to a year or when too many clients itching to see returns start burning their phone lines. But like zombies, the firms come alive again in another office address or in another part of the world, using a different name and another set of incorporation papers. Often, too, the salespeople would say they are calling from Bangkok, Hong Kong or China, even if they are making the calls in, say, Manila.

Clients who try to cash in on their investments are never successful. More often than not, the boiler rooms do not really buy the shares and merely pocket the money. When the clients run to their respective SECs for help, they find out they have put their trust in obscure companies that do not even hold a license to trade stocks or a legitimate office address. Their phone calls go to business centers paid to render secretarial work and receive calls that are automatically re-routed to the boiler room's landlines.

Engineer Peter Harvey, who lives in the remote town of Kondinin in Western Australia, admits losing $150,000 from investing in OTCBB shares offered by boiler rooms allegedly owned by Pastrana. In an e-mail interview, Harvey recounts how he was first "sold" shares of companies believed to be part of Pastrana's own pinksheet empire, and then later told that his account was being transferred to another firm ñ and then another.

As Harvey tells it, he had first dealt with First Federal Capital, a company operating in Makati City but based in Palau, in 1997. A year later, he was told his account was being transferred to Pryce Weston, which had supposedly bought First Federal. In 1999, another company called Saxon and Swift, which also had offices in Vanuatu and Hong Kong, took over Pryce Weston.

Harvey says the same thing happened with Bradshaw Global Asset Management, another boiler room company then based in Makati but with a representative office in Rancho Sta. Margarita in California. Sometime in early 2000, Bradshaw's operations were taken over by Newport Pacific Securities and Management, also based in Makati. According to Harvey, Newport eventually ceased operations, and his account was moved to Gibson and Peterson Company, based in Bangkok.

"I even flew over to the Philippines to meet them and have a look at their operations," says Harvey. He says he did not find anything suspicious at the time. Now, though, he has only one word to describe these companies: "parasites."

Yet while Pastrana seems to be the present king of boiler rooms, he was not the inventor of this elaborate scam. Experts say boiler rooms began more than a decade ago in the United States, particularly in Florida, where they reportedly flourished due to lax investment rules there as well as the large population of retirees.

SIRS's Martin reckons boiler rooms boomed soon after 1990, when the US SEC allowed the trading of the so-called "Regulation S" shares. The policy, meant to respond to the increasing globalization of the capital markets, allows the sale of securities not registered with the US SEC to be sold to offshore investors. But Martin says what it has really done is to allow boiler rooms to mislead investors outside of the United States. These investors are led to believe they are being sold shares in legitimate US companies, and that the transactions have the seal of approval of US regulators. Coming at a time when stock markets were doing very well, the boiler rooms hit pay dirt in the hundreds of thousands of people eager to invest even their nest eggs.

When the FBI conducted a major sweep in the early 1990s, the boiler rooms simply moved their operations outside of the United States, eventually choosing countries that had no extradition arrangements with US law enforcement agencies, or with weak rules of law. Many of the boiler rooms thus set up their ìdialingî offices in Canada, Hong Kong, the Bahamas, Panama, Costa Rica, Liberia and South Africa. Some apparently wound up in the Philippines, with one of them eventually employing Pastrana.

A BS Computer Science graduate of Trinity College in Quezon City, Pastrana had first worked as a crewmember in a McDonald's outlet before he chanced upon a newspaper ad for telemarketers in a Makati-based firm called Griffin Securities. It turned out to be a boiler room operation, but Pastrana lasted long enough in the company to master the "business." Some of his former employees were told that Pastrana took some vital diskettes with him when he resigned from Griffin. They believe he used these to help set up his first company, which became First Federal Capital.

According to the Philippine SEC records of AAP Management, Inc., his flagship company, Pastrana managed to have more than 10 companies in just a span of five years. It is believed these companies form part of his ìlegitimateî business and still do not include his boiler rooms. Among those listed as his previous positions were managing director of First Federal Capital, Inc. and president of Mendez Prior Hall, which authorities raided and were able to seize documents from showing the extent of its boiler room operations.

Today, Pastrana is said to own more than 100 boiler rooms and shell companies around the world. Some of them are incorporated in small tax-haven territories such as the Bahamas, Belize, British Virgin Islands, Mauritius, Cayman Islands, Western Samoa, Turks and Caicos, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Island of Nevis, and the republics of Liberia and Seychelles. Those in the United States were incorporated in Nevada, Florida, Delaware and South Carolina.

