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Gold/Mining/Energy : PYNG Technologies -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LOR who wrote (3688)4/23/1999 11:43:00 AM
From: Brad  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8117
 
Good, challenging questions, LOR. The type of thing all junior public companies should be faced with responding. Good job!



To: LOR who wrote (3688)4/23/1999 12:56:00 PM
From: Ray.  Respond to of 8117
 
Great post LOR,

I am still in the kitchen...(LOL)

Ray



To: LOR who wrote (3688)4/23/1999 1:26:00 PM
From: Stephen Krupa  Respond to of 8117
 
The Individual Investor magazine for May, 1999, on page 64 discusses aspects of CEOs.
"A good incentive structure rewards CEOs for good performance, and punishes them for bad. It assures investors that management will work in their best interests.... By contrast, in 1998 Hewlett-Packard rescinded $3.8 million from CEO Lewis Platt-the value of the options he had to give back for HP's failure to meet certain goals..."
Later, this article mentions former CEOs who used company funds for buying jets and other private interests. "But most of that breed were scared straight by the wave of leveraged buyouts in the 1980s....Now they know to manage with shareholders' best interest in mind-or else."



To: LOR who wrote (3688)4/24/1999 5:44:00 AM
From: AH  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8117
 
Hello LOR,
If I were Mr. Jacobs, I would not bother to respond to your posting. As a shareholder, I hope he does not do it!

The passage:

"WOULD YOU BE KIND ENOUGH TO PROVIDE ANY COMMENTS ON THE ABOVE WHICH MIGHT HELP SHAREHOLDERS BETTER UNDERSTAND PYNG'S CURRENT SITUATION ?"

begs for another question(s):

LOR, WOULD YOU BE KIND ENOUGH TO PROVIDE ANY COMMENTS ON THE ABOVE QUESTION WHICH MIGHT HELP SHAREHOLDERS BETTER UNDERSTAND YOUR CURRENT FINANCIAL SITUATION ? INTEREST IN PYNG? WHAT ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH?

Go after, say, IBM's CEO and try to squeeze out of him/her any substantial information about any single major account the company has, or wants to have. Good luck!

If you don't have stomach to hold the junior, just sell. Don't you grow ulcers on the Pyng's account. It is not worth it.
You should know that about 90% of juniors fail. However, in my humble opinion, it still remains to be seen whether Pyng succeeds, or not.

If you don't want to wait, or you already disappointed, sell. I hope you live in a country free enough to allow you a disposal of a bad stock. Take advantage of this option, please. Preserve your own and others' mental health. Because if Pyng is so bad, including Pyng's CEO, this is indeed the right thing to do!

PS 1 Whatever you do, please answer my questions. After all, you are not representing a listed company, are you?

PS 2 All who like to clap: GO!