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Important Information on Penny Stocks
This statement is required by the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) and contains important information on penny stocks.
Your broker-dealer is required to obtain your signature to show that you
have received this statement before your first trade in a penny stock.
You are urged to read this statement before signing and before making a
purchase or sale of a penny stock.
Penny stocks can be very risky
Penny stocks are low-priced shares of small companies not traded on
an exchange or quoted on NASDAQ. Prices often are not available.
Investors in penny stocks often are unable to sell stock back to the
dealer that sold them the stock. Thus, you may lose your investment. Be
cautious of newly issued penny stock. Your salesperson is not an
impartial advisor but is paid to sell you the stock. Do not rely only on
the salesperson, but seek outside advice before you buy any stock. If
you have problems with a salesperson, contact the firm's compliance
officer or the regulators listed below.
Information you should get
Before you buy penny stock, federal law requires
your salesperson to tell you the "offer" and the "bid" on the stock, and
the "compensation" the salesperson and the firm receive for the trade.
The firm also must mail a confirmation of these prices to you after the
trade. You will need this price information to determine what profit, if
any, you will have when you sell your stock. The offer price is the
wholesale price at which the dealer is willing to sell stock to other
dealers. The bid price is the wholesale price at which the dealer is
willing to buy the stock from other dealers. In its trade with you, the
dealer may add a retail charge to these wholesale prices as compensation
(called a "markup" or "markdown").
The difference between the bid and the offer price is the dealer's
"spread." A spread that is large compared with the purchase price can
make a resale of a stock very costly. To be profitable when you sell,
the bid price of your stock must rise above the amount of this spread
and the compensation charged by both your selling and purchasing
dealers. If the dealer has no bid price, you may not be able to sell the
stock after you buy it, and may lose your whole investment.
Brokers' duties and customer's rights and remedies
If you are a victim of fraud, you may have rights and remedies under
state and federal law. You can get the disciplinary history of a
salesperson or firm from the NASD at 1-800-289-9999, and additional
information from your state securities official, at the North American
Securities Administrators Association's central number: (202) 737-0900.
You also may contact the SEC with complaints at (202) 272-7440.
Further Information
The securities being sold to you have not been approved or
disapproved by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Moreover, the
Securities and Exchange Commission has not passed upon the fairness or
the merits of this transaction nor upon the accuracy or adequacy of the
information contained in any prospectus or any other information
provided by an issuer or a broker or dealer.
Generally, penny stock is a security that:
- Is priced under five dollars;
- Is not traded on a national stock exchange or on NASDAQ (the NASD's
automated quotation system for actively traded stocks);
- May be listed in the "pink sheets" or the NASD OTC Bulletin Board;
- Is issued by a company that has less than $5 million in net tangible
assets and has been in business less than three years, by a company that
has under $2 million in net tangible assets and has been in business for
at least three years, or by a company that has revenues of $6 million
for 3 years.
Use Caution When Investing in Penny Stocks:
1. Do not make a hurried investment decision.
High-pressure sales techniques can be a warning sign of fraud. The
salesperson is not an impartial advisor, but is paid for selling stock
to you. The salesperson also does not have to watch your investment for
you. Thus, you should think over the offer and seek outside advice.
Check to see if the information given by the salesperson differs from
other information you may have. Also, it is illegal for salespersons to
promise that a stock will increase in value or is risk-free, or to
guarantee against loss. If you think there is a problem, ask to speak
with a compliance official at the firm, and, if necessary, any of the
regulators referred to in this statement.
2. Study the company issuing the stock. Be wary of
companies that have no operating history, few assets, or no defined
business purpose. These may be sham or "shell" corporations. Read the
prospectus for the company carefully before you invest. Some dealers
fraudulently solicit investors' money to buy stock in sham companies,
artificially inflate the stock prices, then cash in their profits before
public investors can sell their stock.
3. Understand the risky nature of these stocks. You
should be aware that you may lose part or all of your investment.
Because of large dealer spreads, you will not be able to sell the stock
immediately back to the dealer at the same price it sold the stock to
you. In some cases, the stock may fall quickly in value. New companies,
whose stock is sold in an "initial public offering," often are riskier
investments. Try to find out if the shares the salesperson wants to sell
you are part of such an offering. Your salesperson must give you a
"prospectus" in an initial public offering, but the financial condition
shown in the prospectus of new companies can change very quickly.
