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Microcap & Penny Stocks : TSIG.com TIGI (formerly TSIG) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Martin E. Frankel who wrote (1992)7/14/1998 1:00:00 PM
From: Bald Eagle  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 44908
 
<< And, yes, there is a website and, as previously posted, it is completed.>>
O.K., what's it's URL? If it's completed, I would like to look at it, as would many others I'm sure.



To: Martin E. Frankel who wrote (1992)7/14/1998 1:06:00 PM
From: Gennaro  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 44908
 
I'm sure all of you have read this before, but I think it might be worth a re-read.

Item 2. Acquisition or Disposition of Assets.

Acquisition of Assets - the Registrant, through a subsidiary
corporation, Compact Connection, Inc., a Delaware corporation, ("CCI"), acquired
substantially all of the assets of Compact Connection, Inc., an unaffiliated
Nevada corporation ("Seller"), effective at the close of business on April 30,
1998. The Registrant intends to utilize all such assets to operate the former
business of Seller as the business of CCI.

The assets of Seller consist primarily of equipment, distributor
contracts, tradenames and trademarks, and goodwill. The business involves the
direct-music marketing of compact disks and cassettes through the use of a
music card that allows purchasers of the card the ability to buy a specific
number of compact disks or cassettes from over 200,000 titles, including the
music industry's latest top releases, at "below-retail" prices. Orders are taken
over a toll-free number and are delivered via mail. Music cards can be purchased
directly from the business or from authorized distributors.

In exchange for the assets, the Registrant agreed to issue 6,000,000
shares of restricted common stock of the Registrant to the Seller upon
completion of the audit of the financial statements of Seller. An additional
number of shares of restricted common stock of the Registrant may be issued to
Seller if, as of April 30, 2000, the average of the daily closing price of the
Registrant's common stock for the fifteen (15) consecutive business days before
such date is below $2.50 per share (subject to adjustment for any stock splits
or stock dividends).

If, at any time after closing, Seller is unable to provide audited
financial statements, the Registrant shall be entitled to terminate and unwind
the transaction by way of rescission. The Registrant shall also be entitled to
terminate and unwind this transaction by way of rescission should the audited
financial statements of Seller vary materially from any unaudited financial
information previously provided by Seller.

Pursuant to an Addendum to the Agreement dated April 24, 1998, the
Registrant agreed to provide, or cause to be provided, $250,000 in working
capital, and up to $2,000,000 in additional funding for such specific purposes
as may be requested by the Board of Directors of CCI (the Registrant's
subsidiary).

From what I gather, it would seem that TSIG already has the most important part of the deal, the license agreement, and access to current cardholders etc. As far as distributers go, it appears TSIG has already put into place a new distributor (check their latest press release ie. Vally Media). At the time people were wondering why they did this, but now it becomes much clearer. They could potential acquire the CCI name, and card, have a distributer in place, and if the audit is not satisfactory can get out of the deal, only paying 1% of net profits for exclusive CCI rights. Not a bad deal if you ask me. I think this is a stellar move by management, and in my opinion represents the workings of seasoned veterans. The beauty of this story is that with everyone focusing on the cd internet site, nobody is paying attention to the teleservices part of this company. Although it may not be as flashy, it can still bring in big revenues. Only time will tell,but by the year 2000, I certainly expect the price of TSI to be above $2.50 (even if we do end up buying the assets of CCI).

ALl the best
Gennaro



To: Martin E. Frankel who wrote (1992)7/14/1998 1:14:00 PM
From: Sandi  Respond to of 44908
 
Martin,

Once again, you cry "basher, basher, basher". Why don't you just face it....you just don't know how to respond when someone presents unfavorable yet VALID criticisms of TSIG shortcomings.

Money back in the bank,
Sandi



To: Martin E. Frankel who wrote (1992)7/14/1998 1:38:00 PM
From: JEFF BERRY  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 44908
 
Marty, I have not been a frequent poster to this thread. I did spend a great deal of time with DD on tsig some weeks ago. I alluded to disbelief and skepticism of some Mr. Gordon's answers to the 6/30 questions posed by Gambler and Beebs......I have recieved numerous private messages and Publicly posted requests from Mister Ex and later yourself to publish my DD.

I refrained from posted my DD and negative opinions on the thread during the recent rally from .17 to over .40. If it were my intent to bash I would have most certainly done so then.

My motive for posting is in consideration of those on the thread such as Sandi and others who have expressed honest concerns over their investment in TSIG.
Although Sandi's concerns were open and honest they were met with harsh and inconsiderate "What is your motive" "Maybe you are Wiseowl's wife" ect. Whenever honest concerns are expressed on the thread the poster is bombarded with criticism and quickly "railroaded" off the board.....After all Marty, One could just as easily ask the same question of yourself....How do we know that you are Martin E. Frankel...perhaps you are actually Mr. Gordon in disguise. Eloquently posting assurances of TSIG long term success as an investment......What is your motive in frequently posting to the thread?...After all, You have stated that you are committed to a long term investment "years" with TSIG......Thus nothing that is posted to this thread will ultimately affect your long term holdings. Your investment over the course of time will be dictated by What the company actually does and how it performs over the next few years. Thus, why all of your continual posts assuring others regarding the short run.......Do you have a "save the world" complex that compels you to help others make wise investing decisions?

