all of the positives mentioned forTinley's is not being reflected in the price. It has taken a long time for Tinley's to come together to this nexus where we go from building a new vice company to capitalizing on the progress.
A lot of new companies take 7 years to get established to the point of showing profit and it looks like Tny isn't breaking any records with that respect.
There is a lot more going on here than back in the Hemplify $2 per share days and I believe that we should be showing black ink now that our bottling facility revenue is imminent. The original plant had to grow it's volume and packaging capacity and this has happened from what I can see.
Manufacturing revenue from our facility is capped, so it is our skus that can show more upside than just co-bottling fees and getting back to the original plant of setting up co-bottling deals in other States, places or countries. That is how most of the beverage players grew and made their product lines household names.
One of the Tinley guys mentioned that we are making concentrated syrups which should cross State lines easily as long as there is currently no thc in it. When the laws catch up to allow Interstate commerce such that thc can legally cross State lines, we can add the magic ingredient and keep our recipes a secret.
We have a couple of awards for our a couple of skus, so there's that. With the right promotion and sales this has the makings of being a moneymaker sku and therein lies the problem. Our super sales guys seem to be sitting on their hands or fumbling this requirement badly.
It was a long onerous road to get Tinley to where it is now but California is a great market to be in but our team seems to be moving towards co-bottling revenue from our LB facility and everything I see on social media sites suggests that our line is producing several kinds of packaged products, even some Tinley's.
What is missing is some numbers that an investor can crunch on their own to get a finger on the pulse of what is happening here because it isn't adding up, at least to me!
We had a little flurry of activety since Blaze announced their presence which suggests that they see Tinley as an investment. New invigorated blood can't hurt to take up the slack in our team whom I believe want to get back to playing golf or retirement.
The big question is whether the current shareholders are going to benefit or are we going to be left behind!
Now is not the time to dump out your shares. There are lots of mergers and acquisitions happening while some of the biggie beverage companies are picking up assets for rapid setup when the US triggers their greenrush.
glta and dyodd