Martin, who says he was duped by Pastrana in an even more complicated way, has also received reports that Pastrana in the early 1990s had crossed paths with Sherman Mazur, a German national who was then running boiler rooms in the United States. In 1993, Mazur was sentenced to five years in prison in California for securities fraud. While he was serving time, Mazur reportedly passed on the management of his boiler rooms to Pastrana, "whom he trusted," says Martin. "But Amador not only took over these boiler rooms, (he) set up more."

Records obtained on Pastranaís US corporate empire as of June 2000, though, lists only seven OTCBB-listed companies created out of a series of reverse mergers and acquisition of dormant firms. The results are several holding companies operating only on paper, usually with the same corporate secretary, Roy Rayo, or Filipino lawyer Claudine Montenegro whom Martin also sued for practising in the US without a license.

The seven US holding companies are neatly spread out into different sectors. Apart from Digital Reach Holdings Corp., which takes care of investments, there is Key Holdings Corp., which was incorporated in Nevada, but is an ìonline gaming company based in Antigua or Dominican Republic.î Netsat Holdings Ltd. is said to focus on telecommunications and Internet service, Your Future Holdings Inc. on educational development and technology, Labco Pharma on pharmaceuticals, and another Cayman-based holding company for food. There is also Stratasys, once owned by Martin but is now Pastranaís, which is a Bermuda-based holding firm supposedly handling software development.

The shares of these companies are listed on the OTCBB, which is highly vulnerable to price manipulation. Not surprisingly, these nearly worthless company stocks are among the offerings of Pastranaís boiler rooms. Harvey himself says he was among those who loaded up on Labco Pharma shares.

While the clients of his operations permanently part ways with their money, Pastrana has yet to stop raking it in. According to one of his former employees here in Manila, his companiesí tills rang up a total of some $5 million a day in 2000. Other ex-employees say more than a third of that automatically went to Pastrana while only a tenth was used to buy legitimate stocks in behalf of clients.

A former resident of a squatter community in Guadalupe Viejo in Makati, Pastrana is now said to own a $2.8-million apartment penthouse on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, California.

"He also bought his mother a lovely gift: a $14-million house in Rancho Santa Margarita in Mission Viejo, California," says Martin. "A very nice son, donít you think?"

In the Philippines, his properties reportedly include two luxury condominium units in the high-end Essensa East in Taguig, a villa with a view of the sea in Caylabne Bay, the Winners restaurant on Arnaiz Avenue in Makati, and units at The Peak, also in Makati. Authorities hot on Pastrana's trail say some of the properties have been placed under the name of his front companies such as Euro Pacific Trade Inc., or those of members of his immediate family.

Pastrana's megabucks have also found their way into listed conglomerates such as Hong Kong's Hutchison Whampoa Ltd., as well as Singapore Telecoms, US metal producer Alcoa Inc., Pacific Cyberworks of Hong Kong, and US semiconductor firm Intel.

United Resources Asset Management Inc., which was set up in May 2000 and now acts as investment manager for the entire Pastrana group of companies, had a portfolio of $200,000 invested in these stocks. In its first year of operation, the company targeted an investment of over $20 million a year, according to AAP Management records.

Some of his associates say that despite his supposed riches, Pastrana still has some simple joys, among them buying brand-name shoes at bargain prices in either Bangkok or Hong Kong. But he is also known for e-mailing his personal secretary to keep replenishing his stock of blue and black Mont Blanc pens, as well as showing off the results of his latest liposuction or the wonders cosmetic surgery has done on his face.

Obviously, too, Pastrana is making good a promise his former associates say he made to himself several years back. When he was still a struggling college student, Pastrana was said to have sworn in true Scarlett O'Hara fashion: "I shall never go hungry again." (To be continued)



To: Edscharp who wrote (80133)9/14/2002 2:11:22 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
" and also receives "dirty" money from criminal groups and from arms deals. The victim says Pastrana then launders the money through his sharemarket scam, doubly profits"

Herald Sun: Boiler room racket hits investors [ 05aug01 ]

Boiler room racket hits investors
By ADRIAN TAME and MANDI ZONNEVELDT
05aug01

HUNDREDS of Australians have lost millions of dollars in the world's largest sharemarket scam.