Marty, I do not agree with you that my previous post was merely repetition. My future posts will also contain new information.

Ultimately it is up to each of us to weigh whatever information we have available to make our own investing decisions.

Best Regards, JAB

P.S. I just printed out the new S-8 that you referred to in your post. It appears that what many have referred to as "my bashing" in drawing attention to the "possibility" that the CCI deal could come unwound has actually taking a step closer to that reality. Those CYA statements "that are nothing more then lawyer b.s." do at times actually have teeth. It seems somewhat unresponsible that just a few days ago Mr. Gordon could so dogmatically claim that "CCI is a 100% done deal......If you truly believe Mr. Gordon, why even speculate on the merits/concerns of the new S-8. It will never happen according to Mr. Gordon, "It is a 100% done deal" (post #1594 item #4)

However, if one is inclined to view Mr. Gordon's statements with skepticism then the merit/concern over the new S-8 should be considered for their benefit.

A brief review of the filing does not indicate that the all benefits are in favor of tsig. Surprisingly, no mention is even made that CCI must refund the $2,250,000 that Mr Gordon has claimed that TSIG has already paid CCI.

Additionally, The licencing agreement implies that Mr. Piercy and company will continue to operate as an entity in competition with TSIG. And while TSIG can develope their own base of customers they will have to start from scratch. The agreement does not indicate that Mr Piercy and Co. have agreed to turn over their 1 million plus base of customers to TSIG. Doing so in fact would essentially put Mr. Piercy and Co. out of business.

This would put TSIG in the position of having to generate a tremendous amount of advertising to attract customers to their site. Advertising that I doubt they will be able to buy with company stock. It will take plenty of something TSIG has very little of....$$..CASH..$$

JAB



To: Martin E. Frankel who wrote (1992)7/14/1998 3:51:00 PM
From: Bald Eagle  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 44908
 
Well, Mr. Frankel, since you won't answer my question, I'll answer it for you. Also you are wrong when you say:
<<And, yes, there is a website and, as previously posted, it is completed.>>
According to TSIG Investor Relations, the web site is not open and won't be until late July or early August. I received a call from a Liz Styles today, who told me this.
The web site is :
compactconnection.com
Check it out and tell me if it looks "completed".
Check this one too. This is supposed to take us to the same website.
ccmusiccard.com

I guess you could say that I am not too impressed by the "completed" web sites.



To: Martin E. Frankel who wrote (1992)7/22/1998 12:07:00 AM
From: JEFF BERRY  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 44908
 
Marty,

In follow up to my post #1990:

On 6/25 Tsig filed form S-8 informing us that Mr. Gordon sold 6,480,000 of his personally owned shares. This is an undisputed fact. He did not loan them. They were legally sold.

Mr. Gordon's sale raised considerable concern. Why would Mr. Gordon sell 65% of his personally owned TSIG holdings at a time just prior to the launch of the CCI website?
On 6/30 Beebs and Gambler asked this question of Mr. Gordon during their CC. Mr Gordon explained that he did not sell his shares on the open market He stated that he sold them to a private investment group in order to loan the proceeds to TSIG. He also stated that the private investment group was restricted from selling the shares into the float and that by agreement they were holding the shares for resale back to Mr. Gordon at a later date.

As of this post, there is no way of verfying the truthfulness of Mr. Gordon's claims regarding the sale of his shares. There are however factors that when honestly weighed cast considerable doubt on the accuracy of Mr. Gordon's statements.

A)The big drop:

On May 8th the first day that Mr. Gordon became eligible to begin selling the 7 million shares that he had registered for sale, TSIG share price tumbled on heavy selling pressure. The stock price had been steadily rising throughout the week due to investor enthusiasm over the 4/30 press release announcing the "completion of the acquisition of CCI"......However the high of just over .70 reached that Friday May 8th quickly crumbled under the wave of a massive sell off.....A sell off that continued to keep downward pressure on the share price for ensuing weeks thereafter.

Was it just mere coincidence that Mr. Gordon gifted himself
7 million .15 shares on 4/23....Issued the CCI press release 4/30....Registered the shares for sale on 5/8...and then on this very day the day he could legally begin selling his shares TSIG's rapidly ascending stock price plummets on high volume?

...It is if you believe Mr. Gordon.

B)The profitless sale:

Mr. Gordon also claims that the proceeds of the sale of the 6,480,000 shares were loaned by himself to TSIG under the arrangements of the 5 million revolving credit facility that he had put in place between himself and TSIG on 4/23/98. Is it reasonable to conclude that this is a true statement.....Consider:

The $5,000,000 note between Mr. Gordon and TSIG specifically states "at no time shall the aggregate obligation of borrower to lender exceed one million U.S. dollars" Thus for Mr. Gordon's statement to be true he would have had to have recieved no more then 1 million for the sale of his shares.....Is this reasonable?
Mr. Gordon's option to acquire the 6,480,000 shares were at a cost to himself of $972,000, before associated expenses...Is it reasonable to conclude that Mr. Gordon would exercise his option on .15 shares to sell them at .1543, generating a mere $28,000 preexpense profit, at a time when the open market share price was well over .50 a share and climbing?

