First Canadian American Holding Corporation Further Explains Dividend Friday December 23, 1:03 pm ET
TORONTO--(MARKET WIRE)--Dec 23, 2005 -- First Canadian American Holding Corporation (Other OTC:FCDH.PK - News) would like to further clarify the upcoming dividend. Any shareholder that purchases shares of FCDH as of close of business today will be entitled to receive the stock dividend of Suncrest stock. There has been some confusion in the market place about when a person who buys shares becomes entitled to the dividend and I hope this clarifies it for all concerned.
Posts: 796 | Registered: Dec 2004
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quote:Originally posted by bingo2005: DIV news just out -- have to buy today
First Canadian American Holding Corporation Further Explains Dividend Friday December 23, 1:03 pm ET
TORONTO--(MARKET WIRE)--Dec 23, 2005 -- First Canadian American Holding Corporation (Other OTC:FCDH.PK - News) would like to further clarify the upcoming dividend. Any shareholder that purchases shares of FCDH as of close of business today will be entitled to receive the stock dividend of Suncrest stock. There has been some confusion in the market place about when a person who buys shares becomes entitled to the dividend and I hope this clarifies it for all concerned.
Posts: 4245 | From: SMALLVILLE USA | Registered: May 2004
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posted
I think we might see a good EOD run because of everyone trying to get filled before market close.
Posts: 209 | Registered: Sep 2005
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posted
Come on! Who do we have to pay to get an uptick?!
-------------------- I have taken a vow of poverty, so if you want to irritate me, send money. Posts: 1032 | From: DFW | Registered: Oct 2005
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posted
I do not know what it takes to have people admit they are wrong on the divy date. The OTC Bulletin Board also has this news out.
Now very heavy buying at .0011. It is hard for me to believe. That people invest money in dividend stocks and do not know the rules.
Posts: 675 | Registered: Dec 2005
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quote:Originally posted by CD's Money: Tex, what page?
I simply went to Yahoo Finance (finance.yahoo.com)
Also, just got off the phone with Mr. Winick, who says *he* had to call the NASD for verification, himself. Hence the last-minute PR... According to him, the confusion revolves on this being "restricted shares." Apparently that makes a difference...says he was confused, too, lol.
posted
Is anybody else reading the PR? Has it been posted elsewhere? If not, we're going to stay in the .001 - .0011 range.
-------------------- Do not boast about tomorrow, for you do not know what a day may bring forth -- Proverbs 27:1 Posts: 476 | From: East Texas | Registered: Dec 2005
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posted
well, I learned something in all this, just got offa the phone with div dept in NASD: restricted-share dividends trade differently than common-stock dividends--the T-day + 3 rule does apply.
With common-stock dividends it never matters what the record date is; just buy before the ex-date...
But restricted shares are quoted ex-div, therefore the T+3 rule...
learn something everyday...
Still leaves me wondering about folks who believed the company PR as of Monday...
Also, NASD lady says they send broker-dealer notices to all their clients, so if your broker says they don't know...you can instruct them to look it up in the NASD member notices...
posted
Hey jigen3, why don't you ask hurricanematt about buying shares in SNYY right now. I'm pretty sure he has an opinion on that.
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posted
I just hope investors in FCDH that went out shopping or whatever today. Did not believed that the 28th was good for them.
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posted
December 23, 2005 - 1:03 PM EST close Email this News Article Your Name Your Email Friend's Name Friend's Email Receive Copy: yes
FCDH 0.0011 0.00
Today 5d 1m 3m 1y 5y 10y
First Canadian American Holding Corporation Further Explains Dividend First Canadian American Holding Corporation (OTC: FCDH) would like to further clarify the upcoming dividend. Any shareholder that purchases shares of FCDH as of close of business today will be entitled to receive the stock dividend of Suncrest stock. There has been some confusion in the market place about when a person who buys shares becomes entitled to the dividend and I hope this clarifies it for all concerned.
About First Canadian American Holding Corporation:
First Canadian American Holding Corporation is a holding company with subsidiaries that conduct operations in areas of digital television, radio and the internet under The Fight Network brand.
Safe Harbor
Certain statements in this news release may contain forward-looking information within the meaning of Rule 175 under the Securities Act of 1933 and Rule 3b-6 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and are subject to the safe harbor created by those rules. All statements, other than statements of fact, included in this release, including, without limitation, statements regarding potential future plans and objectives of the company, are forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate and actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Technical complications that may arise could prevent the prompt implementation of any strategically significant plan(s) outlined above. The company cautions that these forward-looking statements are further qualified by other factors. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any statements in this release, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
posted
Damn, look at this volume and movement across the board today. We got nothing, and nothing. Everyone must be out finishing up thier XMAS shopping, which is what I am going to go do now...
