June HotOTC pump recap

All these were pumped by HotOTC or one or more of their other websites. All these were announced after the market close on the date listed.

Want more? Much more detailed research on different stock promoters and how their pump trades is coming, but it is too much work for me to give away for free. Details coming soon … I expect to have this new premium service running within a couple months.

6/2 – MCTH – I traded this profitably.

Ticker Long/Short Shares Open Date Price Position Close Date Price Profit ($) Profit (%) Pumper (if known)
MCTH Short 26832 6/3/2010 $0.398 $10,669 6/3/2010 $0.388 $258.36 2.42% HotOTC

Comment: was hotOTC pump, previously no volume; missed first 15 minutes of day when it opened at .45 and had good volume at .42 due to a dentist appointment; covered gradually with best bid (last 1200 shares I actually covered the next morning)

6/6 – EYSM

6/6 – SLTZ

6/7 – AMEL

6/9 (before market open) – CAEH (was also pumped by Beacon Equity and Wild Bill that day)

6/12 – IGNT

6/13 – DTRO

6/15 – GNZR

6/15 – RXAC

6/20 – ABHI

6/23 – INAR

6/24 (mid-day alert) – SNSR

6/27 – BSOM

6/30 – NUEC

 

Disclosure: No positions in any stocks mentioned. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

May HotOTC pump and dump recap

All these were pumped by HotOTC or one or more of their other websites. All these were announced after the market close on the date listed.

4/29 – DTSL

5/2 – GRNH

5/5 – AMEL

5/6 – ECHD

5/11 – ROSV

5/12 – SILA

5/16 – AGCZ

5/19 – VIDA

5/23 – LMCO

5/26 – JEDM

5/31 – SRGL

Disclosure: Short 500 LMCO. No positions in any other stocks mentioned. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

Trade recap for the first six months of 2010

Below are my monthly profits (keep in mind this includes $6,234.16 in losses from my super-secret trading strategy, for which I do not report the trades on this blog; those losses all came in March and were it not for those losses I would have made $4,703.21 in March):

January $9,938.76
February $11,146.07
March ($1,578.95)
April $17,548.72
May $16,191.05
June $4,123.12

I have become far more consistent compared to last year.This is primarily as a result of relying less on my super-secret trading strategy, which generated essentially zero net profits last year while giving me tons of volatility. (In 2008 and 2007 that strategy generated significant profits).

January $27,740.09
February $29,477.44
March ($21,774.65)
April ($50,199.34)
May $60,484.79
June $10,165.92

Unlike last year, most of my profits this year have come from trading OTC pump & dumps rather than listed stocks. I have netted $15,861.46 from my pump longs strategy (going long the pumps being something I have learned from InvestorsLive of the InvestorsUnderground stock chat, with a weighted average profit margin of 2.89% and a win rate of 53.71%. My revived long-term short strategy, which has been hampered by the psychological difficulty I have in holding long-term shorts after the disastrous forced buy-ins and resultant losses I suffered in mid-2008, generated $3,629.18 in profits with an average weighted profit margin of 6.80% and an 84.2% win rate. All but one of my 19 trades in this strategy were of AMEL (the other was ANTS).

For my TimAlerts-related strategy, $32,228.80 in profits have come from trading OTC stocks (almost exclusively short) while only $12,103.73 in profits have come from trading listed stocks. The total profit attributable to my own trades (mostly shorts of OTC stocks) was $28,733.40 with a 1.82% weighted average profit margin, while the profit attributable to me following TimAlerts was $16,382.83 with a weighted average profit margin of 1.43%. Contrary to popular belief, I have made relatively little money this year scalping TimAlerts, with my total profit attributable to that being $2,853.38 and an average profit margin of 0.92% (note that this is not a weighted average profit margin; I just averaged each trade’s profit margin).

Disclosure: No positions in any stocks mentioned in this post. I own many of Sykes’ DVDs and I am a lifetime subscriber to his TimAlerts trade alerts service and I have a subscription to his PennyStocking Silver service. I receive a commission for every DVD bought through my affiliate link to Sykes’ web store. I am also an affiliate (and customer) of InvestorsUnderground. To see more details on my relationship with Sykes and InvestorsUnderground, please see my terms of service, which is incorporated by reference into this post.

Lawsuit reveals alleged penny stock promotion network of stock promoter Brent Pierce

Note: This article will be updated as I read the documents I have uploaded. I wanted to make them freely available to the public as quickly as possible. For background in the meantime, I suggest reading David Baines’ articles (Part 1 & Part 2) on this in the Vancouver Sun.

Here is a brief excerpt from Baines’ article (part 1):

By this time, [David] Urquhart was long gone. In September 2008, just after the stock [of Mainland Resources] peaked, he resigned. The company said his departure was “not a result of any disagreement between the company or Mr. Urquhart pertaining to matters relating to the company’s operations, policies or practices.”

