Monday, December 17, 2007
The oldest new licensee
Of course, as usual, there's a couple of devils in the details. For one thing, AGC Flat Glass Europe is simply the renaming of Glaverbel SA, which originally took a license in 1992, sold REFR what is now a substantial portion of REFR's patent inventory in 1999, and was bought by AGC in 2002. In other words, it's only a slight variation of the British Isles license shuffle of earlier this year.
But hey, anything for news, right?
Friday, December 14, 2007
Or perhaps I should have said relatively new
Thursday, December 13, 2007
New blood at last
The good news is that, at least ostensibly, these new additions are probably not part of Bob Saxe's immediate circle of friends, and therefore may bring a badly-needed measure of independence to the board. The only obvious downside is, it probably won't be enough: friends of Bob and Joe will still hold control, even if a couple of them (possibly including Bob Saxe himself) retire, an event to which I believe this move is a prelude.
For once, it's a move that I don't immediately see a cynical motivation behind, but rather a response to legitimate shareholder unrest as evidenced by the proxy proposal earlier this year.
Of course, it's not an immediate cure for anything but it will be interesting to watch how our new arrivals react to what they find when they assume their duties in earnest.
Monday, December 03, 2007
Kit to be tied?
Catagory: RFI Licensees of the 21st Century
Clue: Letter;
Dear xxxxxxxx,
Please review and sign the Sales Representative Agreement. Keep a copy for yourself and mail back the orginal with your US $995.00 territory fee to us at:
xxxxxxxx xxxxx xxxx
xxxxx xxxx xxxxx
xxxxxx
xxxxxxxxx xx xxxxx
As soon as I get your letter, I will immediately send your Product Demonstration Kit (PDK/Demo window), Salesman's Notebook, and a few business cards to get you started. We will have 500 business cards printed and sent to you within a few weeks. We expect to do a product launch on November, 14th. We will have our web site completed with sourcing information and pricing at that time.
Best regards,
xxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxx
Two things are obvious: first, if anything happened on November 14th with respect to SPD, we certainly haven't heard about it, and second, the writer, a longtime booster of REFR and SPD, sounds just a wee bit angry. Whoever this is probably wishes they'd listened to what this blog had to say about those PDK's.
Between this and the continued weakness in the share price, now into its sixth straight week, solidarity in a group for whom solidarity is its primary strength, seems to be fracturing a bit. No doubt, if this person continues in this vein the stalwarts will quickly encourage him or her to go away and simmer in silence, so I don't expect this to set off any wide-scale dissent, but once again, these little outbursts are still of interest. One never knows how many others feel the same way.
Update: In a followup, the poster in question indicated that he or she never signed the agreement (and presumably, never forked over the $995). This person also made reference to an "extensive file" that the above letter is a part of. This may not be the last we hear of this after all...
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
The debate in capsule form
Generally agreed-upon premise: "The success of SPD technology is entirely in the hands of REFR's licensees."
Bulls' conclusion: "It's in the hands of big companies, big enough to have the power to make it succeed."
Bears' conclusion: "It's in the hands of big companies, too big to care whether it succeeds."
Happy Thanksgiving, America!
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Into the abyss
Even some the biggest bulls on the message boards were invoking $6.00 as an average-down point, a level that would have seemed laughable just last week.
In a way, there's a kind of symmetry to this whole mess: up big on non-news, down big on no news.
In other news: Gene Marcial, call your office!
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
An early morning quarterly
The points that stand out from an initial reading:
- Revenues were up, pretty much as expected, almost entirely as a result of the Hitachi "guaranteed access" deal. There had been a few questions as to whether the payments were truly guaranteed, but they seem to be at least being recorded on schedule. Although, given the rather similar bulge in receivables, it appears Hitachi had not, as of September, actually gotten around to cutting REFR a check as yet.
- Losses for the quarter, however, were way up, mostly due to the company seemingly giving out stock options like candy to its employees. No less than $1.78 million worth of options expenses were recorded under operating and R&D expenses in the quarter, actually dwarfing all other expenses under those categories. One might well ask if a factor in the sharp decline of the past few weeks wasn't the result of employees cashing out some of these options!
