SCO Investor Changing the Deal 392
Kurt Wall writes "According to this story, recent SCO investor Royal Bank of Canada appears to be changing its tune. RBC, along with BayStar Capital, invested $50 million in SCO, but now has changed the deal to give it veto power over the payment of the 20% contingency fees SCO's IP lawyers will get. As to the wisdom of the investment itself, an RBC spokesman would only say that the 'investment in SCO is passive, made to hedge an economic exposure resulting from client transactions.' Such as the SCO case collapsing, perhaps?"
obligatory Star Wars reference (Score:5, Funny)
SCO's lawyers: "That wasn't part of the bargain!"
RBC: "We're altering the deal, pray we do not alter it further..."
They aren't altering the deal. (Score:5, Informative)
RBC: "We're altering the deal, pray we do not alter it further...
They aren't altering SCO's deal with the lawyers.
What they're doing is getting agreement from SCO that SCO will not take an additional unilateral action (such as selling the company) that will trigger the CYA part of the deal (giving 20% of the company to the lawyers) - unless SCO first gets investor approval.
"You promised them 20% of the company if you sold it. That would dilute our investment. So don't do that without asking us first."
NO change to the deal with the lawyers. Just don't push the red button (and give away a fifth of the store) without asking the owners first.
way to cash in on the joke there Pedanto (Score:3, Funny)
Do you correct all the "chicken crossed the road" jokes too?
"Actually, though very few people know this, biologically speaking, chickens lack the cognitive processes necessary to cross the road under the aforementioned circumstances. See the research done by Smoot and Hawley, 1934.... blaw blaw mumble mumble..."
Re:They aren't altering the deal. (Score:5, Interesting)
Which brings up an interesting question in my mind. If the deal with the lawyers was made by the executives and not the board, is this deal even legal? Was the right to give away a "fifth of the store" even theirs?
If I were an investor in SCO, and this prior deal wasn't disclosed to me, or made subsequent to my investment without my knowledge, I would immediately be on the phone to the SEC.
Re:They aren't altering the deal. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, of course the CEO can do this. If it is obviously not in the best interest of the shareholders they can sue him, but it could easily be in the best interest of the shareholders.
This deal was disclosed in exactly the fashion that it should have been as far as I can tell. And it was a judgment call on the part of the CEO. Exactly the type of thing he's paid for.
Re:They aren't altering the deal. (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, this could turn into a change of deal with the lawyers. Picture this scenario:
1. IBM says "ok, we give up, we'll buy you out at a 30% premium."
2. Lawyers say - "ok, we want 6% of the market cap of the new company."
3. SCO says "please, investors, let us do this".
4. Big investor says to lawyer "settle for 1% or we'll call off the whole deal".
5. Lawyer
Re:obligatory Star Wars reference (Score:5, Funny)
If you think that's good, just wait until next week, when the Vice President of RBC will reveal that he's the father of Darl Mcbride, shortly after slicing his hand off.
Actually, let's not pursue this analogy any further, in case SCO somehow manage to destroy the Death Star^W^WIBM ...
Re:obligatory Star Wars reference (Score:2, Funny)
SCO = Alderon
Re:obligatory Star Wars reference (Score:4, Funny)
IBM is "Big Blue". Everyone knows that the REAL Death Star is elsewhere [att.com]...
Re:obligatory Star Wars reference (Score:5, Funny)
I hear Darl's sister is kinda cute.
Re:obligatory Star Wars reference (Score:5, Informative)
That the investors have forced SCO and Boies to agree to changing the deal might indicate that they (the investors) either:
Re:obligatory Star Wars reference (Score:5, Funny)
Darl's Brother.... (Score:5, Interesting)
David Boies and his fellow Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP lawyer Mark Heise are SCO's attorneys in this case, but the software company was represented in a court skirmish last week in Utah between SCO and IBM Corp. byDarl McBride's brother Kevin. Kevin McBride, according to West Legal Directory, has a private practice in nearby Park City, Utah, where he specializes in litigation and appeals, not corporate-contract or intellectual-property law.
Makes things even more fishy. Looks like the McBride family is going to make out nicely either way, SCO wins Darl gets a big payout, Kevin gets a cut of attorney fees, SCO looses and Kevin still gets a cut from the contingency plan.
