SEC Gives Alleged Stock Manipulators Slap on Wrist

In this recent final judgment, issued yesterday (September 17, 2007), the SEC revealed what is wrong with its enforcement efforts against penny stock manipulators. There was no punitive fine; the accused were only required to give up their profits. This was despite the “egregious nature” of the offenses. If I were to steal $100 from my neighbor I would be ordered to pay restitution plus a fine (often larger than the restitution), and yet these people allegedly stole hundreds of thousands of dollars and they paid no penalty besides giving up their ill-gotten gains and promising not to do it again.

The Court ordered Barnwell to disgorge $31,700 and prejudgment interest thereon. Casias was ordered to disgorge $334,097. Keener was ordered to disgorge $162,000 and was permanently barred him from acting as an officer or director of any publicly traded company. The Court did not order penalties.

Disclosure: I believe that the SEC is incompetent. I have never committed fraud or any other securities violations.

Why I Investigate Penny Stocks

Some may wonder why I investigate and write about penny stocks so aggressively. I have been accused of pursuing this line of research simply to make myself look good so that I can feel important. I do not think that is the case because, as those who know me will attest, I always feel important. In fact, I have occasionally been accused of being a bit of an egotist.

Others may believe that my sole purpose in investigating over-the-counter stocks is to enrich myself for short selling. I do not deny that I make money by selling short OTC stocks. I do not, however, write about all the stocks that short, nor do I short all the stocks about which I write. I started writing about OTC stocks before I even knew that it was possible to short sell them. And I am not convinced that my commentary on the stocks about which I write has any effect on the market price.

The main reason I like to write about penny stocks is because I feel that I can offer something (independent, if not unbiased research) on companies for which there is little information available. Perhaps in writing about such companies I can persuade a few people to avoid speculating in such companies and to choose more appropriate and more profitable investments. It was only with substantial research and a bit of luck that I myself avoided losing a lot of money in a pink sheet stock 2.5 years ago, when I first started investing in individual stocks. If I had not chanced upon some pretty amazing negative information from the CEO’s past business deals, I could easily have lost 99% of the money I would have put into that company.

If you invest in anything, you should always do your due diligence. Do not believe that just because a company is publicly traded (or even because it is listed on the stock exchange) that it is a worthy investment or even a legitimate investment. If I had relied upon the SEC to protect me when I was considering investing in a penny stock, I would have watched 75% of my money vanish in a fraud and would not feel vindicated when four months later the SEC sued the company (US Windfarming, USWF.pk) and its CEO.

Disclosure: I have no position in any stock mentioned. See my disclosure policy.

Continental Fuels: The Most Overvalued Penny Stock I’ve Ever Seen

It is Not Fraud if There are No Lies

Dictionary.com defines fraud as “deceit, trickery, sharp practice, or breach of confidence, perpetrated for profit or to gain some unfair or dishonest advantage.” It has been more succinctly defined as “implicit theft” by Murray Rothbard, among others. The key to fraud is that deception leads to the deceiver gaining economically in a direct transaction with the deceived. Many unlisted penny stocks toe the line on fraud. Management, getting paid large salaries (and tons of stock options) despite crummy financial performance, hypes up the stock, always offering overoptimistic predictions of future performance. Oftentimes management pays ‘independent’ analysts large sums to cover the company. This leads to gullible investors paying out large sums for the stock. When management’s glowing predictions are later belied by stark reality, the investors lose their socks and the executives live happily ever after.

What would happen if management of a worthless penny stock were completely honest about how worthless the company truly was? In that case, there would be no fraud, but anyone buying the stock would be an utter fool. I found a company like this: Continental Fuels (OTC BB: CFUL.ob, $1.70). As of August 13, the company had 571.6 million fully diluted shares outstanding. That gives the company a market cap of $972 million. What do investors get for that $972 million? Not much. They get total assets of $3.8 million, a stockholder’s deficit of $1.1 million, and for the most recent quarter, sales of $5.7 million and an operating loss of $560k. (See the 10Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2007 for details.)

