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Strategies & Market Trends : Stock Watcher's Thread / Pix of the Week (POW) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: MakeMoney who wrote (9349)5/21/1999 2:32:00 PM
From: flickerful  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 52051
 
A warning: the spelling police are out in full force. <eom>



To: MakeMoney who wrote (9349)5/21/1999 2:35:00 PM
From: Boddington  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 52051
 
re: HNLY - It is absolutely public record that they failed to live up to their released promises last year, and failed to return any repeated calls, including mine.

I would be very surprised to hear from them now.

They re-emerged this year as an internet play. How unique.

I'm not slagging your investment. In fact, I hope you make millions off it - no matter to me. I was just warning the unknowing that the HNLY outfit has been under, and still should be under serious suspicion as to their honesty and the way they operate.

I wonder why you take offense to that? If the SEC or FBI has anything to do with HNLY, it should be in investigating them, not protecting them.



To: MakeMoney who wrote (9349)5/23/1999 7:47:00 PM
From: Psycho Killer  Respond to of 52051
 
Stop your babbling about legal action for anyone who "slanders" HNLY.
If anyone ought to fear legal action, it's HNLY. And as far as HNLY's "legal department" is concerned, the company barely has a pot to piss in, and sure as heck doesn't have an army of securities lawyers. (You would know this if you had read HNLY's financial statements.)

If you want to do some due diligence, go back through the posts on SI's HNLY board for about a year. Read the ones I posted. They contain citations to SEC filings (from 3 or so years ago, before HNLY changed its name, stopped holding annual meetings, and stopped filing with the SEC); press releases; newspaper articles (including some interesting ones about the fraud conviction of HNLY's former CEO, who resigned a week or so after I posted that info); and websites for info such as Florida corporation records.

Or call Daisy Campos at HNLY, and ask her for HNLY's financial statements. You probably have more cash in your wallet than HNLY has in the bank.

HNLY's method of operation has been the same for years -- lose money, but keep promising that the next acquisition (or maybe the one after that) would be the one that finally made the company profitable. Of course, so far every acquisition has failed to make any money to speak of. What a track record. Sure inspires confidence in management, doesn't it?

If you've got some FACTS, let's hear them. I've posted reams of them on the HNLY board.