RE: Fabber stocks

From: Lightman, Allan J (Lightman@udri.udayton.edu)
Date: Thu Sep 09 1999 - 19:03:08 EEST


Marshall:

When a company's capitalization falls below the minimum required for listing
on an exchange, it becomes an over-the-counter (OTC) stock, commonly called
a 'red sheet' (as I recall) listing. If it falls further it becomes
'unlisted,' sort of the purgatory prior to incineration. If you know the
symbol you can get the prices via the internet sites providing stock quotes.
There are a huge number of such sites. I use Microsoft's MoneyCentral /
Investor. Helisys is HELI and Soligen is SGTN. Helisys last traded at 0.05
and Soligen appears to have fallen off the charts.

Allan Lightman
University of Dayton

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Marshall Burns [SMTP:Marshall@Ennex.com]
> Sent: Thursday, September 09, 1999 11:36 AM
> To: List: Rapid prototyping
> Subject: Fabber stocks
>
> Is there someone on the list that understands the stock market well enough
> to answer the following question:
>
> Of the five public fabber companies (3D Systems, Stratasys, DTM,
> Helisys, and Soligen), two of them are now no longer traded on an exchange
> whose prices are reported in the regular channels of the newspaper and
> Internet listings (Helisys and Soligen). How does one check on the price
> of
> these stocks?
>
> Best regards,
> Marshall Burns
>
> Marshall@Ennex.com
> Ennex Corporation, Los Angeles, USA, (310) 824-8700
> www.Ennex.com
>
>
>
> For more information about the rp-ml, see http://ltk.hut.fi/rp-ml/

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