Thursday, September 15, 2005

Get thee to the small cappery!

In a rather unexpectedly swift rendering of judgment, the NASD has denied REFR's appeal of its delisting from the Nasdaq National Market to the Nasdaq Small Cap exchange, less than four weeks after the company announced the filing of its appeal.

In past years, the delisting process would often take months. One possible explanation is that the NASD has suddenly gotten much more efficient. This is a little iffy, but strictly speaking, the NASD is not a governmental body, so it's just barely possible that they've allowed some efficiency improvements to creep into their system.

Regardless, there seems little scope for there to have been a great deal of deliberation over this appeal. Was it that REFR's case for continued listing was so weak that it got laughed out of the room? Or did they not even try to make a case, but rather simply filed an empty appeal as a naked attempt to stall for time. If the latter, it doesn't seem to have worked very well.

This comes at an inconvenient moment for REFR, what with their plans to make their pitch to the Long Island Investor's Conference next week. The distinction between National Market and Small Cap may be all but transparent these days, but it will still be one more embarassing issue, out of an extremely long string of them, Joe Harary may have to contend with. Assuming he even opens the floor to questions.

But at any rate, that's for next week. REFR has promised the whole thing will be recorded and kept for posterity's sake, so stay tuned. We may actually have something to talk about again!