The Technical Register By Mr. Chartist
August 11, 1998
STOCK FRAUD #101 Your Insurance Policy in High-Risk Investing
There are ten overt actions required to fleece the investing public. All these actions have more than the tacit consent of a company's management. No bonafide company official has been left in the dark, when such crimes are committed. Management is not just condoning the fraud, they are secretly, but actively, participating in this deceptive confidence game.
1. The company will sell hundreds of thousands or millions of stock, options and/or warrants to the retail investor through the back door. This is done under the pretense of financing the company's objectives or making a market in the stock. Actually, such back-door offerings are made to pay a company's overhead, especially lucrative management salaries, at the expense of the retail investor. Insider trading reports are filed after the fact and may not become public knowledge until after a fraudulent promotion has surfaced.
2. Through their position in a company, management will sell company shares to themselves at below market prices and then resell them to investors at a higher price, utilizing a series of promotions. Private insider sales will not be accompanied by disclosure to the retail public, prior to such sales.
3. Management will buy an intellectual or physical property with shares. This is called a property vend-in that places a value to the shell company. The shell is worthless without the property. Often the property has little value, other than it can be promoted.
4. There will be no legitimate underwriting of the company by an independent brokerage firm. Management will use available loopholes to avoid filing a rigorous U.S. registration statement in order to sell the shares. Frequently, they will use an S&P or Moody's designation or Section 504 registration to deceive an unwitting retail public into believing a complete registration statement has been filed.
5. At best, management will place a figurehead on the board of directors to satisfy technical-expertise requirements, occasionally dictated by a lesser stock exchange or more often to persuade the retail public that the project has the blessing of an independent director with such technical expertise. This insinuation exists to convince retail investors that the company is being run by, or funded by, professionals or experts in their field. Management will have none of the basic technical requirements for a position in such companies, i.e. an accountant, attorney, relative, drinking buddy, or mistress found on the board of directors.
6. Management will withhold or downplay the inherent risks of investing in that stock. From the paid hack writing a tout sheet to the investor relations employee, scant commentary will be devoted to the enormous risks found in such shell companies. Broad statements are used instead: "There are no guarantees in a speculative investment."
7. Management will supply a large number of news releases, apprising the retail public of its progress. In lieu of abundant news releases, Internet stock forums and newsletters will offer rosy projections and potentially lucrative outcomes, to prevent retail investors from taking profits. Such hidden promotions are not readily transparent to the novice, retail investor until after the promotion has ended, if ever.
8. Management will cultivate an atmosphere of deceptive product claims, through paid newsletters, advertising, "investment" conferences, bribed stockbrokers or "analysts," its investor relations staff, and others who might benefit from the scam. Such deception requires forward-looking earnings projections, product or property misrepresentation or omitted defections therein, outrageous extrapolations of a basic fact without the likelihood of consistency, comparisons to other industry leaders, potential takeovers, possible future funding at higher levels, spurious alliances hinted-at, and other similar exaggerations. It is not unusual to find a single unrealistic slogan that defines the promotion, "visual gold in the core" or "the next Microsoft." Management will breed a network to create an atmosphere of retail stock buyers, through the Internet, special Fax Alerts, telephone rooms, magazine advertisements, secret investment groups, shareholder "action" committees, private forums, anonymous posters in public forums, and other promotional outlets.
9. Management will refuse to publicly issue "warning statements" or cautionary remarks, during the promotional phase, about its market valuation or artificially inflated stock price. Often, during the peak of the promotion, key management may be unavailable for comment, on vacation, or in important meetings.
10. Management will not lift a hand to stop the rush of buying, during a promotion, to investigate and smash any fantastic promotional statements or overly optimistic rumors, unless or until securities regulators, or highly critical media comments, insist they do.
The retail investor rarely benefits by the listing exchange or its securities commission, during a fraudulent stock promotion. The four main culprits include the Vancouver and Alberta stock exchanges, the Canadian Dealing Network, and the unregulated US over-the-counter electronic bulletin board and pink sheets. The Vancouver exchange has reformed many of the hideous and fraudulent practices, still found elsewhere, but is not immune to such frauds.
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