Markets closed on Monday, so lets make it a Green Tuesday...
Oh, and MERRY CHRISTMAS people's, and God Bless!
-------------------- All you need in this life is Ignorance and confidence; then success is sure. Mark Twain Posts: 517 | From: Philadelphia PA | Registered: Oct 2005
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posted
Here is the process of selling Restricted shares of stock.
_________________________________
Untangling Rule 144: Restricted Stock Sales and Affiliate Volume Limitations
At the foundation of our securities laws is the premise that shares of stock that are not registered with the SEC are subject to limitations on resale. Naturally, however, exceptions to this premise evolved. Perhaps the most well-known exemption to the limitation on resale rule is Rule 144. Rule 144, promulgated under the Securities Act of 1933, is a safe harbor provision that allows holders of restricted securities to make sales of stock when certain conditions are met. The most familiar condition imposed by Rule 144 is a one-year holding period before any resales may be made--but that is certainly not the only condition.
Rule 144's mandatory conditions are the following, and all of the conditions must be met for Rule 144's safe harbor to apply to a transaction, and we'll cover each of the requirements in detail below: ∙ A potential seller must satisfy the minimum one-year holding period. ∙ The seller must file a Form 144 with the SEC (unless the transaction is very small, under $10,000 worth of shares). ∙ There must be "current public information" available on the issuer. ∙ The sales must be in arm's-length broker transactions, without pre-arrangement or broker's solicitation of orders. ∙ The seller must have a bona fide intention to sell the shares at the time he/she files the Form 144.
The "Current Public Information" Requirement
Paragraph 144(c) dictates that current public information regarding an issuer must be available regarding an issuer before a 144 sale takes place. This requirement protects potential purchasers in 144 transactions; ideally, purchasers can thereby research companies before buying shares. The current public information requirement is met automatically if the issuer is fully reporting (OTCBB companies, and those on the larger exchanges), or if the issuer has a 15c2-11 form on file (pink sheet companies). There is no requirement that the seller or the issuer provide the information directly to potential buyers, only that the information be available publicly.
Rule 144's Holding Period(s)
At its core, Rule 144 allows a holder of restricted stock to resell such stock upon the expiration of a one-year holding period. Until February of 1997, the holding period was two years. The foundational principle underlying 144's holding period is that securities acquired and held for one year were most likely purchased with investment intent and not with a "view towards distribution." The holding period begins upon the "date of acquisition of the securities." Securities are deemed acquired when the full purchase price or other consideration is paid. Securities issued, but not fully paid, do not start the 144 holding period until full payment is made.
The expiration of a two-year holding period triggers a considerable relaxing of 144's strictness, but only for non-affiliates. After a two-year holding period, Rule 144(k) eliminates the current public information requirement, eliminates all volume restrictions, eliminates the "manner of sale" restrictions that apply to the way brokers must handle 144 sales, and eliminates the required filing of Form 144. Thus, Rule 144(k) removes all significant restrictions to resale for non-affiliates who hold shares for two years. Section (k) of Rule 144 is the section upon which holders rely when they have the restrictive legends removed from their stock certificates. Affiliates, however, remain bound by the major restrictions in Rule 144 until they cease to be affiliates.
Rule 144's Volume Restrictions, and the Importance of Affiliate Status
Rule 144 treats affiliates of the issuer much more strictly than it treats non-affiliates. The Rule applies to the sale of restricted (unregistered) stock by a non-affiliate. However, the Rule is far more imposing on affiliates; the Rule governs any sale of stock (both restricted and registered shares) by an affiliate of the issuer, and the Rule applies to affiliates indefinitely. Loosely defined, affiliates are control persons and other insiders, but we'll take a closer look at the definition of affiliates below.
With respect to sales of stock by an affiliate, Rule 144 imposes significant sales volume restrictions upon non-affiliates selling restricted stock, and upon affiliates selling either restricted or registered stock. Rule 144's volume restrictions are commonly referred to as "dribble out" provisions. We can distill the volume limitations as follows:
∙ Non-affiliates are subject to volume restrictions after holding stock for one year, but are no longer subject to volume restrictions after holding stock for two years. ∙ Affiliates are subject to volume restrictions as long as they are affiliates.
The dribble out provisions limit the amount of stock that can be sold in any 90-day period. The volume restriction dictates that sales in a 90-day period cannot be more than the greater of the following: ∙ 1% of the issuer's total outstanding shares, or, ∙ The average reported weekly volume in an issuer's stock for the four weeks immediately preceding the filing of Form 144 (if the issuer trades on a stock exchange or Nasdaq--OTC and pink sheet companies can only be sold using 1% rule).
