We are the proud owners of DWAC and <1 share of GME (traded for my measly Dollar General starter stock). It's all down so much. Will we see a bounce back? I'd really like for this to pay off! I invest with a set amount of money when I can. Could this be one of those stocks that people wished they'd bought into and kick themselves for not doing so?
I am still learning and it's taking awhile for it to click in my noggin.
Bought 1 share 250dollars of GME which I will sell for 10 billion dollars if anyone is interested. That’s the trick. Get 10 billion people to buy 1 share. Not gonna sell cheap because it doesn’t really change my life at all. Bought DWAC at 11.95. So I’ll hold until truth takes over every platform including all of Hollywood.
There is ONLY ONE way to KNOW for sure if your shares are legit, and registered.
It is the COMPANY that keeps the official records, NOT a third party.
Contact Investor Relations at the company, and ask how many shares are registered in your name.
Anything else is a circle jerk.
Yes, I know. Patrick Byrne says he discovered (due to discovery in a lawsuit) that Goldman Sachs makes most of its profit from lending shares, which probably means they are the #1 naked shorter out there. Or at least, they are the ones allowing the hedge funds to naked short.
Not punished due to regulatory capture. I'm all for taking them down, but the touts have sold a bill of goods about the shorts being in a panic about these two stocks, and AMC.
Just not true. Even if it was true back when the short squeeze happened, that story changed and it is old news now.
ComputerShare is the DRS agent for GME.
Did GME tell you that, directly?
Or was it a rumor on the internet?
Even if GME told you that, it does not change the fact that every corporation is required to keep a register of who owns its stock.
That is a state law in every state.
In which state is GME domiciled? Do you know?
Can you provide any legal citation that shows that the corporation itself does not have to maintain its own register of owners?
Are the shares registered in YOUR name, or ComputerShare's name?
If they are not in YOUR name, and not physically in YOUR personal possession (so you can see and touch the certificate(s)), then you are still vulnerable.