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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Amazon Natural (AZNT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tonto who wrote (1412)8/24/1998 8:03:00 PM
From: RBM  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 26163
 
Tonto,

You are being absurd now.... KTEL really touched somewhere around 100 I believe, after the splits. IT WENT FROM 7.00 dollars... and the accumulation started before that. EVERYONE WHO WAS IN ON THE GROUND FLOOR MADE AN ABSOLUTE KILLING... This is the floor if this is real. 1000 shares of KTEL would have paid close to 75,000 + if you would have hung in. If this is real, it makes the KTEL short look like peanuts.

Rob



To: tonto who wrote (1412)8/24/1998 8:03:00 PM
From: Just My Opinion  Respond to of 26163
 
Stealth Stalk!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
;-)

businessweek.com

Four Ways Shorts Get Stung

There are four distinct types of short squeezes. All force short-sellers to buy
back stock, thereby driving up share prices.

THE TRADE
A short-seller sells shares that are borrowed, either from an institutional investor or--more perilously--from a retail brokerage. Shares in any margin account can be borrowed if they haven't been fully paid for. The short hopes to eventually replace the borrowed stock at a lower price, pocketing the difference.

THE MARKET-FORCES SQUEEZE
In the most typical short squeeze, market forces or favorable news drive up share prices. If prices move up sharply, shorts must immediately put up more collateral--or return the shares.

THE INSTITUTIONAL SQUEEZE
Institutional shareholders --mutual funds and pension funds--who loan out shares to short-sellers can demand their return at any time. When that happens, the shorts must hand them over.

THE ACCOUNT SWITCH
If shareholders move shares from margin to cash accounts, shorts must return any shares borrowed from the margin account.

THE HYPE SQUEEZE
Common among thinly traded shares. The company, or stock promoters, intentionally pressure shorts by praising the stock to small investors or issuing overoptimistic press releases to drive up the share price.

THE BUY-IN
When shorts must return borrowed stock, the shares must be bought on the open market. Thus, short-sellers can sustain huge losses if prices have risen--and since their purchases drive up prices still further, they boost the pain of fellow short-sellers.

DATA: BUSINESS WEEK
Updated June 14, 1997 by bwwebmaster






To: tonto who wrote (1412)8/24/1998 8:37:00 PM
From: Cavalry  Respond to of 26163
 
thought aznt was over $2.50 for several months
could it be a stock climbing back to it's true value
that would be bad for you i guess though
cav



To: tonto who wrote (1412)8/24/1998 9:54:00 PM
From: Mongo2116  Respond to of 26163
 
Is this you?
Tonto and The Lone Ranger riding across the prarie, when they are
surrounded by 10,000 Commanche Indians. The Lone Range sets up in his
saddle, looks around and says "Well Tonto, Looks like we're surrounded!".
Tonto looks around and says "What's this "WE" shit, white boy?"