- On the licensee front, we learned that AGP has renegotiated some terms of its license. The only change spelled out in the filing was that REFR's royalty cut tripled from 5% to 15%. Why AGP would agree to such an arrangement, which would only hamper its competitiveness if there is to be a marketplace for SPD products, is something of a mystery. One gets the feeling the answer lies in the "other things" the filing did not specify.
- Finally, were there product sales? This blogger has read through the filing twice and didn't find any definitive language one way or the other on the subject.
Update: A poster on Yahoo! came up with a theory on AGP that rings so true I'm surprised I didn't think of it. It makes perfect sense that each end-product licensee would be able to "buy" a lower royalty rate by agreeing to a minimum royalty payment. So, the increase in the rate strongly suggests that AGP is greatly lowering, or very likely, eliminating, its "minimum". Draw your own conclusions about AGP's confidence in the market for SPD products from that.
Monday, November 12, 2007
Has the cap come off?
Actually, in that last bit, little has changed since that time, but one relatively new development is that short interest has broken through the barrier that had been just over 2 million shares, and has reached 2.5 million and is still climbing.
So how is that happening? Well, for lack of a better theory, the diagnosis of "what's changed" points a finger at the listing of options on REFR a few months back. The basic idea seems to be that, by purchasing put options, you buy the right to sell REFR at a given price and time, and this right seems to circumvent the borrowing restrictions that kick in whenever the availability of shares to short runs low. Thus, short interest is allowed to increase more freely, with brokers now having to extract borrows after the fact rather than preventing the trades up front.
Now, for all I know that could be all hooey, but it's really the only working theory either side of the debate seems to have come up with. All we know for sure is that the short interest is reaching records highs, and in the meantime the stock, ever since the Hino show announcement, has been in free fall, and those two items are probably not 100% coincidence.
In other news, REFR, which for the past few years has been filing quarterly reports 40 days after the end, did not do so this quarter. This might be because the status of accelerated filer no longer applies to it for whatever reason. Assuming that is so, the filing will most likely come on Wednesday instead. Because goodness knows, REFR is such a complex organization that those extra five days are vital to putting out a proper report on the company's finances.
Monday, October 29, 2007
Marketing worldwide, but not to you
Today, with the release by licensee American Glass Products, is not that day.
To be sure, it starts out promisingly enough, talking about the launching of a new product line, complete with a global marketing campaign. It certainly sounds like REFR has finally gotten a licensee to step up and take the lead in presenting SPD to the world.
But then you get into the details. The campaign kickoff, which one might expect to be a big, splashy affair to really get things going... is in fact a trade show. Yes, another one.
But all right, you might say, a campaign has to start somewhere. At least they're getting out there in front of the public and... oh, wait:
The SEMA Show is for automotive industry professionals and is not open to the public.So once again we have an example of SPD "marketing" seemingly designed to be as obscure as possible to the general consumer, while showing up prominently on the radar of what seems to be their true customer base, that of the speculative investor.
Welcome asensio.com readers
The entry referenced in the release regarding the Setra demonstration may be found here. But I encourage you to browse this site at your leisure for all kinds of little nuggets on Woodbury's longest-running profitless public company.
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Is SPD a "concept" technology?
Between the Jeep Rescue, the Juno, let's throw in the Kabura even though it was never established as SPD, and now the Hino S'elega Premium, SPD is establishing a considerable track record as a demonstration technology. But, with its subsequent failures to cross the gap into the real market, one has to wonder if it can ever do so.
Certainly, anyone considering SPD technology and researching it would have to be well aware of both SPD's proliferate demonstrations and dearth of market applications. Just as certainly, they could not be blamed for thinking to themselves, "SPD gets evaluated a lot, but never makes it into the market. Does that mean people are finding something wrong with it?"
That actually might partially explain the almost immediate reversal of the news that SPD is in yet another concept vehicle. Is there not a growing risk that prospective customers going to start thinking that maybe demonstrations and concepts are all SPD is actually good for?
Maybe SPD has reached that point and maybe it hasn't. But that's a concept Joe Harary and company really ought to consider carefully, before hauling SPD off to the next trade show demonstration.