First, I should detail the shares outstanding–this is a tricky computation giving all that the company has done with its shares. To save space I will only discuss the origins of 500 million (88%) of the shares. There is convertible preferred voting stock that is convertible into 500 million shares. This was issued to UNIVERSAL PROPERTY DEVELOPMENT AND ACQUISITION CORPORATION (OTC BB: UPDA.ob) in payment for some assets. From the 10Q:

On April 23, 2007, the Company closed a business combination transaction pursuant to a Stock Purchase Agreement dated April 20, 2007, by and among the Company and Universal Property Development and Acquisition Corporation (“UPDA”), a publicly held Nevada corporation (the “SPA”). Pursuant to the SPA, the Company acquired one hundred percent (100%) of the capital stock of US Petroleum Depot, Inc. and Continental Trading Enterprizes, Inc. f/k/a UPDA Texas Trading (the “Subsidiaries”), two private Nevada Corporations and wholly-owned subsidiaries of UPDA. The consideration paid by the Company for the Subsidiaries consisted of $2,500,000 in cash, payable within 30 days of the Effective Date, and 50,000 shares of our Series A Convertible Preferred Stock valued at $5,000,000 (the “Preferred Stock”). The Preferred Stock is currently convertible into 500,000,000 shares of our common stock and UPDA has the right to vote the shares of Preferred Stock on an “as converted” basis in any matters for which the holders of our common stock are entitled to vote.

Valuation

Now comes the fun part. Continental Fuels, its 88% owner UPDA, and major shareholders of the two companies have repeatedly said that the stock is not worth 1% of its current market value. Following are the statements and transactions that show this:

1. The acquisition of a majority of CFUL stock by UPDA. The preferred stock (representing at that time 77% of the total stock of Continental Fuels) was in payment of a debt of $5 million incurred when CFUL bought some assets from UPDA. By this metric, Continental Fuels is rightly worth $6.5 million. This puts the value of its stock at $0.011 per share.

From a recent 8k filing regarding the merger: “The consideration received by us from CFI for the Subsidiary Shares consisted of $2,500,000 in cash, payable within 30 days of the Effective Date, and 50,000 shares of CFI’s Series A Convertible Preferred Stock valued at $5,000,000 (the “Preferred Stock”). The Preferred Stock is currently convertible into 500,000,000 shares of CFI common stock and the Registrant has the right to vote the shares of Preferred Stock on an “as converted” basis in any matters for which the holders of CFI’s common stock are entitled to vote. Based on the number of shares of CFI common stock currently outstanding, as of the Effective Date the Registrant controlled seventy-seven percent (77%) of the voting stock of CFI.”

2. A large shareholder recently sold 100 million shares of CFUL to UPDA in exchange for 10,000 shares of UPDA Series preferred stock. That preferred stock is convertible into 200 million shares of UPDA stock, which at a recent market price of $.042 per share values the preferred stock at $8.4 million. Why would someone sell stock valued at $170 million for stock in a different company, worth $8.4 million? The simple reason is that CFUL is way overvalued, and Ms. Sandhu was rightly afraid that by the time she could sell her stock (it was restricted until February 2008) the stock would have tanked. If Ms. Sandhu gained nothing from this transaction, then this stock swap values CFUL at $48 million and each share at $.084.

From UPDA’s most recent 10Q:On August 13, 2007, Ms. Karen Sandhu sold 100,000,000 shares out of 141,000,000 shares of Continental’s outstanding $.001 par value common stock held by her to UPDA for 10,000 shares of UPDA Series B Preferred Stock. UPDA made the purchase on behalf of Continental as treasury stock and was retired on the same day.

also from the 10Q: “In July of 2007, certain holders of Series B preferred shares converted 3,520 Series B preferred shares into 70,400,000 common shares.”

3. Those shares (plus 40 million others) of CFUL that were sold by Karen Sandhu were acquired by her in a private placement in exchange for $200,000 on February 6, 2007.

From CFUL’s 10Q: “On February 6, 2007, Company completed the sale of 141,000,000 restricted shares of its post-2007 Reverse Split common stock to Ms. Karen Sandhu for $200,000 cash. Company used the proceeds from this offering to pay outstanding debts and liabilities.”

4. Continental’s 88% owner, UPDA, has a market cap of $33 million. If Continental Fuels was worth its current implied market cap, UPDA would be not only greatly undervalued but it would be the best investment of all time.

5. On August 17, 2007, Continental Fuels issued 12.6 million restricted shares to pay off a $100,000 debt, valuing those shares at $0.008 per share. Assuming a modest discount (20%) for the restricted shares, the company so much as said that it is worth $0.01 per share or $5.7 million.

From the 8k: “On August 17, 2007, the board of directors of the Registrant approved the conversion of an aggregate of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) of outstanding notes of the Registrant (the “Notes”) into shares of the Registrant’s common stock. Based upon the current assets and capitalization of the Registrant, the conversion price of the shares of common stock to be issued upon conversion of the Notes was valued at $0.008 per share by the Registrant’s board of directors. The conversion of the Notes to shares of the Registrant’s common stock is at the discretion of the Note holders. However, convertibility of the Notes is subject to certain limitations based on the number of shares of the Registrant’s common stock then outstanding. Upon the eventual full conversion of the Notes to common shares, the approved conversion of the Notes to common stock will result in the issuance by the Registrant of an aggregate of 12,615,326 restricted shares of its common stock.