The racket was masterminded by a shady Filipino, Amador Pastrana, 31, who has made $6 billion in eight years. Pastrana is on the run. The FBI will move soon to close the global operation, but it will be too late for the Australians – two of whom are known to have been cheated of $400,000 each. Last week's raid on a boiler room – a sophisticated, "cold calling" operations centre – in the Thai capital of Bangkok was the tip of a fraudulent iceberg. Pastrana, according to one of his victims, has built an empire of 50 boiler rooms in nine countries, and also receives "dirty" money from criminal groups and from arms deals. The victim says Pastrana then launders the money through his sharemarket scam, doubly profits. Pastrana regularly works 20-hour days, seven days a week and has become one of the world's richest people. He is close to the Thai royal family, various archbishops and also is a friend of disgraced former Philippines president Joseph Estrada. Australia has been one of the countries most heavily targeted by Pastrana and his army of high-pressure telephone salesmen. But last week's arrest of 80 people in Bangkok was just the "tip of the iceberg", according to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission. ASIC officials warned that unlicensed brokerage firms are still operating in Asia. Thailand's securities watchdog, the Securities and Exchange Commission, has asked police to file criminal charges against seven men who allegedly ran Bangkok-based stock trading firms that tried to scam investors, mostly in Australia and New Zealand. The SEC alleges the seven men headed stock brokerage firms without a licence from the Thai Government. It says they sought to sell shares of non-existent or dubious companies to investors. The seven are John Martin Kealy, Ronan Joseph Murray, Paul Mary Hickey, Scott Campbell Fisher, Jason Garrick Rich, Adrian Robert Wallis and Steven Hooper. The SEC provided no details about them. Hickey, an Irishman, and Fisher, an Australian, are in custody. The unlicensed firms employ English-speaking backpackers in Asia to "cold call" people, encouraging them to buy shares on the stock market. People are pressured into investing thousands of dollars – which usually disappears. ASIC's executive director of consumer protection, Peter Kell, said the latest arrests were only a deterrent. "Quite a few cold callers will continue to exist and consumers need to be vigilant to make sure they are not tricked," Mr Kell said. ASIC has been flooded with thousands of phone calls since the Thai arrests. Overall losses are believed to be billions of dollars and by fraudulently using the stock of just one company, Berten USA, Pastrana has fleeced Australian investors of $25 million. The company's president, James Martin, claims if US authorities and the FBI had listened when he warned them a year ago of fraudulent transactions in his stock, up to 90 per cent of the Australian losses could have been avoided. Instead, US authorities told Mr Martin there was nothing they could do about the scam because it had not taken place on American soil and they had received no complaints from US victims. It was not until Pastrana made his first major mistake in nine years – he forged Mr Martin's signature on a document – that the FBI began an inquiry. Berten USA started as a legitimate manufacturer of men's cologne. After being dormant for a decade, Berten was purchased by an American known as "Dan", who is implicated in Pastrana's operation, and is a suspect in a $1.8 million US security fraud. "Dan" sold Berten as a shell company to Pastrana shortly before he introduced the Filipino to Mr Martin. At the time, Mr Martin was operating a legitimate Silicon Valley company called Stratasys and needed investment capital. "Dan" suggested Pastrana to Mr Martin as a potential source of the investment capital. Pastrana agreed to invest $US7.5 million on condition Mr Martin used Berten as the vehicle and became company president. Pastrana's background appeared impeccable and among his references was then-president Estrada. "He was going to put in $US7.5 million to add to the $US2.5 million my colleagues and I had invested," Mr Martin said. "When I first met him in December 1999, he was charming and deeply concerned I was happy with everything he was doing. It was a class act, very accomplished and polished." Mr Martin and Pastrana met regularly over the next year and all went well until Mr Martin caught two employees planning to embezzle $600,000 from Stratasys. "I fired them immediately, and then I received a quite forcible call from Pastrana saying I should reinstate them," he said. "That's when I first smelled a rat." His suspicions were soon confirmed when he started receiving phone calls from Pastrana's friends asking when he was going to float Berten USA. Information of that nature is illegal insider trading. In August last year, following his float, Mr Martin went to the authorities and asked them to take his stock off the market. But it already was too late. Mr Martin and his friends lost their $US2.5 million original investment and Mr Martin lost a further $US27.5 million. He was declared bankrupt but later discharged. He then set off to trace investors who had lost money. So far he has been to Australia, New Zealand, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and South Africa. The FBI had Pastrana under surveillance for weeks and was due to arrest him and close his operation any day. But last week's Thai-led raid on the Bangkok boiler room, which snared 10 Australians and 70 other foreigners, was premature. Mr Martin said Thai officials had needed a boost for a local election and the raid provided the opportunity. The original plan was for simultaneous raids on 25 boiler rooms in 15 countries but the other boiler rooms have now been warned. And, Mr Martin said, one of the two companies named by Thai police after the raid, Benson Dupont Capital Management, was one of the least effective cogs in Pastrana's operation. "Everybody they picked up in the raid was very small fry," he said. Mr Martin left Australia on Wednesday after meeting defrauded investors. "For the past two months I have been touring the world tracing investors who have been burned," he said. "There is no legal obligation to do this, but I see it as a moral obligation. These people placed their faith in my company and have lost large amounts. "Their reaction to me has been understandably suspicious to begin with, but I have addressed a lot of meetings now, and generally my version of events has been accepted." Mr Martin has compiled detailed lists of many of the 4000 victims worldwide who bought worthless shares in Berten USA and has put together an international "hit parade" of the worst-hit countries. He believed it was almost impossible to work out global losses on companies manipulated by Pastrana. "He picks up five new companies every month, aiming for 60 a year. He plugs and dumps them at the same rate," Mr Martin said. "Berten is the only one I know about in detail and investors lost $25 million in Australia alone in under a year. "If you start multiplying that figure by 60 times a year for nine years, you are probably starting to get close."