Maybe so, but there was serious disagreement over compensation. In a legal action filed in U.S. District Court in Nevada this week, Urquhart claims the company owes him hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, shares and options.

The case number is A09-591695-B and I downloaded Urquhart’s complete filing from June 23rd 2010. Below are links to PDFs of the full complaint.

Pages 1-50
Pages 51-100
Pages 101-150
Pages 151-178
Exhibit A
Exhibit B

Disclosure: No positions in any stocks mentioned and no connections to anyone mentioned. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

A few links to help with pump & dump research

Messageboards
I read these messageboards without fail. All these messageboards are active and have optional RSS feeds.

SI Paid Mailers
iHub Franklin, Andrews, Kramer, and Edelstein (FAKE)
iHub DD Support board and Fraud Research Team
ihub Spam and Scam
The Penny Stock Bar (Cheers)

Websites / Blogs
These are the best blogs that cover pump and dumps.

The Financial Investigator (Roddy Boyd)
The Street Sweeper
David Baines at the Vancouver (BC) Sun
TheWorm_06 – Roberto aka TheWorm_06 has unmasked numerous frauds on his blog.
ShareSleuth – Financed by Mark Cuban.
Citron Research – Short seller Andrew Left has unmasked many penny stock frauds.
Promobuyer.net (has nice details on big promotions)
Hotstocked.com (owned by a stock promoter)
StockPromoters.com (owned by a stock promoter)
Pumpsanddumps.com

 
Disclosure: No links to the above message boards except that I do poste on the iHub DD Fraud Research board. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

SEC sues alleged stock manipulators behind BlueFire Ethanol (BFRE) and other pump & dumps

BlueFire was one of the first pump and dumps I observed. Below is the chart. Guess where the pump and dump occurred.

bfre

Here is the summary from the SEC’s litigation release:

The Securities and Exchange Commission today filed a complaint against Blake Williams of Dallas, Texas, and registered representative Derek Lopez, of Torrance, California, and numerous entities that they controlled, alleging that they committed securities fraud by manipulating the markets of numerous microcap stocks from 2006 to 2008. The Commission alleges that the defendants sold stock in unregistered offerings and that their subsequent manipulation led to artificially high prices and volume, which allowed the defendants and others to sell their holdings for substantial gains. The complaint also alleges that Williams acted as an unregistered broker-dealer when he solicited purchases of stock and traded on behalf of investors who bought stock from him.

The Commission’s complaint alleges that Williams, using five entities that he controlled, and Lopez, using the entity Da Big Kahuna, LLC, engaged in a number of manipulative practices, including:

  • engaging in “bid support” by placing orders for shares at prices below the inside (highest) bid to absorb sell orders and create an artificial floor for the stocks;
  • trading in multiple accounts through multiple brokers to give the false impression that there was greater demand for the stocks than truly existed;
  • coordinating trading among a group of individuals for the purpose of maintaining stock prices; and
  • obtaining securities in unlawful, unregistered offerings and then selling the securities to investors and into the markets in similarly unregistered and unlawful transactions

Here are some details on which companies were affected, from the SEC’s legal complaint (pdf):

53. Williams and the Williams Entities participated in the manipulation of the stocks of at least a dozen issuers (Advanced Growing, Axium, Bluefire, Datascension, Interlink, Medirect Latino, National Automation, Packaged Home, Pet Ecology, Remote Surveillance, Riverdale, and Straight Up).
54. Lopez and Da Big Kahuna participated in the manipulation of at least eight stocks (Axium, Bluefire, Interlink, Packaged Home, Pet Ecology, Straight Up, National Automation, and Remote Surveillance).
55.
The defendants used a variety of methods to manipulate the markets for the targeted stocks including, “bid support,” controlling the float, coordinated trading, and trading in multiple accounts.

I find the details of how the alleged manipulation took place to be especially enlightening:

