RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:Another day in the life of a fire shareholderAgreed Fast, I have had my concerns along the way and would not hesitate to sell if the negatives out weigh the positives and on one hand would like to see/ hear more material news, of course, but on the other side a blizzard of useless bullshite bothers me more....there is promotion done all the time with customers which has generated a fairly substantial amount of signed agreements to date....don't know the man but if he is egoically challenged it is of no concern to me, as long as he delivers on the business plan and pushes the SP north to where it is intended to go.
The quality of bud produced is what is getting these LOIs inked, with some at $6/gm....the FIREweed provided on Aurora's menu so far is the best herb on the menu and that is not the $6/gm product either. The debt and burn rate to date, with the projected sales less the lowest cost of production in the industry are serious assets that will reflected in demand and net margins.
I think the post legalization market is going to be larger than estimated and FIREweed will be what many will be paying a better price to consume, JMHO....Opt
Fastlane2 wrote: Best discussion in awhile. I'm a long time shareholder and questioned the direction and approach John serves it's shareholders many times. The lack of promotion and news of Supreme's progress is alarming. The thought process of Supreme's product will speak for itself comes from the perception of a CEO who thinks his sh"t doesn't stink. The B2B model is very interesting but the share price speaks for itself. The investment community understands the model or hates the model. What Supreme has completed to date and has projected for the future doesn't have a lot of investors enthused. The share price speaks volume and is the tell. I'm not betting the farm here but I'm vested because the business plan is intriguing. Long FIRE and good luck to those who but into John's vision.