As an example, assume ABC Corp., listed on Nasdaq, has 10,000,000 shares outstanding and traded 25,000 shares in each of the 4 weeks prior to the filing of a potential seller's Form 144. The dribble out provisions allow a seller to sell the greater of 1% of the total shares outstanding (in this case, 100,000 shares), or the average weekly volume for the prior four weeks (in this case, 25,000 shares). Thus, the seller can sell the greater number, up to 100,000 shares in the 90-day period.
Who Is an Affiliate?
Because Rule 144 applies differently to affiliates and non-affiliates, it is important to know who is an affiliate. The Rule dictates that affiliate status attaches to any person who directly or indirectly controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with the issuer. Rule 405 defines "control" as the "power to direct . . . the management and policies" of an issuer, whether by ownership or position. Thus, directors, officers, and upper-level managers are clearly affiliates. Owners of 5% or more are typically considered affiliates, but be careful--while the 5% figure is widely relied upon, you won't find the 5% figure in any rule are case on the subject.
Manner of Sale Restrictions
Finally, the Rule dictates the manner in which shares can be sold under its protections. The sales must be handled in all respects as routine trading transactions, and brokers may not receive more than a normal commission. Neither the seller nor the broker can solicit orders to buy the securities.
A private sale of restricted shares is neither governed nor protected by Rule 144. That is not to say that private sales of restricted shares are illegal. By its own terms, Rule 144 is not exclusive, and sellers of restricted stock have a few other potential safe harbors to protect their resales. Private sellers of restricted shares commonly rely upon what is known the "4(1╫)" exemption.
Why Are Opinion Letters Necessary?
A Rule 144 seller must also secure an opinion letter from the attorney for the issuer. This is because before a sale can take place, the transfer agent for the issuer must agree to remove the restrictions (and hence the restrictive legend) from the share certificate. The transfer agent will only agree to remove a restrictive legend if it receives a letter from the issuer's counsel carefully presenting the legal argument why the shares are available for sale under Rule 144.
Where To Go for More Information
Determined and patient readers might try reading the text of the Rule, which can be found here: http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/forms/144.htm. Beware of many of the "Articles" on the topic on the internet--many contain blatant errors.
Posts: 675 | Registered: Dec 2005
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posted
I just picked up some of this one, also added some more MOTG today looks bottomed. gl
Posts: 3086 | From: miami | Registered: Nov 2005
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posted
good post, gonna copy this to the reference thread...
quote:Originally posted by Tape worm: Here is the process of selling Restricted shares of stock.
_________________________________
Untangling Rule 144: Restricted Stock Sales and Affiliate Volume Limitations
At the foundation of our securities laws is the premise that shares of stock that are not registered with the SEC are subject to limitations on resale. Naturally, however, exceptions to this premise evolved. Perhaps the most well-known exemption to the limitation on resale rule is Rule 144. Rule 144, promulgated under the Securities Act of 1933, is a safe harbor provision that allows holders of restricted securities to make sales of stock when certain conditions are met. The most familiar condition imposed by Rule 144 is a one-year holding period before any resales may be made--but that is certainly not the only condition.
Rule 144's mandatory conditions are the following, and all of the conditions must be met for Rule 144's safe harbor to apply to a transaction, and we'll cover each of the requirements in detail below: ∙ A potential seller must satisfy the minimum one-year holding period. ∙ The seller must file a Form 144 with the SEC (unless the transaction is very small, under $10,000 worth of shares). ∙ There must be "current public information" available on the issuer. ∙ The sales must be in arm's-length broker transactions, without pre-arrangement or broker's solicitation of orders. ∙ The seller must have a bona fide intention to sell the shares at the time he/she files the Form 144.
The "Current Public Information" Requirement
Paragraph 144(c) dictates that current public information regarding an issuer must be available regarding an issuer before a 144 sale takes place. This requirement protects potential purchasers in 144 transactions; ideally, purchasers can thereby research companies before buying shares. The current public information requirement is met automatically if the issuer is fully reporting (OTCBB companies, and those on the larger exchanges), or if the issuer has a 15c2-11 form on file (pink sheet companies). There is no requirement that the seller or the issuer provide the information directly to potential buyers, only that the information be available publicly.
Rule 144's Holding Period(s)
At its core, Rule 144 allows a holder of restricted stock to resell such stock upon the expiration of a one-year holding period. Until February of 1997, the holding period was two years. The foundational principle underlying 144's holding period is that securities acquired and held for one year were most likely purchased with investment intent and not with a "view towards distribution." The holding period begins upon the "date of acquisition of the securities." Securities are deemed acquired when the full purchase price or other consideration is paid. Securities issued, but not fully paid, do not start the 144 holding period until full payment is made.
