RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:$325 million in long term debtbandit69 wrote:
Good grief, you really are dense. I've never ever mentioned MyHealth in any post just regarding selling a business in general. And yes, people "sell" their business as an exit strategy and as anojther poster pointed out there's a difference between selling a business and just raising capital for growth.
And to say they're operating with autonomy is wrong. What does this mean then:
"we are also embarking on a sweeping operating cost review and optimization initiative."
"WELL's business continues to operate very well as our business unit leaders are delivering tangible value to healthcare practitioners across our network and allowing them to focus on what matters-patient care. "
That's your definition of autonomy? you really should stop. I'd say quit while you're ahead but you're not even ahead.
OK. maybe you've forgotten already between the multitude of penny stock bullboards you frequent, but the whole discussion was specifically about MyHealth's share consideration. you contended their WELL shares could be worthless and they'd still make out like bandits and you contended the sale was an exit and not a "career starter".
speaking of dense - I'm not even sure what point you are trying to prove with those quotes? the MyHealth founders/vendors still run the MyHealth business autonomously under WELL's ownership. the entire MyHealth ownership group and management team is still there.