KIS, you'll love this:
From Barrons: (my apologies if it's been posted) 05/01 5:23A (BN) BARRON'S: Plugged In: One Internet Supernova, Log On America, Seems To Be Dancing With Some Dubious Several pundits have expressed their bafflement at Log On America, which sold 2.2 million shares at $10 on April 22, and a further 330,000 to meet additional demand. The shares opened on their first day of trading above $29, shooting up to $37, as 2.1 million shares changed hands, before closing at $35. Altogether, the Log On IPO garnered $22.1 million for the firm, which had nine full-time employees after seven years in business, and posted a loss of $422,000 on last year's revenues of $760,000. About 40% of those revenues went to fund compensation and loans to the Internet firm's 31-year-old president, David R. Paolo, and to his father, Ray, a company vice president. With more than 2.6 million shares between them, the Paolos should be good for the loans, at least. And the firm's cash hoard should help it pursue its growth plans, which include the offering of high-speed Internet service and phone service to customers. Some of the surprise greeting Log On America's stock performance relates to the firm's underwriter. Unlike the bluechip bankers of Abovenet, which included CIBC, Lehman Brothers and PaineWebber, Log On America's banker was the Manhattan firm Dirks & Co., that had co-managed only three prior deals. Ray Dirks says that his wife, not he, owns and runs the underwriter. Although the 65-year-old Mr. Dirks was reached at the Dirks & Co. number, he says he's a stock analyst at Security Capital Trading, which did a private placement for Log On America in December. Ray Dirks' history is long on color. He did a great thing once, when he ferreted out the huge fraud at Equity Funding in 1973, then won a landmark ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court saying it was kosher for Dirks to have warned his clients before alerting the general public. Since then, however, Dirks hasn't had a lot to brag about, considering the horrid performance of many of the low-priced stocks underwritten by his former brokerage firms, John Muir & Co., now defunct, and RAS Securities. The Securities & Exchange Commission sanctioned Dirks after Muir's collapse. Dirks also gained notoriety as the loudest member of the "Shortbusters Club," where he urged the purchase of companies whose stocks had large short positions and underlying businesses that Dirks thought were sound. Dirks is not the only person whose Wall Street luck has turned around thanks to Log On America. Last August, the Providence-based firm hired four consultants, in exchange for warrants covering one million shares, exercisable at $1 a share. Even at Friday's $29.50 close, those warrants have a total potential paper profit of $28.5 million. The recent prospectus lists the consultants as corporations, but goes on to identify the owners of those corporations. A cool 250,000 of those warrants went to ICC Consulting, owned by a Wayne Robbins. Another quarter-million went to Scofield Dennison, owned by a Jacqueline Richardson. The prospectus shows both corporations with addresses in Port Washington, New York. Scofield Dennison's address turns out to be a post office box at Port Washington's Mail Boxes Etc. Both Richardson and Robbins have previously shared the same addresses, including some presumably cramped postal boxes. After Barron's called Dirks & Co. and Log On America with questions about these consultants, a Mineola, New York, lawyer named Leonard R. Sperber called and confirmed that he represented the Wayne Robbins mentioned in the prospectus. But Sperber answered no other questions, including whether ICC Consulting's proprietor was the Wayne Robbins arrested in 1987 for cocaine possession while he presided over a notorious penny-stock firm called Brooks Weinger Robbins & Leeds. The arrest of that Robbins and 16 others got headlines as far away as Australia for Rudolph Giuliani, who was Manhattan's U.S. Attorney at the time. Federal affidavits painted a lurid picture of Robbins' operation, where the Feds alleged Robbins used coke as a routine medium of exchange for inside information, stock and client lists. The broker's lawyer in the drug case did not return Barron's call, and case records on the drug bust had gone to archives. By the way, just before the drug bust in 1987, Robbins and other co-owners of Brooks Weinger consented to temporary suspensions, to settle SEC allegations of underwriting fraud -- which Robbins neither admitted nor denied. When Log On America President David Paolo returned Barron's call, he wouldn't describe the "business promotion and marketing" that earned the four consultants the million warrants, saying the information was confidential. "We're in our quiet period," said Paolo. Ray Dirks says he wasn't involved in the IPO due diligence, but he guessed that the consultants helped Paolo find technical people needed to manage the So it is still possible that the Wayne Robbins of ICC Consulting is not the former penny-stock broker. If that's the case, both Robbinses are the same age and have somehow managed to live at the same addresses. Although Wayne Robbins and the other consultants are in the money in a big way, they must wait to cash in. The prospectus says that without Nasdaq's consent, Dirks & Co. may not release security holders from lock-up agreements for six months. |