RE:RE:RE:The naivete of some of the posters on this BoardGo back and read rains post again. IT was the cheapest and most effiecient way to raise funds, thats' it. They were repriced to what at the time was roughly market price. Meaning exercising those warrants at the time was a bigger headache than buying on the market. It wasn't a gift, it wasn't a sign of respect, it was just good business. Now did the company know they had news coming that 'should' move the price up and trigger the acceleration claus? Probably. They knew that most warrant holders would be leary to exercise unless it was immediately lucrative to do so. This was just a good all-round move by management to get money in the coffers as quickly and painlessly as possible.