6. A similar transaction to #5 above took place back in April, valuing the company’s stock at $0.012 per share.

from the 8k dated 23 April 2007: “On April 25, 2007, the board of directors of the Registrant approved the conversion of an aggregate of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) of outstanding notes of the Registrant (the “Notes”) into shares of the Registrant’s common stock. Based upon the current assets and capitalization of the Registrant, the conversion price of the shares of common stock to be issued upon conversion of the Notes was valued at $0.012 per share by the Registrant’s board of directors. The conversion of the Notes to shares of the Registrant’s common stock is at the discretion of the Note holders. The eventual full conversion of the $100,000 in Notes to common stock will result in the issuance of an aggregate of 8,326,115 restricted shares of our common stock.”

When Will Sanity Return?

I have proven my case that Continental Fuels is incredibly overvalued. When should its valuation return to a realistic level? I am not sure, for it is never possible to predict stock price changes. However, it is a worthwhile exercise to examine a couple factors that will influence the price of the company’s stock.

1. UPDA has begun to convert its preferred shares to common shares of Continental Fuels. Consequently, it has decided to spinoff a number of these shares to its shareholders. A total of 787 million shares were outstanding as of the record date, and one share of CFUL will be distributed for each 50 shares of UPDA. This means that 16.7 million more shares of CFUL will hit the market, although not until August 1, 2008, because these shares are restricted from trading for one year. With only about 2 million shares trading currently (according to Yahoo Finance and verified by me from the company’s SEC filings), selling of a large chunk of those 16 million shares next August as the shares lose their restrictions will quickly depress the price.

From the press release on CFUL’s website: “According to the Board Resolution, one share of CFUL common stock will be distributed to UPDAs common stockholders for every 50 shares of UPDA common stock held. Every UPDA common stockholder will receive at least one CFUL share in this distribution and fractional shares will be rounded up to the nearest whole number. The date of the distribution will be August 1, 2007 to UPDAs common stockholders of record on July 11, 2007. Although the distributed shares will be restricted from transfer for one year pursuant to SEC Rule 144, UPDA has obtained an opinion that the shares will have no tax consequence to the recipient until they are sold or transferred.

2. Every month since April the number of shares of CFUL sold short has increased dramatically. Currently (as of August 2007), 417,000 shares are sold short (see here and search for CFUL for updated numbers). Increased selling is inevitable as more short sellers (and stockholders) become aware of the company’s extreme overvaluation.

Conclusions

The absurd valuation of Continental Fuels despite highlights several problems with capital markets in the United States. In a future post I will address these problems and ways that financial market regulation can change this.

Disclosure: I am short Continental Fuels (OTC BB: CFUL.ob). I do not recommend investing in unlisted stocks or in shorting stocks, as both are very risky. Combining the two is perhaps even more risky and should be left to the brave, the foolhardy, and the professionals. I refuse to disclose to which of these categories I belong. See my disclosure policy.

I love revealing the ignorance of my critics

If you are bored, see SeekingAlpha and the comments on my post about Octillion (scroll to the bottom).

To my critics: if you are going to criticize me, at least try having your facts right. The one universal I have found is that people who ‘invest’ in the penny stocks I disparage tend not to think very deeply before lobbing crazy accusations. And they should be ashamed of themselves, because not only do they lose their own money in bad investments, they give money to fraudsters, fools, and useless dreamers, which means there is less money for legitimate and useful businesses.

Disclosure:  I hate Octillion. I would short it if I could. But I can’t. So I am neither long nor short. My disclosure policy also hates Octillion and thinks it is worthless.

Fun with Terax Oil & Gas

Maybe there is something wrong with me, but I find joy in reading the SEC litigation updates. I subscribe via RSS. This is how I learned about Terax Oil & Gas (OTC BB: TEXG.ob). The company as well as its executives have been sued by the SEC, and the company’s assets have been frozen.

Trading in the shares of Terax Oil and Gas has been suspended by the SEC from September 12 until September 25.

Of course, this is small consolation for “investors” who bought shares of the stock at $20 a year ago. They last traded at $2.65 and they are probably worth absolutely nothing now. It just goes to show that caveat emptor definitely still applies when investing in unlisted over-the-counter stocks.

Disclosure: I have no pecuniary interest in Terax. My disclosure policy makes for good reading and is best accompanied by a glass of Muscat.