Bus-ness as usual
Relentless rumormongering that REFR and SPD were going to make a big splash at the Tokyo Motor Show this month proved accurate... sort of.
According to a REFR press release, SPD glass was a feature in one of four concept vehicles unveiled by Hino Motors, a subsidiary of Toyota.
For Hino's part, their announcement of the display does eventually get around to mentioning glass with variable transparency, though for some reason it is referred to as "photochromatic", which SPD definitely is not.
Perhaps something was lost in translation, but what is most emphatically not lost, is the uncanny resemblance to the Setra rollout of four years ago, with the primary difference being that the Hino bus is a clearly labeled a concept vehicle, while Setra's bus supposedly had a small production run. (Although if so, REFR is still waiting for its royalty check from that.)
The market in REFR being what it is, of course, the stock instantly soared more than 10% to multi-year highs on the release. But a funny thing happened on the way to the $20 level that seemed inevitable early on this morning. Very quickly, the sell-the-news reaction kicked in. Rather startlingly, the stock gave back the whole rise inside of two hours, and actually finished in the red for the day. Maybe the investors with longer memories recalled that right after the Setra announcement, REFR stock hit a peak that it would go on to crash 75% from, and not recover for years.
One thing seems certain, the actual event paled in comparison to the months of endless message board hype that preceded it.Friday, October 19, 2007
The newest licensee
A quick browse of the company site shows that Craftsman isn't so hot in terms of web presence. Their website, dated with a 2005 copyright, still has many "under construction" page stubs. This of course does not automatically mean they're not competent at their core business, but it definitely suggests they're not exactly a big time player, more like on the order of a Custom Glass, only in a larger local market.
Of course, the market, as is its wont these days, has just gone nuts on the news, running back up near the highs after a fairly steep pullback over the prior few days.
What must surely frustrate the shorts in this stock is how the stock just gaily runs up to the moon with no apparent expectations of the company actually producing any kind of revenues, much less profits. BUT... there may be a end to this tunnel vision in sight. At the Dallas luncheon Wednesday, Harary is reported to have announced a "small amount" of royalty income for the third quarter of this year, a "large amount" for the fourth quarter, and big-time growth through next year. So it's basically on the fourth-quarter report in February or early March to show something, or REFR will have finally, officially disappointed.
The blog plans to be here to see it happen. How about you?
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Asensio back on the scene
Marcial and his employer Business Week are the focus of the release, but the article is still a good read for anyone looking for insight into stock promotion in the press.
Monday, October 01, 2007
The great debut... again
In addition to the number of ways in which they attempt to cast their technology as environmentally friendly (as well as nanotechnological, security-enhancing, or whatever the hot trend of the day is), they walk the walk as well, being very heavy into recycling. So much so that it even extends to their licensees' press releases.
Today Isoclima announced they were taking SPD on the trade show circuit. Now, my question to you is, does this sound familiar at all?
It should.
To Isoclima's credit, the new PR doesn't entirely come off as a copy-and-paste of the one from two years ago, even though there are some aspects of it that are very similar: they specify the size of the sample being toured (larger than the one two years ago), and mentioned their future plans for film width (surprisingly, smaller than two years ago). In other news, they seem to have settled on a spelling for their brand name: the no-H version.
One sidelight of interest is the insight into the process this PR provides. Dainippon, though licensed to sell film and emulsion, is only sending Isoclima the raw production chemicals, an activity that doesn't even make use of their license. One might well gather from this that Dainippon is not as committed to the SPD infrastructure as some licensees.
But of course none of this matters a whit as REFR soars to new multi-year highs on this recycled news. That's life in the world of stock promotion for you.
Monday, September 10, 2007
The Beechcraft boondoggle
But in the meantime, on the home front, an interesting new development is coming to light with regard to the after-market SPD shades from Hawker-Beechcraft (then Raytheon Aircraft) whose announcement spurred the stock into the tizzy it has remained in to this day.