......If you believe Mr. Gordon it is?

C)The odd share amount:

Mr Gordon states that the 6,480,000 shares were sold to a private investment group. If this were true...why such an odd number?..Mr. Gordon registered 7,000,000 shares for sale. Why did he not sell all 7 million.....or perhaps 6,500,000?
When dealing with numbers in the millions it is rather unusual that a negotiated deal would involve such an odd number.
6,480,000 shares is a number much more in line with sale increments in the 10,000 to 20,000 range that combine to equal such a figure.......In fact the new S-8 registration filed 6/25 which allows Mr. Gordon to sell another 7,000,000 shares also re-registers the left over 520,000 shares that Mr. Gordon was still in the process of selling.

Is it reasonable to conclude that Mr. Gordon and an investment group choose the number 6,480,000 shares?

.....It is if you believe Mr. Gordon.

D)Lack of a proper SEC filing:

Mr. Gordon states that he sold the 6,480,000 shares to a private investment group. If this is true where is the SEC filing?

SEC law requires any person or entity to file form 13D when 5% or more of a company's outstanding shares are acquired. Once 5% is reached form 13D must be filed within 10 days. The filing includes the names of all individuals involved in the investment group. They also must describe all recent buying or selling activity as well as their purpose in acquiring such a large interest. Thus if everything is as Mr. Gordon claims that it is, we should have seen a filing at the very latest by Monday 7/6 describing the sale and verifying the restrictions of resale and commitments to hold shares for a future sale back to Mr. Gordon.

Is it reasonable to conclude that a private investment group has chosen to ignore this vital SEC filing requirement?

.....It is if you believe Mr. Gordon.

E)S-8 inconsistancies:

The S-8 filing on 6/25 specifically states that none of the proceeds from the sale of Mr. Gordon's shares would be recieved by TSIG. This is the same language as the 5/8 filing.
The filing also fails to support Mr. Gordon's claim since it does not mention that the 6,480,000 shares were sold to a private investment group with restrictions on resale...Language that would have been included if it were true. The legal firm that prepared the S-8 would have access to all the specific documentation and would be required to disclose it by virtue of the fact that 6,480,000 would make such a private investment group an insider with well over 10% of the outstanding shares. In fact they would be the single largest shareholder!

Is it reasonable to conclude that the legal firm omitted this vital and material information from the S-8 by mistake, or perhaps on purpose in order to mislead other TSIG shareholders and potential investors?

....It is if you believe Mr. Gordon.

Consider another possibility:

Mr. Gordon gifts himself 7,000,000 shares at .15 a share on 4/23. One week later on 4/30 Mr. Gordon issues a somewhat misleading press announcing the "completion of the acquisition of CCI"...knowing that such a release would be met with investor favor certain to rapidly move TSIG stock price higher. Mr. Gordon then registers the shares for sale on 5/8 and immediately takes advantage of the mania that is fueling the rise in share price by selling shares in blocks of 10,000 and 20,000 shares on the open market. Pushing share price down in the process by flooding the float with over 6.000,000 shares over the next few ensuing weeks. Pocketing a cool $2.5 million profit on a best guess estimate of an average sale price in the mid 50 cent range.

Which scenario best fits the evidence?

Is it important whether or not Mr.Gordon is telling the truth?..Does it make a difference if he did sell his shares into the float on the open market?......Most certainly it does!

If Mr. Gordon sold 6,480,000 shares on the open market once ....he is likely to do it again. Based on the 6/25 S-8 filing Mr. Gordon is eligible to sell an additional 7,520,000 shares. He is allowed to sell them into the float if he chooses to do so. Has he done so?

Was it just by coincidence that the website mysteriously appeared and the information regarding it was communicated to the thread?..Certainly such a major event of the unveiling of such an impressive and promising site was certain to drive up share price during the speculative mania that would no doubt ensue......Such did prove to be the case.........However a similar pattern emerged. A seemingly unexplainable sell off in the face of wild exuberance. Could this have been the clever Mr. Gordon at work....once again manipulating news and events for his own gain at the expense of the investing public?..........Judge for yourself.

Of course we would not need to make such a judgement if Mr. Gordon would see to it that the SEC form 13D is promptly filed verifying his claims as true......Also, since the qtr. has ended Mr. Gordon could make disclosure prior to the next 10Q filing of the amount of the outstanding loan that TSIG owes Mr. Gordon on 6/30.

Proof of the truthfulness of his claims squarely rests on his own shoulder's......Mr. Gordon, we are waiting!

Marty, My next post will deal with Mr. Gordon's claims regarding his involvement with "Phoenix" and it's recent bankrupcy. Information that you will find to be very interesting, as well as at odds with Mr. Gordon's statements and claims.

Best Regards, JAB