Also to reference Linux as being a derivitave of the "older operating system" Unix is wrong on a couple points. First has already been pointed out, Linux is designed to work like Unix but was not in any way derived directly from its source, which is actually what SCO is trying to claim in the first place. Also, the article fails to mention that the "older operating system" Unix is what SCO's primary buisness was based on originally.
Tm
Stock Charts (Score:4, Informative)
Charts...
Going down over the last 5 days [google.com]
About the same over the last 3 months [google.com]
Re:Stock Charts (Score:5, Informative)
Thus, when everybody and his brother is shorting a given stock, the short-term effect is to increase demand for that stock, because brokers can profit by obtaining shares to lend out to short-sellers. This generates a "short-squeeze" bubble that has the counterintuitive effect of temporarily increasing the target stock's price.
Groklaw has a good story .. (Score:5, Interesting)
One user states:
Re:Groklaw has a good story .. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Stock Charts (Score:2)
yahoo finance SCO chart /.ed (Score:2)
The insiders are! (Score:5, Interesting)
-russ
Re:Stock Charts (Score:2)
The pattern is that after SCO has gone down a certain amount, they make some new outrageous announcement and it goes roaring back up. They should be doing this in the next day or two. Investors are kind of dumb.
Re:Stock Charts (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Stock Charts (Score:5, Insightful)
But there is one big problem with short-selling SCO stock:
Short-selling doesn't work unless you can predict when the stock will go down. Given that no rational and well-informed person would buy SCO stock, I'm stumped to guess why it's as high as it is, and twice as stumped to say exactly when it will go down.
You might be all set to short-sell SCO stock, and then Darl McBride might announce that SCO actually owns UNIX, BSD, Windows, MacOS, and CP/M; SCO stock doubles overnight and your short-sale, instead of making you money, loses you a lot of money.
steveha
Re:Stock Charts (Score:2)
Re:Stock Charts (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact is, despite what
Re:Stock Charts (Score:3, Informative)
Only plays a tangle on TV (Score:5, Informative)
THEN they would have to prove that ownership.
The thing is, Linus (And hence the Linux kernel effort) has detailed records of what came from whom (and therefore from where). SCO has no such records except the vague statement that "whatever we (sco) have we own."
If there is common code, and Linus can prove who provided it to him (e.g. who wrote it), and SCO cannot prove even the first records of who provided the code to *them*, then guess who legally possessess "proof of ownership."
See the word Provenance [m-w.com] (which usually applies to "fine art"). Lets say I walked up to you with a genuine Picasso, proveably genuine, if I can't provide the chain of ownership that demonstrates that it is mine to sell to you, you would be a fool to buy it.
The same basic features apply to the (mis-named) intellectual property issues. If SCO demonstrates that there is code in common between something they claim to own and the Linux kernel, they will need to be able to make a stronger claim of ownership than that made by the OS community.
This is the basis of the ATT vs BSD settlement. In that case BSD was more pursuasive in their ownership of the disputed text because they had the original copyright notices that included the names of the authors, and they had the authors right there saying "yep" I wrote that under X cirsumstances. ATT was in the SCO position of just having some program text in a bunch of files, no attributable authors and no copyright notices.
The point is, SCO has produced no proof because they have none. They are (probably) hoping to release whatever confluence of code they may have as close to closing arguments as possible, on the grounds that such material would apear to stand on merrit. They *cannot* release that data because the very presence of submission and aproval-for-inclusion records kept in the linux project system (BitKeeper et al) is, by definition, "more pursuasive" than any straight claim.
We saw how fast the one example that got out was debunked. By this time SCO is hoping to do a drive-by submission-of-evidence. That never works. 8-)
Guessing that they have some kind of case is very bad. The simple fact that they havn't produced a single spesific instance of (provenanced) code in the process of pursuing thier case, is rather indicitive.
Remember that in civil cases there is no "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard. It is purely "proponderance of evidence." In a civl matter it is *ONLY* a question of who has "more and more credible" evidence.
"incredible" evidence and clames are, by definition, useless.
How short-selling works (Score:5, Informative)
I don't understand what you wrote. But you seem to be saying that short-selling is low-risk, which is totally wrong.
Here's how short-selling works:
You expect a stock to go down in price. You borrow some shares of the stock, and sell them. Then at a predetermined date, you must buy the stocks back, and return the shares to whomever loaned them to you. If you sell at $16 per share, and buy back at $10 per share, you get to keep $6 per share, less any fees (you need to pay whomever loaned you the shares).
