Kobe Ginobili
12 years ago
GREY MKT:
Contact Info
224-S Pegasus Avenue
Northvale, NJ 07647
Phone: 201-476-9600
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Business Description
Financial Reporting/Disclosure
Reporting Status SEC Filer
Latest Report Not Available
Regulatory Agency Not Available
CIK 0001316925
Fiscal Year End 3/31
OTC Market Tier Grey Market
Profile Data
SIC - Industry Classification 3845 - Electromedical equipment
Incorporated In: NJ, USA
Year of Inc. Not Available
Employees Not Available
Company Officers
Andre' DiMino CEO, CFO
Company Directors
Andre' DiMino
Service Providers
Auditor/Accountant
Not Available
Legal Counsel
Not Available
Investor Relations Firm
Not Available
IVVI Security Details
Share Structure
Market Value1 $10,117 a/o Sep 20, 2012
Shares Outstanding 10,116,930 a/o Feb 05, 2009
Float Not Available
Authorized Shares Not Available
Par Value No Par Value
Shareholders
Shareholders of Record 38 a/o Jun 30, 2008
Security Notes
Note = deleted from NASDAQ on 06/23/09
Note=Trading temporarily suspended by the SEC pursuant to Section 12(k) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 from 9:30 AM EST on 06/07/2011 through 11:59 PM EST on 06/20/2011.
Short Selling Data
Short Interest 0 (-100%)
Mar 31, 2011
Significant Failures to Deliver No
Transfer Agent(s)
CollegeGrad22
14 years ago
YOU STALKER!!! hahaha....good seeing you Quick. Hope all is well! Yeah, I actually made a quick 30% here. In at .075 and out at .10. Plays like this are extremely risky, but are also some of my favorites. I got in before the "scam" was uncovered. If that never occurred, it would have probably went much, much further. But you know, you have to always be on your toes as penny plays can change with the drop of a hat.
NeverEnuf81
14 years ago
LOL. Ya I got trapped into that a bunch of times in the past -- believing I had chosen correctly, and the stock would correct itself to meet up with my expectations. LOL (I'm sure everyone's done that) I'd even try to direct the stock with my hands when I saw it go down, like a bowler does after s/he rolls and it's going off course.
Picking what price you'll sell for is not a plan though...it's not even half of the plan. Deciding to sell above what you paid for it is the underlying principle that we design plans to try to achieve. I've lost a bunch of times when I didn't just quickly accept a mistake and move on. The worst is when you buy something, see it double, hold on to get one more penny or one more dime out of it, and then it crashes and you end up taking a loss on something you could have doubled. That's a whole different level of shame, for me.
If you sell and it goes up more, that last run was usually an unpredictable group of people late to the party who are buying at the top, only to watch it crumble out from under them (very hard to capitalize on, because you need buying momentum in order to sell...if the Bids on the Level 2 start getting spaced out too much, she's coming down because buyers are thinning out). Like, when KBLB went from 1c to 25c, I managed to get most of that...not because I could see the future or anything, but because I got in and out 5 times during the run (an absolute 'sure thing' justifies using 25% of your money -- that way you always have settled cash to trade with every day).
90% of traders just lose money, so if you get to where you're consistently and safely getting just 30% out of these stocks that double or quadruple, you're in the elite society of profitable stock operators -- you've got bragging rights, imo -- you're a rockstar. (compound interest is a beautiful thing...don't spend it, retrade it)
IMO, what you CAN do, and what will make you more profitable after you sell when something doubles and it goes on to 5x or 10x is study the chart up to the point where you sold it -- are there ANY indicators that suggest you should have waited longer? 99% of the time, the answer is no, and there's nothing to regret about taking your profit...the next spike was just unpredictable extra newsletter hype...the best you can do is decide if it's worth buying back into later.
scottgjohnson
14 years ago
Thanks a lot, some of he things you had mention not to do, I do, like worryin about what I missed when I sell, also tend to kee a stock too long and then I figure, why not wait until t comes back and make at least what I had put into it. It sometimes ends up in a compete loss, the co. does a rev split or just fails and closes down.
ArtieB
14 years ago
As you see by the date of my first post, I ran into this late August via my scanning process. If you look carefully at the filings, you will see connections between IVVI Health, Montvale, IVVI Sciences, etc. The asset and CEO trail was intriguing and the fact that the websites were up and running held my speculative interest. All said, we can all chalk this one up to the saying, "someone knows something."
Now, I have tons of solid DD on PFOB; final court hearing scheduled for Nov. 4 for the exchange of the shell. It is inevitable; an r/m will follow.
NeverEnuf81
14 years ago
Blah...It started as luck and took a while. The biotech and greentech markets should turn up and give everyone the opportunity to get their bonus.