To: Edscharp who wrote (80133)9/14/2002 2:21:02 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
Check out warnings ED evid.com.au



To: Edscharp who wrote (80133)9/14/2002 3:04:05 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
SIX BILLION AND PASTRANNA HAS A 2 MILLION DOLLAR HOUSE IN CALIFORNIA!! GO FIGURE... AND OUR SEC, FBI HAS DONE ZIPPO, NADDA, NOTHING ABOUT THESE CRIMINALS

"The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism reported on the "boiler room king" Amador Pastrana, who allegedly amassed $6 billion in eight years by running 150 boiler rooms in nine countries. Boiler rooms are cramped office spaces that have telemarketers who con people into investing in non-existent businesses."

216.239.51.100



To: Edscharp who wrote (80133)9/14/2002 3:28:01 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
A LITTLE MORE INFO ON PASTRANA WHO HAS AN ENDLESS SUPPLY OF OTC BB STOCKS.

CDOs vs 7 firms made permanent
By Elena R. Torrijos
Inquirer News Service

THE SECURITIES and Exchange Commission has made permanent the cease-and-desist orders slapped against seven companies allegedly involved in securities fraud through pyramiding schemes or "boiler room" operations.

The Commission En Banc, in a resolution, last week asked the concerned companies to show cause why their licenses should not be revoked. These companies are Barclays Group Inc. and/or New World Financial Group Ltd., Bradshaw Global Asset Management Inc., Newport Pacific Securities and Management Inc., Sherman Brothers Management Ltd. Inc. and Worldwide Investors Management Inc.

SEC officials alleged that these companies were linked to the group of Amador Pastrana. The SEC earlier filed a complaint before the Department of Justice against this group in connection with defunct Dukes & Co. Securities Corp.

The officials said that the five companies were allegedly involved in so-called boiler room operations. These operations involve the employment of tele-marketers and foreigners who, as unregistered brokers, use high pressure sales techniques and promises of exorbitant returns on investment to sell fraudulent securities overseas.

A boiler room operates with minimal legitimate business activities. This involves raising funds, which are pocketed by the principals and telemarketers in the form of commissions, costs and fees.

The SEC also made permanent its CDOs against Powerhomes Unlimited Corp. and Prosperity.com Inc. for their alleged involvement in pyramiding operations through the sale of unlicensed investment contracts.

In the case of Prosperity.com, the SEC has issued an order directing the company to show-cause why it should not be cited in contempt for operating in defiance of the permanent CDO issued on April 4.

The Court of Appeals lifted early this year the temporary restraining order to stop the SEC from enforcing its CDO against Prosperity.com.

The SEC has also asked Powerhomes to show-cause in 30 days why the company's license should not be revoked.

The SEC and the National Bureau of Investigation recently signed a memorandum of understanding to jointly go after perpetrators of securities fraud.

The MOU was entered into in light of the growing number of boiler-room operators in the country which have victimized thousands of Filipinos and foreign investors around the world through fraudulent investment schemes, the SEC said in a statement.



To: Edscharp who wrote (80133)9/14/2002 6:02:08 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Ed, how Can Bart Simpson Ruin Your Company? One of these Boiler Rooms had owned property in the United states that sold for $844,000 Ed. LOL What Crims!!