But if you buy at $16, then Darl announces that SCO actually owns South America and the stock price goes up to $26, when it's time to buy back the stock shares you need to pay $10 per share.
If you simply buy some stock, the worst thing that can happen is that the stock devalues to zero, and you lost all the money you spent on the stock. With short-selling, if the stock price unexpectedly soars, you can lose vast sums of money in a hurry. Buy-and-hold is much safer than short-selling.
steveha
Re:Stock Charts (Score:3, Interesting)
Shares Outstanding:13.85M
Float:7.50M
% Held by Insiders:45.83%
% Held by Institutions:31.82%
Shares Short (as of 10-Nov-03):1.62M
Since the insiders better not be shorting the stock (or uh-oh, SEC) that means over 20% of the available stock IS being shorted.
Re:Stock Charts (Score:5, Informative)
OLSON, MICHAEL P Vice President sold 10,000 shares on November 11, 2003.
Davak
Re:Stock Charts (Score:5, Informative)
Hmm.. maybe from the recent court's judgment. (Score:3, Interesting)
It'll be really funny... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It'll be really funny... (Score:3, Interesting)
Isnt filing obviously bogus suits, to pump and dump a stock just a little illegal?
I'm not sure that there is even a story here... (Score:2)
Darl's Goin' Down! (Score:2)
Of course they're trying to pump up the stock! Without Darl's henchmen..uh..lawyers guaranteed a huge payment for the sale of the company, they're sunk.
Play in the sty, smell like a pig (Score:2, Funny)
Gives an entirely new reason to... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Gives an entirely new reason to... (Score:3, Interesting)
Reminds me of a story (Score:5, Funny)
After meeting up with my contact at the site, I tried to get a little more information about what kind of problem it was having. As we walked to the elevators he explained that no one really knew exactly what the box did, or if it was even in use anymore, but it was obvious that the machine was rebooting itself for no apparent reason.
We got out of the elevator at the basement level of the building. The server was sitting alone in a damp room with a concrete floor and concrete walls. I was already pretty sure it was going to be a hardware problem, since Unix boxes don't tend to reboot for absolutely no reason. I pointed out that the damp environment was undoubtedly bad for the machine.
He said, "The honest truth is, no one wants anything to do with this box. It's sitting down here because we're out of space in our server room, and the only guy that knew anything about this box quit three years ago, so we don't even know if it's doing anything useful." With that he turned and left me to figure out the problem.
The machine was plugged in, the power switch was on, but the console was blank and mashing on the keyboard didn't seem to have any affect.
As I was unscrewing the side panel from the case I started to notice that there was a really rank stench in the room. When I first entered the room I figured it was just mildew from the dampness or something, but it was really strong now. I really just wanted to get out of that dimly lit room and out into the sunlight and fresh air.
It was hard to see anything in the case, so I fumbled around inside it with my hands making sure all the internal cables were securely attached to their respective components. Suddenly I felt something squishy and slimy on my hand and jerked it out of the box.
At that instant the machine came on and began to POST. As the memory counted up, I turned the box so I could see into it by the light of the screen. Now I could see the cause of the problem. A rat had crawled into the case via an open drive bay and made a nest near one of the power supplies. She and several hairless newborns had died in there a week or two previous, and I had just stuck my hand in the middle of it all.
As I was wiping my hands off on my pants, I noticed the machine had finished booting. I was like "Ugh, gross! This thing is running SCO Unix!"
Needless to say, I marched right up to the IT offices and told them that the machine was undoubtedly no longer relevant to their business and that they should just throw the whole mess in the dumpster.
Re:Reminds me of a story (Score:2, Insightful)
This is truly a remarkable troll. You sir, are an inspiration to us all.
Re:Reminds me of a story (Score:4, Funny)
Has someone been stealing the IQ round here?
Missing text in article (Score:5, Insightful)
Shouldn't the blank be filled in by the words "SCO contends"? As in, "Unix, an older operating system from which SCO contends Linux was derived."
I thought the whole point of the defense against SCO is that Linux is Unix-like, but *not* "derived" from Unix. Unless I'm wrong (a frequent situation), the newspaper article has swallowed a little too much FUD today.