I lucked out on a great bull market that made it hard to lose (as soon as I figured out to dump penny stocks when the volume started to dry up), then a great bear market where I could short anything and win, and the by reinvesting all profits until I broke 5m (there's so much room for margin on options at 5m that you can make huge gains on the most tame, predictable stocks out there...very safe...finally moved out of my parent's house at 27, they thought I was broke but actually getting a job instead of playing on the computer all day, LMAO...talk about sacrifice).
For all I know, I could just be terrible at this but lucky, and complete ruin is just around the corner, but once you find a niche that works for you, use it...imo, take losses quickly and be selective about your profits (take what you know you can get, and don't worry about what you miss...there's always another opportunity...if volume is drying up, don't wait for the horrifying death spiral to try to sell), and never give up -- you either get a paycheck or a lesson.
***The biggest thing that's tripped me up in the past has been 'revenge trading'. Stocks are sort of like women -- when I get badly burned by one badly, I now take some time off...I don't trade on the rebound or I'll end up with some scummy one that'll bleed me dry. I always tried to force some kind of miraculous recovery of all my losses with the very next trade and ended up losing more. :)**
Best of luck on your trading. The economy blows...everyone deserves to bank on some stocks these days (although, capital gains taxes get really painful).
NeverEnuf81
14 years ago
Ya...no worries.
All these pennies...they're so much more exciting than the large caps where you just set a trailing stoploss and wait for them to turn. I wish they were more liquid than they are, or there were more of the $5 ones turning into $60 ones like in '00. :-/ The last time I saw that happen was May'08 with MXC, and I didn't even stay for half of that...it was totally unexpected (I think it was probably mostly shorts getting squeezed when stubborn buyers wouldn't budge on their shares after it doubled).
The excitement factor in pennies is almost like a drug.
Out of absolute blind luck I managed to hit that ADAM jump with my pennystock account (Schwab is so much cheaper than ThinkorSwim for these pennies, but still has better executions than like OptionsExpress or Interactive Brokers, imo...get separate accounts for pennies and normal listed stocks).
This ADAM jump over a weekend was fun to wake up to on monday, but it took a while to get out of without gorilla-f__king the price with a single huge market-sell (I try not to screw over fellow traders with large market-sells, lol).
That kind of beautiful thing NEVER happens in Apple or nVidia or Sprint etc (especially not Microsoft or Dell...those are dangerous to look at during trading hours; they'll put you to sleep).
NeverEnuf81
14 years ago
LOL. I know, I was debating that. I'm not much to look at...thank god for money and italian cars, lol. I'll keep the pics rotating and get more of the girls and less of me in the future.
(anyone who isn't entirely out of IVVI yet, best of luck on Monday...I hope there's a wave that didn't hear this was a really bad scam or doesn't care, and believes there'll be liquidity to sell after it goes up another 3000% in 20min, lol....worst case scenario, I can't imagine anyone managed to get very much purchased anyway...it's hard to get more than a few grand executed on these ultra-tiny ones :-/)
NeverEnuf81
14 years ago
I don't think they even had to be "in" with any market makers on this one. It was a subpenny stock with a TINY, almost unheard-of, 2mln share float. LOL. Someone buys $1000 worth and it predictably quadruples.
(I'm trying to get people turned on to RPPR now because they actually have a real, useful, ethical product, with photographs and proper SEC filings and manufacturing agreements, but it's less than 1c with a tiny 34m share float...a few thousand dollars and the company really takes off...I thought that was a small float until I saw this ridiculous thing...people in the penny world seemed to be turned off by ethical ones that showed up on CNN Money and had a product at a trade show, LOL)
Aren't 9999/10000 penny stock alerts you get carcass companies that they've hijacked and pumped because of a low float (sometimes with recent fluffy news), or do you guys get more ethical email than I do? :)
I the only times I've ever stayed in on something I saw in a newsletter overnight is if the volume never dries up all day long and I can at least expect a morning spike of momentum to sell off into. :-/
This one shot up so quickly I didn't believe there'd be any opportunity to sell before the price crumbled though, lol...I haven't seen one move this fast in a long time. Kraig Biocraft did it, but over 2 weeks, with tons of liquidity and multiple obvious entry and exits along the way. I wonder if this one will be blatant enough for the SEC to care...they seem to care very little...there's 10 new pumps a week on suspiciously obscure, low float, stocks. lol
mkinhaw
14 years ago
This basically a shell ?
On March 9, 2010, the Company was informed by the New Jersey Economic Development Authority that it would not be entitled to sell its net operating losses under the 2009 New Jersey Tax Credit Transfer Program (the "Program"). As such, the letter of agreement entered into by the Company and Ivivi Technologies, LLC (the "Buyer") on January 12, 2010 pursuant to which the Company would provide engineering, regulatory and technology services to the Buyer in the event the Company received at least $770,000 under the Program was cancelled. The Company will proceed with the dissolution of the Company as authorized at the Special Meeting of Shareholders held February 12, 2010.
MK