4. Know the brokerage firm and the salespeople with whom you
are dealing. Because of the nature of the market for penny
stock, you may have to rely solely on the original brokerage firm that
sold you the stock for prices and to buy the stock back from you. Ask
the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (NASD) or your
state securities regulator, which is a member of the North American
Securities Administrators Association, Inc. (NASAA), about the licensing
and disciplinary record of the brokerage firm and the salesperson
contacting you. The telephone numbers of the NASD and NASAA are listed
on the first page of this document.
5. Be cautious if your salesperson leaves the firm.
If the salesperson who sold you the stock leaves his or her firm, the
firm may reassign your account to a new salesperson. If you have
problems, ask to speak to the firm's branch office manager or a
compliance officer. Although the departing salesperson may ask you to
transfer your stock to his or her new firm, you do not have to do so.
Get information on the new firm. Be wary of requests to sell your
securities when the salesperson transfers to a new firm. Also, you have
the right to get your stock certificate from your selling firm. You do
not have to leave the certificate with that firm or any other firm.
Your Rights
Disclosures to you. Under penalty of federal law, your brokerage firm
must tell you the following information at two different times-before
you agree to buy or sell a penny stock, and after the trade, by written
confirmation:
* The bid and offer price quotes for penny stock, and the
number of shares to which the quoted prices apply. The bid and
offer quotes are the wholesale prices at which dealers trade among
themselves. These prices give you an idea of the market value of the
stock. The dealer must tell you these price quotes if they appear on an
automated quotation system approved by the SEC. If not, the dealer must
use its own quotes or trade prices. You should calculate the spread, the
difference between the bid and offer quotes, to help decide if buying
the stock is a good investment.
A lack of quotes may mean that the market among dealers is not
active. It thus may be difficult to resell the stock. You also should be
aware that the actual price charged to you for the stock may differ from
the price quoted to you for 100 shares. You should therefore determine,
before you agree to a purchase, what the actual sales price (before the
markup) will be for the exact number of shares you want to buy.
* The brokerage firm's compensation for the trade. A
markup is the amount a dealer adds to the wholesale offer price of the
stock and a markdown is the amount it subtracts from the wholesale bid
price of the stock as compensation. A markup/markdown usually serves the
same role as a broker's commission on a trade. Most of the firms in the
penny stock market will be dealers, not brokers.
* The compensation received by the brokerage firm's
salesperson for the trade. The brokerage firm must disclose to
you, as a total sum, the cash compensation of your salesperson for the
trade that is known at the time of the trade. The firm must describe in
the written confirmation the nature of any other compensation of your
salesperson that is unknown at the time of the trade.
In addition to the items listed above, your brokerage firm must send
to you:
* Monthly account statements. In general, your brokerage firm
must send you a monthly statement that gives an estimate of the
value of each penny stock in your account, if there is enough
information to make an estimate. If the firm has not bought or sold any
penny stocks for your account for six months, it can provide these
statements every three months.
* A Written Statement of Your Financial Situation and
Investment Goals. In general, unless you have had an account
with your brokerage firm for more than one year, or you have previously
bought three different penny stocks from that firm, your brokerage firm
must send you a written statement for you to sign that accurately
describes your financial situation, your investment experience, and your
investment goals, and that contains a statement of why your firm decided
that penny stocks are a suitable investment for you. The firm also must
get your written consent to buy the penny stock.
Legal remedies. If penny stocks are sold to you in
violation of your rights listed above, or other federal or state
securities laws, you may be able to cancel your purchase and get your
money back. If the stocks are sold in a fraudulent manner, you may be
able to sue the persons and firms that caused the fraud for damages. If
you have signed an arbitration agreement, however, you may have to
pursue your claim through arbitration. You may wish to contact an
attorney. The SEC is not authorized to represent individuals in private
litigation.