Re:Missing text in article (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Missing text in article (Score:4, Insightful)
2) It _is_ partially derived from Unix source code, as in the Symbol font non-example.
3) The question is whether Linux contains illegally used Unix source.
Re:Missing text in article (Score:2)
Re:Missing text in article (Score:5, Funny)
"nothing in"
Motley Fool (Score:5, Informative)
Hedge what exactly? (Score:5, Interesting)
So RBC does business with Red Hat, and needs to hedge against them going bust when SCO wins? Or they are hedging short positions they already had in SCO because of selling call options or the like to clients?
It would make some sense if they said 'we have lots of Linux boxes, and we want to get cash if SCO wins to cover the licence fees'...
Re:Hedge what exactly? (Score:2)
$50MM investment (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:$50MM investment (Score:5, Informative)
Re:$50MM investment (Score:2, Interesting)
2) Boies' firm was retained, and they are billing hourly (granted, some of their billing is at 2/3 the normal rate, but that's still not cheap). This is in addition to any contingency factors that Boies' firm can also get money on. SCO had maybe $10M in the bank, and if one took about all of their accounting tricks, they're probably spen
client transactions, hmmm... (Score:2)
Finally investors prove they aren't idiots! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Finally investors prove they aren't idiots! (Score:3, Informative)
Who Owns Stock In SCO? (Score:5, Informative)
Capital Guardian Trust Company 1,177,800 8.51 $16,288,974 30-Sep-03
Integral Capital Management Vi, LLC 316,600 2.29 $4,378,578 30-Sep-03
Royce & Associates, Inc. 1,441,200 10.41 $19,931,796 30-Sep-03
Integral Capital Management V, LLC 246,730 1.78 $3,412,275 30-Sep-03
Empire Capital Partners LP 205,000 1.48 $1,961,849 30-Jun-03
Barclays Bank Plc 174,686 1.26 $2,415,907 30-Sep-03
Bjurman, Barry & Associates 160,000 1.16 $2,212,800 30-Sep-03
ING Investments, LLC 143,100 1.03 $1,979,073 30-Sep-03
Oberweis Asset Management Inc. 112,000 0.81 $1,548,960 30-Sep-03
Whitney Asset Management LLC 76,967 0.56 $1,064,453 30-Sep-03
Royce Technology Value Fund 105,000 0.76 $1,004,849 30-Jun-03
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund 24,713 0.18 $236,503 30-Jun-03
Vanguard Extended Market Index Fund 17,875 0.13 $171,063 30-Jun-03
Marketocracy Masters 100 Fund 3,900 0.03 $53,937 30-Sep-03
Spartan Extended Market Index Fund 3,753 0.03 $54,831 31-Aug-03
Spartan Total Market Index Fund 3,132 0.02 $45,758 31-Aug-03
Vanguard Balanced Index Fund 2,125 0.02 $20,336 30-Jun-03
Quantitative Master Series Tr-Extended Market Index Seri 1,775 0.01 $16,986 30-Jun-03
Vanguard Institutional Index-Inst Total Stock Market Ind 705 0.01 $6,746 30-Jun-03
Manufacturers Investment Trust-Total Stock Market Index 349 0 $3,339 30-Jun-03
Re:Who Owns Stock In SCO? (Score:2, Funny)
Probably. But with all the VC firms and hedge funds I keep my billions in, how am I supposed to keep track? Oberweis Asset Management? Empire Capital Partners? Hell, I probably _own_ some of them! And I'm not even an uber-rich dotcom mogul like Cowboy Neal and Timothy!
Also, you forgot to mention that KDE owns SCO!
Re:Who Owns Stock In SCO? (Score:3, Informative)
It's not fair to include index funds here. They are doing their job to own all stocks in a given index. The whole point of index funds is to match the market, not gamble, and usually to have low fees (and this is why they almost always beat other funds.)
Now, if the manager of an *actively managed* fund is buying SCOX, that's a different story.
Ladies and Gentlemen (Score:5, Funny)
Golgafrincham (Score:5, Funny)
Where is a Golgafrincham Space Ark [bbc.co.uk] when you need one?
Two significant pieces in the 8-K (Score:4, Informative)
So did SCO just announce that intend to issue more stock? I'm confused by what they intend to gain from this statement.
And now, did then just announce their intent to sell the company?
Like I say, I'm not a lawyer, and this might be typical legalese, but if not, is this significant?
