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


To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (20880)3/15/1999 10:41:00 PM
From: Sword  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 122087
 
EFAX. Watch out. Their balance sheet and income statements are good, relatively speaking. They are no where near bankrupt. Their soaring equity makes it possible for them to finance all kinds of new technology, which is precisely what their business plans call for. This company is a short killer.



To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (20880)3/15/1999 10:43:00 PM
From: M. Dion  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
Good to see you up and about........EPAY.....any thoughts?

mike



To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (20880)3/15/1999 11:00:00 PM
From: Billy Shoemake  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 122087
 
Anthony,

I read on yahoo that insiders of EFAX filed to sell more
shares today and it is on EDGAR.
Can you confirm this?
If it is true, is it significant?

Thanks



To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (20880)3/16/1999 3:47:00 AM
From: SEAN007  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
WCAP has criminal ties? something is not right.... White Plains, New York, March 15 (Bloomberg) -- Winfield Capital Corp. shares
more than doubled on the Nasdaq SmallCap market. Officials of the company, which
went public in October 1995, didn't immediately return phone calls.

White Plains, New York-based Winfield rose 12 15/16, or 111 percent, to 24 5/8, a
record. The stock traded as high as 25.

Winfield Capital's initial public offering in October 1995 was managed by A.S.
Goldmen & Co., an Iselin, New Jersey, brokerage.

Last year, A.S. Goldmen, its owner, Anthony J. Marchiano, and two employees were
ordered by regulators to pay $305,000 in fines and $1.1 million in restitution for
allegedly manipulating the shares of Innovative Tech Systems Inc., a software company.
Marchiano and the employees said at the time they would appeal the order.

Marchiano owned 9.95 percent of Winfield Capital last July, according to documents
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Marchiano couldn't be located at the Naples, Florida, address listed in the July 1998
SEC filing. A.S. Goldmen was no longer listed in New Jersey. Marchiano's attorney
didn't immediately return telephone calls.

Today, Daniel Miller a 15-year-old Teaneck, New Jersey resident who has drawn wide
publicity for his Internet page that offers investment advice, wrote on the page at 3:06
p.m., ''Get in on WCAP...going to 30 by the end of the day, trust me.''

At the time, the stock was trading at 22 7/8. While it did climb as high as 25 after 3:30
p.m., it never reached 30.

19:06:26 03/15/1999

BlOOMBERG has got you on their radar! LOL!