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Ivanhoe Capital Acquisition Corp. Warrants each whole warrant exercisable for one share of Class A common stock at an exercise price of $11.50 per... IVAN.WS

Ivanhoe Capital Acquisition Corp is a special purpose acquisition company that targets companies in the supply chain from the mine site to the end-user of electrification products and services, including in the transportation, e-mobility, electric propulsion, battery technology, and storage sectors. These include companies exploring for mining, processing, or refining metals necessary for electrification; and manufacturers of battery and battery components, electric grid component manufacturers, and producers of electric vehicles, parts, and battery storage.


NYSE:IVAN.WS - Post by User

Comment by Oregonduckon Feb 22, 2015 6:25pm
375 Views
Post# 23453227

RE:RE:How Ivanhoe Goes Bust

RE:RE:How Ivanhoe Goes Bust
westlander168 wrote:
my plan: buy in at $0.06, sell at $0.09


You can do that - just be nimble, just be quick until they shut down the game. For instance, when Nortel Networks and Air Canada filed for bankruptcy protection under CCAA proceedings quite a few years ago, people were warned that there was no value in those "old" shares, but speculators still bought boatload of those shares. The two stocks traded heavily daily - up and down - and the shares eventually went to zero as the "old" shares were cancelled. The "old" shareholders have no pecuniary interest, post-bankruptcy, in the "new" Air Canada trading at Can$12.54/share on TSX, or Nortel trading at US$0.0037/share on OTCBB.
SEE: SEC WARNING:

"Q" is for Caution

Investors are often confused by the fact that, despite the likelihood that the common stock of a bankrupt company will be cancelled, the company's securities may continue to trade after the company has filed for bankruptcy protection and before it emerges as a newly reorganized company. This confusion may be aggravated by the lengthy bankruptcy process—which may take months, if not years. Such securities typically trade on either the OTCBB or the Pink Sheets and the stock symbol will have a fifth letter "Q" at the end to denote the company’s bankrupt status.

 

Risks of Trading in Securities of Bankrupt Companies

 

When a company files for reorganization under the federal bankruptcy laws, investors are often tempted to buy or hold the company’s common stock in anticipation that the company that emerges from bankruptcy will be profitable. The reality is, however, that when companies emerge from bankruptcy, the common stock of the “old” company is usually worthless. In most instances, the company's plan of reorganization will cancel the existing equity shares.

 






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