Goodbye, SCO.... (Score:5, Funny)
Wonder if SCO would sell me some of their copyrights to UNIX....
SCOX already down almost 7% today (Score:3, Informative)
Hopefully the stock keeps up this trajectory!
--
I am cool for a variety of reason, but mostly because I use Oddpost [oddpost.com]
Re:SCOX already down almost 7% today (Score:2)
Wow (Score:5, Funny)
BC spokesman would only say that the 'investment in SCO is passive, made to hedge an economic exposure resulting from client transactions.'
What he really meant to say was: "we don't really give a shit about this company, and this investment was the stupidest crap we've ever done."
Hedge (Score:5, Informative)
If SCO wins this case other companies who are Linux dependant will get a HUGE loss.
RBC has probaly invested in some of these companies.
They gamble a small amount of money on SCO winning.
This way they have less risk, SCO loses, their Linux investments payback - 50 million.
The SCO case wins, they lose their Linux investments (or they are damaged) They get a windfall from SCO which partially offsets this loss.
Think of gambling on a sports games against two people.
They will pay 3:1 that their team wins.
Bet $2, $1 each, and no matter who wins, you are ahead $1. Welcome to hedging.
Re:Hedge (Score:3, Interesting)
If you were betting on both sides of a 3:1 game against the house and wanted to come out ahead, you would need to ensure you won enough no matter what
I'm sure some if it... (Score:2)
Re:I'm sure some if it... (Score:2)
www.sco.com (Score:2)
Re:www.sco.com (Score:2)
Surprise in court? (Score:5, Insightful)
IBM scored a surprise legal victory in that court case when a judge ruled on Friday in favour of IBM in SCO's trade-secret violation lawsuit against the computing giant.
Huh? Even SCO wasn't surprised by what happened last friday in court.
-MDL
Re:Surprise in court? (Score:3, Funny)
Huh? Even SCO wasn't surprised by what happened last friday in court.
A judge in a U.S. courtroom ruled that SCO had to produce some sort of evidence in support of their allegations. Now, honestly... how could anyone have foreseen that happening?
Pro Sco Slant? (Score:5, Interesting)
SCO has admitted that its action is designed to shore up sagging sales by wringing revenue out of its rights to Unix, an older operating system from which Linux was derived.
Derived is used rather loosely here. To a casual looker, it might sound like SCO is in the right.
IBM scored a surprise legal victory in that court case when a judge ruled on Friday in favour of IBM in SCO's trade-secret violation lawsuit against the computing giant.
Whoa!
SCO had been pressuring the courts to force IBM to reveal its Unix and Linux source code so SCO could prove that IBM was using stolen code. But the judge ruled that SCO would have to present its own Unix source code first and identify which software code had been stolen.
That does'nt make sense considering just about anyone can look at Linux source.
Good story. Financial community isn't seeing it. (Score:5, Interesting)
Bloomberg hasn't picked this up yet. [bloomberg.com] Bloomberg is slipping. Yahoo Finance doesn't have it yet either.
This is an unusual investment for a bank. It's a pure speculative play. Their management is probably kicking themselves for buying in at the top.
Passive Aggressive bankers (Score:5, Insightful)
Director of Royal Bank is insane (Score:2)
This just goes to show that there are rich suckers out there that never deserved to make a profit. Should change name from ROYAL BANK to ROYAL CASINO BANK.
WTF else are they going to do with (Score:2)
Unix excluse result? (Score:2)
In a way, good news (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately as a result, they're helping prop up the stock price of an really awful company.
problem solving (Score:2)
--sound from one anonymous executive office in Lindon, UT
SCO case collapsing? (Score:3, Funny)
Perhaps I wax pragmatically?
Royal Bank Canada new advertising slogan (Score:5, Funny)
this is making sense... (Score:3, Interesting)
This seems to be making sense. The investment companies are playing both sides against the middle. If SCO wins, the consequences will be likely be lower earnings for companies that must pay the licensing fees. OTOH, the investment bankers who have invested with SCO will be able to offset those losses by their earnings from SCO. If SCO loses, they lose their investment, but it is not that much money.