01-16-2001 205 S. Helix Ave Unit #68 $844,000 Solana Beach 92075 0024515 298-520-01-68 ixpres.com

arcc.co.san-diego.ca.us.
P T DOLOK PERMAI,
Grantor/Grantee Index Search
Search Result
Doc. No.: 2001-024515
Reel: 20880 Rec. Date: 1/16/01
Image: 7627
Pages: 5
Order Copy By Mail:
Certified ($11)
Non-Certified ($10) Document Type: DEED
Grantor(s)
P T DOLOK PERMAI
Grantee(s)
PORTNOY ALAN H TR
PORTNOY DIANNE J TR
PORTNOY FAMILY LIVING TRUST


Warning from Indonesia
ASIC received this announcement from the Indonesian Capital Market Supervisory Agency (Bapepam) "Capital Market Supervisory Agency (Bapepam) has received several complaints from international investors whom have been harmed by illegal capital market activities by the following entities:

1. Transglobal Limited Consultants Ltd Address: Wisma Bank Dharmala 19th Floor
Jl. Jenderal Sudirman Kav. 28
Jakarta 12920

2. Hudson International Address: Level 43, Wisma 46-Kota BNI
Jl. Jenderal Sudirman Kav. 1
Jakarta 10200

3. PT Dolok Permai D.B.A (International Asset Management) Address: Level 12, Wisma Bank Dharmala
Jl. Jenderal Sudirman Kav. 28
Jakarta 12920


These companies have claimed and acted as Securities Companies. Therefore, Bapepam announces to public, especially to market participants, that Bapepam has never granted registrations for the entities mentioned above to act as Securities Companies in Indonesia. Further, those companies have not been registered as exchange members of either Jakarta Stock Exchange (JSX) or Surabaya Stock Exchange (SSX). Based on Article 30 Paragraph (1) and Article 32 Paragraph (1) Law No. 8 Year 1995 concerning Capital Market, only companies and individuals licensed by Bapepam may carry on business as a Securities Company or act as Securities Company Representatives. In accordance with Article 110 Paragraph (2) jo. Article 103 Paragraph (1) Law No. 8 Year 1995 concerning Capital Market, violation to Article 30 Paragraph (1) Law No. 8 Year 1995 concerning Capital Market is considered as felony and shall be subject to imprisonment for a maximum of five years and a maximum fine of five billion rupiah. Whereas, violation to Article 32 Section (1), based on Article 110 Section (1) jo. Article 103 Section (2) Law No. 8 Year 1995 concerning Capital Market is considered as misdemeanor and shall be subject to imprisonment for a maximum of one year and a maximum fine of one billion rupiah. To avoid any unsolicited matters, also to prevent the recurrence of similar fraud in the future, Bapepam advises the public, especially investors, to be cautious in taking investment services from any entity or individual that claims to have license issued by Bapepam or claims as an exchange member of either JSX or SSX. If there is any doubt concerning the legal status of an entity or individual offering investment services, please contact Bapepam at the following address: Capital Market Supervisory Agency (Bapepam)
Attn. Capital Market Information Division
New Building of Ministry of Finance of Republic of Indonesia
Jl. DR Wahidin Raya No. 1
Jakarta - 10710
Phone: 62-21 385 8001 Ext. 4130/4131
Fax: 62-21 385 7917
E-mail: info@bapepam.go.id " End of announcement More information
Addresses of cold calling brokers known to ASIC
More about cold calling
Indonesian Capital Market Supervisory Agency website, English version





Updated: 16/01/2002



To: Edscharp who wrote (80133)9/14/2002 6:45:15 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
Here is an interesting stock. Steady as a rock. Walked up to $3.50 on air and trades just about no volume now. How does Alpine Securities do that? Well there is volume but it is all in reg s stock which is being sold by the carltoncm.com and firstswissag.com which are two Boiler Rooms with a cast that are very familiar to me and some of the same characters with PT Dolok. Fleesing of foreigners continues.

SEC, FBI and DOJ continue to look the other way!!

Saftey in a Bear Market with Boiler Room Stocks

XVNT - XVARIANT INC
Last Price: 3.50
Change: Unchanged (0.00%)
High: --
Low: --
Open: Not Available
Previous Close: 3.50 on 8/28
Volume: 0
Currency Units: US Dollar
Exchange/Delay: OTCBB: 15 minutes

Confirm all data with your broker or financial advisor before trading.

Data by: S&P ComStock

XVNT - XVARIANT INC Company Profile


MPID Bid Size Ask Size U O/C
ALPS 3.1 500 4.35 500 O
MLNJ 3 500 4.55 500 O
SCHB 2 500 5 500 O
JIMK 1 2500 9.8 500 O
HILL 0.51 2500 7 500 O
PGON 0.51 2500 9 500 O
FRAN 0.35 5000 5.1 500 O
NITE 0.1 5000 6.5 500 O
GVRC 0.01 5000 11 200 O