The expiration of a two-year holding period triggers a considerable relaxing of 144's strictness, but only for non-affiliates. After a two-year holding period, Rule 144(k) eliminates the current public information requirement, eliminates all volume restrictions, eliminates the "manner of sale" restrictions that apply to the way brokers must handle 144 sales, and eliminates the required filing of Form 144. Thus, Rule 144(k) removes all significant restrictions to resale for non-affiliates who hold shares for two years. Section (k) of Rule 144 is the section upon which holders rely when they have the restrictive legends removed from their stock certificates. Affiliates, however, remain bound by the major restrictions in Rule 144 until they cease to be affiliates.
Rule 144's Volume Restrictions, and the Importance of Affiliate Status
Rule 144 treats affiliates of the issuer much more strictly than it treats non-affiliates. The Rule applies to the sale of restricted (unregistered) stock by a non-affiliate. However, the Rule is far more imposing on affiliates; the Rule governs any sale of stock (both restricted and registered shares) by an affiliate of the issuer, and the Rule applies to affiliates indefinitely. Loosely defined, affiliates are control persons and other insiders, but we'll take a closer look at the definition of affiliates below.
With respect to sales of stock by an affiliate, Rule 144 imposes significant sales volume restrictions upon non-affiliates selling restricted stock, and upon affiliates selling either restricted or registered stock. Rule 144's volume restrictions are commonly referred to as "dribble out" provisions. We can distill the volume limitations as follows:
∙ Non-affiliates are subject to volume restrictions after holding stock for one year, but are no longer subject to volume restrictions after holding stock for two years. ∙ Affiliates are subject to volume restrictions as long as they are affiliates.
The dribble out provisions limit the amount of stock that can be sold in any 90-day period. The volume restriction dictates that sales in a 90-day period cannot be more than the greater of the following: ∙ 1% of the issuer's total outstanding shares, or, ∙ The average reported weekly volume in an issuer's stock for the four weeks immediately preceding the filing of Form 144 (if the issuer trades on a stock exchange or Nasdaq--OTC and pink sheet companies can only be sold using 1% rule).
As an example, assume ABC Corp., listed on Nasdaq, has 10,000,000 shares outstanding and traded 25,000 shares in each of the 4 weeks prior to the filing of a potential seller's Form 144. The dribble out provisions allow a seller to sell the greater of 1% of the total shares outstanding (in this case, 100,000 shares), or the average weekly volume for the prior four weeks (in this case, 25,000 shares). Thus, the seller can sell the greater number, up to 100,000 shares in the 90-day period.
Who Is an Affiliate?
Because Rule 144 applies differently to affiliates and non-affiliates, it is important to know who is an affiliate. The Rule dictates that affiliate status attaches to any person who directly or indirectly controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with the issuer. Rule 405 defines "control" as the "power to direct . . . the management and policies" of an issuer, whether by ownership or position. Thus, directors, officers, and upper-level managers are clearly affiliates. Owners of 5% or more are typically considered affiliates, but be careful--while the 5% figure is widely relied upon, you won't find the 5% figure in any rule are case on the subject.
Manner of Sale Restrictions
Finally, the Rule dictates the manner in which shares can be sold under its protections. The sales must be handled in all respects as routine trading transactions, and brokers may not receive more than a normal commission. Neither the seller nor the broker can solicit orders to buy the securities.
A private sale of restricted shares is neither governed nor protected by Rule 144. That is not to say that private sales of restricted shares are illegal. By its own terms, Rule 144 is not exclusive, and sellers of restricted stock have a few other potential safe harbors to protect their resales. Private sellers of restricted shares commonly rely upon what is known the "4(1╫)" exemption.
Why Are Opinion Letters Necessary?
A Rule 144 seller must also secure an opinion letter from the attorney for the issuer. This is because before a sale can take place, the transfer agent for the issuer must agree to remove the restrictions (and hence the restrictive legend) from the share certificate. The transfer agent will only agree to remove a restrictive legend if it receives a letter from the issuer's counsel carefully presenting the legal argument why the shares are available for sale under Rule 144.
Where To Go for More Information
Determined and patient readers might try reading the text of the Rule, which can be found here: http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/forms/144.htm. Beware of many of the "Articles" on the topic on the internet--many contain blatant errors.
posted
Got my fill at 1. Well I'm done today. Have a merry christmas all...see you guys before the bell on Tuesday!
Posts: 680 | From: san francisco | Registered: Aug 2005
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posted
In the last 28 trades only 2 were sells at .001. The rest buys at .0011. Catch you all Tuesday.
Posts: 675 | Registered: Dec 2005
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