As far as the lawyer veto, I think this is just another hedge in case SCO loses. The bankers want to keep the money instead of paying for currently promised obligation. In any event, they will probably just go court and claim that the lawyer fees are excessive. No one likes lawyers, and even in the case where a lawyer funds a litigation, such as the tobacco case with the states, the courts seem willing to put aside contractual obligations to the detriment of the lawyers.
recently famous for Enron involvement, too (Score:5, Interesting)
been in the news
http://www.cfo.com/article/1,5309,11460,00.html
lately? To quote:
"Goldin said that Bank of America and Royal Bank
of Canada knew of fraud in Enron-related
transactions. .
Charming profile they're developing of late.
Boise Representation (Score:5, Interesting)
If I was a SCO sucker^h^h^h^h^h investor this would be a very troubling sign. In fact, Boise's presence is the only thing that really gave the lawsuit credibility - regardless of the fact that he lost the last two highly publized lawsuits.
The short percentage on this stock is huge and that can help keep the stock price, up strangely enough. As the stock drops people complete the short transaction, which is "buying back" the shares that they sold earlier.
An IBM surprise? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm certainly no legal expert, but was this really that much of a surprise? From most legal info I've read about the case, it seem fairly accepted that SCO is really just fishing.
when all is said and done (Score:5, Funny)
Who d'yall think might be the big "client"? (Score:3, Interesting)
This is the only rationalle that I can think of, for a big bank to buy SCOX; banks are typically not big risk takers.
I wonder if there is any way to discover who bought "Call" options on SCOX from the Royal Bank? Perhaps some investor whose name starts with M? Maybe it didn't take a rocket scientist corporate finance guy to figure out how to force an "independent" third party to buy a big chunk of SCOX, if you don't want to do it personally...
The SCO Case is NOT Collapsing (Score:4, Funny)
"God will roast their stumachs in hell at the hands of Darl McBride."
"Lying is forbidden at SCO. Darl McBride will tolerate nothing but truthfulness as he is a man of great honor and integrity. "
""We are winning!""
Quotes for the SCO Information Minister
SCO Experiences DDOS Attack (Score:3, Informative)
Check for yourselves [sco.com]
SCO Experiences Distributed Denial of Service Attack
Wednesday December 10, 3:19 pm ET
Syn Attack Halts Availability to SCO's Internal Operations
# LINDON, Utah, Dec. 10
This specific type of DDoS attack, called a "syn attack," took place when several thousand servers were compromised by an unknown person to overload SCO's Web site with illegitimate Web site requests. The flood of traffic by these illegitimate requests caused the company's ISP's Internet bandwidth to be consumed so the Web site was inaccessible to any other legitimate Web user.
"SCO is working with law enforcement officials and gathering information through mechanisms that we have in place to help us identify the origin of these attacks," said company spokesperson, Blake Stowell. "We deplore these activities by those who try to intimidate or harass legitimate businesses through cyber terrorist tactics while hiding their true identity."
Darl's Swan Song: (Score:3, Funny)
Sheila: Time's have changed
Our kids are getting worse
They won't obey their parents
They just want to fart and curse!
Sharon: Should we blame the government?
Mrs. Cartman: Or blame society?
Dads: Or should we blame the images on TV?
Sheila: Heck NO, blame Canada
Everyone: Blame Canada
Sheila: With all their beady little eyes
And flapping heads so full of lies
Everyone: Blame Canada
Blame Canada
Sheila: We need to form a full assault
Everyone: It's Canada's fault!
where? (Score:3, Funny)
Asleep at the wheel again. . .
Re:Investment is never passive... (Score:5, Informative)
No, what is going on here is someone is trying to make a wager on SCO and they don't want anyone to know about.
Re:rbc investing in SCO ! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:rbc investing in SCO ! (Score:3, Informative)
What are you talking about? SCO stock would have been a great investment, it went way up. That's the point of a pump 'n' dump. As long as RBC got out just before it collapses, I think it's a good investment. Not because they think SCO is right, but because they think the stock would go up like it did.
Re:rbc investing in SCO ! (Score:5, Informative)
We have only a handful of major banks here in Canada. When they do anything that might be conceived as remotely negative, they get severly attacked for it.
Re:clueless (Score:2)
Within 20 min of learing about RBC's SCO investment, I had fired off a nasty letter to the CEO complaining about what the RBC was doing with MY money.
I would not be suprised if a lot of other RBC customers did similar things.
Perhaps they are taking notice.
DG
Re:clueless (Score:3, Interesting)