A. Bid Support
56. The defendants and others engaged in what they referred to as “bid support.” This conduct involved layering orders at or near the best bid and ask prices with the intent to stabilize or increase share prices.
57. The defendants placed buy orders for stock at prices immediately below the “inside,” or highest, bid price posted by the market makers. For example, if the highest bid posted by a market maker was $1.50, the defendants might place orders at $1.45, $1.40, and $1.35, often for small amounts of stock.
58. These orders had two purposes. First, the defendants intended to create an artificial floor price for the stock when there was increased selling in the market; the defendants expected that the supporting orders would absorb some of the sell orders so that the stock prices would not fall dramatically. Second, the defendants placed the orders through different brokerage firms so that market participants would see a substantial number of bids and conclude that there was greater demand for the stocks than truly existed.
B. Controlling the Float and Coordinating Trading
59. The overall manipulation strategy relied upon controlling the “float”—the total shares available for investors to trade for a particular stock. As part of the scheme to distribute shares in unregistered offerings, the defendants and others ensured that the majority of shares without restrictive legends were controlled by the group.
60. The defendants and other participants in the scheme controlled the float so that shares would not be “dumped” into the market indiscriminately while they were selling their shares into the market.
61. As described above, the individuals who bought shares from the Williams
Entities had their shares pooled for some initial period (typically 30 to 60 days) and Williams traded their shares during this lock-up period.
62. The defendants and others engaged in coordinated trading to deceive the markets and extract profits from artificially high stock prices. This was accomplished by, among other things, selling in times of increased volume and price and not selling in times of low prices and/or volume.
C. Trading in Multiple Accounts
63. The defendants traded through several different brokerage firms using multiple accounts. This practice gave the impression of market depth to those looking at the market on a “Level II” or “Level III” screen, which identifies the market makers that are originating bids. Additionally, trading spread over many brokerage firms might avoid “red flags” with brokerage houses if large amounts of stock were deposited via stock certificates, thus concealing the fraud.
64. Williams traded stock on behalf of the Williams Entities and in his own name through accounts at multiple brokerage firms. Williams often deposited shares across the numerous accounts to avoid scrutiny and purportedly to ease the “clearing process.”
65. For instance, in the case of Axium, Williams directed the transfer agent to issue stock certificates to TBeck Capital, Victoria Financial, Valek Investments, Warren Street, and himself. An email from another individual to Williams said, “distribute free trading stock to 3 brokerage firms. Remember that the small cert[ificate]s go out first. Don’t send Lampost [Brokerage] any Victoria shares since they think I am on too many accounts.” Valek Investments’ one million Axium shares were issued in twenty certificates of 50,000 shares each. As part of depositing these numerous certificates across all of the accounts, Williams told one of his brokers, “I thought I would deposit one 50,000 share cert[ificate] into each account to make sure y’all are comfortable before I drop the bigger ones in.”
66. Similarly, Lopez traded securities at both his employer and “away” from his employer (in accounts at other firms), and traded in both his own name and in the name of Da Big Kahuna. Lopez made efforts to hide his activities on behalf of Da Big Kahuna from his employer by not properly designating them as “related” accounts. Moreover, the accounts for Da Big Kahuna are listed in the name of one of Lopez’s relatives even though Lopez controlled the trading in those accounts.

Disclosure: No positions in any stocks mentioned. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

Trading R&D (and the May 19th trade recap)

Just one main trade today on ANTS and a small HAUP scalp. Mostly in the video I talk about trading research and development.

Daily profit: $1,452.00

BOT    1,000    ANTS    false    Stock    2.3500    USD    SMART    09:56:19        5.00
BOT    1,000    ANTS    false    Stock    2.1900    USD    SMART    10:06:41        5.00

Disclosure: No positions in any stocks mentioned. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

HOD list: How to find stocks breaking out to new highs

Are you curious how I find stocks making new highs so quickly. Watch the video as I show and explain the “HOD list” or “high of the day” list.

Disclosure: No positions in any stocks mentioned. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.

Trade recap: Market insanity edition

I missed all the good trades on the market panic but I live to fight another day.

Daily profit: $835.60

A new strategy of mine: playing bounces after huge panics. +$4 on two trades so far. Recent bounce plays I’ve attempted:

POSC – bought at low of .102, sold at .1075 (oops)
POSC_bounce

PDGO – Bought well at 1.44, sold half at 1.525, sold rest at 1.349. Lesson: risk is much higher the less a stock has dropped. My identification of where it would bounce using level 2 was correct, however.
pdgo

Trades:
+    BOT    2,500    AMEL    false    Stock    1.579    USD    ARCAEDGE    08:51:15        12.50
+    SLD    5,000    LEI    false    Stock    2.600    USD    SMART    09:43:14        25.00
SLD    5,000    LEI    false    Stock    2.6100    USD    SMART    09:43:20        25.00
BOT    5,000    LEI    false    Stock    2.5200    USD    ISLAND    09:44:57        25.00
+    BOT    5,000    LEI    false    Stock    2.496    USD    ISLAND    09:45:54        25.00
BOT    5,000    LEI    false    Stock    2.3300    USD    SMART    12:51:15        25.00
+    SLD    5,000    LEI    false    Stock    2.360    USD    ISLAND    12:51:38        25.00
10:14:05    PDGO    B    1.44    1000    ETMM
10:14:05    PDGO    B    1.44    1000    ETMM
10:15:35    PDGO    S    1.525    1000    NITE
10:17:09    PDGO    S    1.34    100    NITE
10:17:14    PDGO    S    1.35    900    NITE

Disclosure: No positions in any stocks mentioned. This blog has a terms of use that is incorporated by reference into this post; you can find all my disclaimers and disclosures there as well.