RE:RE:Be Patientjust for shets and giggles why don't you go with that and then break it down to what acdc will actually be able to register as company profit. They are only the distributor not the manufacturer so what do you think their revenue will be after they pay for the product. From that what would their overhead be to take off of that? Then divide by number of shares outstanding and predict what the profit per share comes to. I think ya might be surprised that even if they sell 80 million to Daymak after they pay for the product and pay their board of directors bonuses and subtract operating costs they may not have very much to report as income to shareholders. That is part of the trouble with this company. Sooooo many shares out there to feed so revenues will need to be quite substantial to push the share price significantly. But that is business math not Lucky Charms investment strategy so it won't go over well on this board.