If you do the math, look at the earnings of recent quarters, then you realise it really is only a matter of time……..
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@bs You should just turn your PC off. A 7ft athlete (not a 7 ft athletic...) with Achondroplasia is the d-mbest thing I have ever read on the web. The average height of a person with Achondroplasia is 4ft 4 inches. If you haven't been IRIF'd yet, you should be next. The company will immediately have a better chance of success.
@bs is the right pseudonym for you because your comment is BS#
@bs ever hear the the saying it’s better to keep quiet and have people think you are simple, than post here and remove all doubt. You are incoherent and uneducated.
@bm I still stand by my statement; people are saying we are losing money and etc which I don't disagree.. but put the work into share that decline; such as answer in the same statement we are losing x$ per quarter, we are making x$ per quarter and we will be negative cash on hand at x# of months based upon current lack of cash flow.
It's a multiple row equation is my point.. it's not just one number. And the cash flow just got even more complicated because now we have royalty payments on our IP that needs to be added to our cash drain.
It's like saying the male athletic is 7ft tall so he/she is a basketball player. There is multiple metrics that needs to be reviewed; what if the athletic was born with Achondroplasia (Achondroplasia is the most common form of skeletal dysplasia (short-limbed dwarfism), caused by a genetic mutation in the FGFR3 gene that inhibits cartilage-to-bone conversion.) would you still say that he/she is a basketball player?
The entire picture needs to be looked at is my point.. I'm by no means saying that the company is financially sc--wed.
@a1 arithmetic. None of this is complicated.
@a5 yeah, but we are making losses and cannot cut expenses fast enough. Go back to school and see if you can get past freshman year this time.
@a5 have a look at the FY25 results - revenue decline, losses, need I say more
And in isolation this means nothing. How much has the company been steady making in the same quarters; It's the bottom line and how the bottom line is changing that is important.. Has expenses and revenue been shrinking and etc.. and better yet I see another job that can be cut if this is coming form someone in corporate finance just single focused on one number.
I could run an Hot Chocolate stand and need $15/day to keep the lights on but if I was making $25/day then who cares; If I was making $16.50/day but never had customers on M-Th just F-Sun then maybe it would require a business decision to just open on the weekend.
What math is this?