Staging ::: VER CORREOS
Acceder

Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños

26,5K respuestas
Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
3 suscriptores
Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
Página
3.049 / 3.346
#24385

Re: No todo el mundo tiene que pensar lo mismo... algunos lo vemos así.

¿quien está invertido en WMIH? Yo? o tu...

#24386

Re: No todo el mundo tiene que pensar lo mismo... algunos lo vemos así.

La verdad es que te estas luciendo cuanto mas hablas y posteas tus datos basura mas baja la cotización.
Hay que proponer en Rankia que te den el premio al mas malo en bolsa.

Mira de hacer una compra a mercado, habida cuenta que se mueven pocas acciones, compras a 0´90 puede que por un día no la tiren demasiado. Jajaja

#24388

Re: WMIH...enlaces de interés

OK Mr Simpson ya has comprado unas cuantas acciones a 0`84 a fin de animar el foro, a ver como termina porque el cuidador hara al final lo que le de la gana.
Que ganas tenias de remontar para sacar pecho. Jajaja

#24389

Re: No todo el mundo tiene que pensar lo mismo... algunos lo vemos así.

Los Nols, Fannie y Fredie tienen mas de 130 mil mlls de dolares,ABK los tenia pero las comunes ABKQK dejaron de tener valor,AIG debe tener un Nol de mas de 150mil mlls, por que no lo usa de una vez para pagar su deuda con el estado al igual que Fannie y Fredie que normativas limitantes hay? Se habla en todas de perdiadas operativas mas muy poco de los Nols cuando se hara efectivo?

#24390

Lee esto con atención... Form D SEC Rule 506

Form D que el BOD de WMIH ha entregado el mes pasado de acuerdo al SEC rule 506.
Esto lo comentó Mike Willingham durante la Conferencia.

Si no se traen algo entre manos, ¿Porque estaba comentando sobre las restricciones y Regulaciones? ¿Porque entregaron un Form D? si esta basado en el Rule 506 significa que
"no hay un tope en la inyección de Capital Privado".

Si dejan a WMIH en private placement, tiene que haber un plan preconcebido en el form 'Private Placement Memorandum'.

A Mike Willingham no le dejaron hablar sobre el potencial acuerdo sujeto a la regulación D así que hay que asumir que algo se está cociendo. Es debido a esto que la acción no se ha ido a pique como en otras ocasiones donde no ha habido noticias... ahora hay una linea posible de actuación encubierta en marabunta legal pero el puzzle aun es complicado de resolver.

http://www.sec.gov/answers/rule506.htm

According to the statement of Willingham during the shareholders meeting, regarding filing a form D and regarding the regulations of Form D to meet the requirements of Rule 506.

Rule 506 of Regulation D

Rule 506 of Regulation D is considered a "safe harbor" for the private offering exemption of Section 4(2) of the Securities Act. Companies using the Rule 506 exemption can raise an unlimited amount of money. A company can be assured it is within the Section 4(2) exemption by satisfying the following standards:

The company cannot use general solicitation or advertising to market the securities;
The company may sell its securities to an unlimited number of "accredited investors" and up to 35 other purchases. Unlike Rule 505, all non-accredited investors, either alone or with a purchaser representative, must be sophisticated—that is, they must have sufficient knowledge and experience in financial and business matters to make them capable of evaluating the merits and risks of the prospective investment;
Companies must decide what information to give to accredited investors, so long as it does not violate the antifraud prohibitions of the federal securities laws. But companies must give non-accredited investors disclosure documents that are generally the same as those used in registered offerings. If a company provides information to accredited investors, it must make this information available to non-accredited investors as well;
The company must be available to answer questions by prospective purchasers;
Financial statement requirements are the same as for Rule 505; and
Purchasers receive "restricted" securities, meaning that the securities cannot be sold for at least a year without registering them.
While companies using the Rule 506 exemption do not have to register their securities and usually do not have to file reports with the SEC, they must file what is known as a "Form D" after they first sell their securities. Form D is a brief notice that includes the names and addresses of the company’s owners and stock promoters, but contains little other information about the company.

In February 2008, the SEC adopted amendments to Form D, requiring that electronic filing of Form D be phased in during the period September 15, 2008 to March 16, 2009. Although as amended, the electronic Form D requires much of the same information as the paper Form D, the amended Form D requires disclosure of the date of first sale in the offering. Previously, the closing date of an offering was used as the first date of sale. The Office of Small Business Policy has posted information on its web page about the filing requirement for the new Form D.

If you are thinking about investing in a Reg D company, you should access the EDGAR database to determine whether the company has filed Form D. If you need a copy of a Form D filed as a paper filing (which will include any Form D filed before September 15, 2008), you can request a copy using our online form. If the company has not filed a Form D, this should alert you that the company might not be in compliance with the federal securities laws

You should always check with your state securities regulator to see if it has more information about the company and the people behind it. Be sure to ask whether your state regulator has cleared the offering for sale in your state. You can get the address and telephone number for your state securities regulator by calling the North American Securities Administrators Association at (202) 737-0900 or by visiting its website. You’ll also find this information in the state government section of your local phone book.

For more information about the SEC’s registration requirements and common exemptions, read our brochure, Q&A: Small Business & the SEC.

http://www.sec.gov/answers/rule506.htm

#24391

Re: Lee esto con atención... Form D SEC Rule 506

Con atencion hay que leer lo que ha pasado en los ultimos 4 años, que estas acciones han caido cuando el mercado americano ha subido.
Eso es lo que hay que leer con atencion "genio".
Vienes contando milongas desde entonces. Cuando USA se desplome estas acciones se iran a la mierda y unicamente habrás hecho perder tiempo y dinero a la poca gente que te ha seguido. No va mas.

#24392

Re: Buena noticia para WMIH

WMI Holdings (WMIH) To Purchase Bank of Marin Bancorp (BMRC) Within The Next 60 Days Predicts Accurate Sierra World Equity Review. Big News Coming To Shareholders Of WMIH Forecasts Sierra, Enjoy The Ride
http://www.sierraworldequityreview.com/