Broadside said:my concern Mr Right is we are really relying very heavily on what the directors tell us are economic gas shows, nothing has really been quantified...so if they are wrong it could be ugly....time will ...thus far all their announcements have been very encouraging I just hope the cold hard data backs up GDN's initial evaluation, they are in the best position to judge at this point.
Broadside said:my concern Mr Right is we are really relying very heavily on what the directors tell us are economic gas shows, nothing has really been quantified...so if they are wrong it could be ugly....time will ...thus far all their announcements have been very encouraging I just hope the cold hard data backs up GDN's initial evaluation, they are in the best position to judge at this point.
maverick11 said:and there's the problem. They have been pimping it so hard with no hard evidence and everytime more is revealed, the potential gas reserve is getting smaller and smaller. And how could anyone have faith when the director himself doesn't??! Wouldnt touch it. I just hope she picks up, cause I hate to see people lose money.
chris1983 said:What do you mean no evidence? Im just curious what more they could report. They are saying they are hitting gas at every interval... It is a drill..all they can say is what they have been saying..such as
maverick11 said:sorry i should have been more specific. They are constantly pumping the stock and haven't even released wireline data yet. Which by the way, they keep mentioning they are doing in their regular pump reports, but still "show me the money"?!
I know for a fact that gas fph and units can greatly vary before, during and after drilling. God knows which of the 3 they are telling us...if I could take a guess going off the 'professionalism' of this mob, i would put my money on the highest of the 3 numbers.
Mate, I aint arguing with you, just pointing out that something smells fishy - which is reflected in the drop of sp. Still, if commercial, chances are this may pick up, but the way things have been handled, I would feel more comfortable with money elsewhere than gdn.
The net result was that the director put $2 million into his own pocket.mahmoodf said:- The net result was that Sciano actually INCREASED his shareholding in GDN by 1.57 million shares (4.4 million shares that were converted from the options less the 3.03 million sold on market).
Hang on just a second.mahmoodf said:So Sciano could only exercise them for a maximum of 20 cents, regardless if the SP was at $1 or $5. BUT, if the director does exercise his options, he gets more shares. And if those shares rise in value, HE CAN make more money. See where I am coming from? He is converting options to shares so that he can make more money if the SP rises. If the SP falls, he loses out too, unless he starts dumping shares before they reach 20 cents (the price he paid for the conversion). I don't see any mass dumping at this stage of shares by director's.
Also, by his exercising, the company has received $1.32 million to help with any further drilling costs etc. So this is a good sign to me.
If Sciano pocketed $2 million, good on him. Director's are allowed to make money too. And they are well aware of what signals this can send to the market.
The other shareholders perhaps? The money wasn't just created. If the well isn't commercial or doesn't warrent the 600% increase, someone's going to out of pocket that 1.4mill.MichaelD said:He's better off by $1.4 million in cash. The company's better off by $1.4 million in cash. Who's the loser here?
Well, yes it was. Suddenly one day there were 6.6 million more shares in GDN which weren't there the day before which have now been sold at above $1 to other at the time seemingly irrationally exuberant shareholders. There's now a rather large number of shareholders in GDN in a loss position. That's not to say that they won't all be counting their riches in a few days/weeks/months/years, but right now, they're sitting on a loss.doctorj said:The other shareholders perhaps? The money wasn't just created.
Indeed so. As a technical trader I am only concerned with one thing - price. Right now, GDN's price gives me no reason to own it and every reason to sell it. It did give me reason to buy a while back, but I'm out now.mahmoodf said:What I am trying to say is that there are a host of other risk factors that we should focus on, not the director's share transactions.
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