However, to protect yourself and other investors, you should report
any violations of your brokerage firm's duties listed above and other
securities laws to the SEC, the NASD, or your state securities
administrator at the telephone numbers on the first page of this
document. These bodies have the power to stop fraudulent and abusive
activity of salespersons and firms engaged in the securities business.
Or you can write to the SEC at 450 Fifth St., NW., Washington, DC 20549;
the NASD at 1735 K Street, NW., Washington, DC 20006; or NASAA at 555
New Jersey Avenue, NW., Suite 750, Washington, DC 20001. NASAA will give
you the telephone number of your state's securities agency. If there is
any disciplinary record of a person or a firm, the NASD, NASAA, or your
state securities regulator will send you this information if you ask for
it.
Market Information
The market for penny stocks. Penny stocks usually
are not listed on an exchange or quoted on the NASDAQ system. Instead,
they are traded between dealers on the telephone in the
"over-the-counter" market. The NASD's OTC Bulletin Board also will
contain information on some penny stocks. At times, however, price
information for these stocks is not publicly available.
Market domination. In some cases, only one or two
dealers, acting as "market makers," may be buying and selling a given
stock. You should first ask if a firm is acting as a broker (your agent)
or as a dealer. A dealer buys stock itself to fill your order or already
owns the stock. A market maker is a dealer who holds itself out as ready
to buy and sell stock on a regular basis. If the firm is a market maker,
ask how many other market makers are dealing in the stock to see if the
firm (or group of firms) dominates the market. When there are only one
or two market makers, there is a risk that the dealer or group of
dealers may control the market in that stock and set prices that are not
based on competitive forces. In recent years, some market makers have
created fraudulent markets in certain penny stocks, so that stock prices
rose suddenly, but collapsed just as quickly, at a loss to investors.
Mark-ups and mark-downs. The actual price that the
customer pays usually includes the mark-up or mark-down. Markups and
markdowns are direct profits for the firm and its salespeople, so you
should be aware of such amounts to assess the overall value of the
trade.
The "spread." The difference between the bid and
offer price is the spread. Like a mark-up or mark-down, the spread is
another source of profit for the brokerage firm and compensates the firm
for the risk of owning the stock. A large spread can make a trade very
expensive to an investor. For some penny stocks, the spread between the
bid and offer may be a large part of the purchase price of the stock.
Where the bid price is much lower than the offer price, the market value
of the stock must rise substantially before the stock can be sold at a
profit. Moreover, an investor may experience substantial losses if the
stock must be sold immediately.
Example: If the bid is $0.04 per share and the offer is $0.10 per
share, the spread (difference) is $0.06, which appears to be a small
amount. But you would lose $0.06 on every share that you bought for
$0.10 if you had to sell that stock immediately to the same firm. If you
had invested $5,000 at the $0.10 offer price, the market maker's
repurchase price, at $0.04 bid, would be only $2,000; thus you would
lose $3,000, or more than half of your investment, if you decided to
sell the stock. In addition, you would have to pay compensation (a
"mark-up," "mark-down," or commission) to buy and sell the stock. \1/4\
In addition to the amount of the spread, the price of your stock must
rise enough to make up for the compensation that the dealer charged you
when it first sold you the stock. Then, when you want to resell the
stock, a dealer again will charge compensation, in the form of a
markdown. The dealer subtracts the markdown from the price of the stock
when it buys the stock from you. Thus, to make a profit, the bid price
of your stock must rise above the amount of the original spread, the
markup, and the markdown.
Primary offerings. Most penny stocks are sold to the
public on an ongoing basis. However, dealers sometimes sell these stocks
in initial public offerings. You should pay special attention to stocks
of companies that have never been offered to the public before, because
the market for these stocks is untested. Because the offering is on a
first-time basis, there is generally no market information about the
stock to help determine its value. The federal securities laws generally
require broker-dealers to give investors a "prospectus," which contains
information about the objectives, management, and financial condition of
the issuer. In the absence of market information, investors should read
the company's prospectus with special care to find out if the stocks are
a good investment. However, the prospectus is only a description of the
current condition of the company. The outlook of the start-up companies
described in a prospectus often is very uncertain.
For more information about penny stocks, contact the
Office of Filings, Information, and Consumer Services of the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Washington,
DC 20549, (202) 272-7440.
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