It started fairly innocuously with a post by "rikes_of_hell" claiming to have contacted Beechcraft and found that the shades were unavailable. Now, normally this would devolve into a "he said, he said" that proves nothing either way, but a funny thing happened on the way to the denial. Posted "spd_where_you_look", (obviously) a big REFR bull, actually confirmed the shades' unavailability, by way of making the excuse that film was being diverted to other, more important (yet somehow entirely invisible) projects, and that film for the shades would come available sometime this month.
Now, if the diversion excuse rings familiar, it should -- it was used to excuse REFR/Inspectech's failure to win the Boeing 787 business, even though, as we now know, there was no film production at all, much less massive amounts being diverted to projects more important than the 787(!!)
Still, it's a rather amusing state of affairs on a lot of levels. The entire current run in REFR's stock was kicked off by the Raytheon/Beechcraft announcement last February, and was the target of article after article highlighting how this was REFR's big breakthrough into the market. And now we learn that the shades were not, in fact available and have yet to be?
Fortunately for shareholders, with the latest run propelling the stock back near its highs, there's no need to apply for a refund when you can still cash out almost certainly with a healthy profit. Or... you can hold out for the Next Big Thing, a rumor of an announcement at next month's Tokyo Motor Show, which may, or, given even the most recent track record of this company, may very well not happen.
It's your call, shareholders!
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Options revisited
But I do have to say that I find it a little odd that, even though the stock is trading around $11 at the moment, thus making the nearest strike price $10, there is zero activity on current options at the $10 strike, with $12.50 being the "mainstream" price instead.
Now, I'm sure there's a hundred different ways to spin this phenomenon, many of them directly contradictory, so I'm far from suggesting my personal take is the "correct" one. But it seems to me that the stands being taken are kind of a reflection of the contrast in styles of the opposing sides of this stock. The bears are content to sit back and exert whatever influence they have from a distance, accepting that any further decline in this stock is likely to be gradual (the events of the week before last notwithstanding), and that little is to be gained from placing a bet that can be lost by running out the clock.
The bulls, in contrast, are going all out, betting strictly out of the money and willing to lose their bets if the stock doesn't rebound and soon.
And yet, basically, the stock itself meanders.
I think that might say a thing or two about the direction of the path of least resistance right now.
Thursday, August 16, 2007
Gagging on something
Stranger still, the usual message board catcalls that this is all pressure from shortsellers, while not entirely absent, was considerably muted. In its place was this oblique complaint from one poster:
"HAVE YOU SEEN THE CRAP THAT SPD'S COMPETITORS ARE TRYING TO SELL ??? HAVE YOU EVER SEEN A CAR WITH PUKEY WHITE WINDOWS? THEY ARE CALLED GAG MOBILES SINCE YOU WANT TO PUKE WHEN YOU SEE ONE. DON'T WORRY THEY WILL NEVER SELL IN A MILLION YEARS."No one else on the boards is admitting to having much of an idea what this was about, and this blog has so far struck out as well. But if it's some kind of competition for SPD, that may have even gained traction with an auto maker, that certainly spells trouble for REFR, and might help explain the heightened panic today.
Anyone out there have any idea what these "gag mobiles" are actually called? Support your local blog and give me a heads up!
Friday, August 10, 2007
The latest 10-ZZZZ filing
Of course, before any shareholder preens over this success, it bears pointing out that REFR's net margin for the quarter remains at -1285%. Coincidentally, REFR's price/sales ratio is in the same ballpark on the positive side, most recently pegged at 1298.
None of these results come as a surprise to shareholders, at least as far as they will admit, as the "production delays" at Hitachi, which were of course all their fault and furthermore in no way reflect adversely on demand for the film, nosiree, apparently made the realizing of revenues in the mere five months since film production was announced, a virtual impossibility.
It will be interesting to see what the rationalization will be for similar failures in the third quarter. Will the royalty lag time be stretched out to eight months? Will the "technology subscription" payments from Hitachi be used to mask the lack of revenue from product sales?
Will someone, anyone, step forward and offer an SPD-based product for sale to the general market?
I wouldn't bet on it.
Now if you'll excuse me I think I'll go back to bed.
Options update: 11 more lots of calls opened today. 10 March 17.50 calls at the ask (money in the bank to be sure -- but for whom?), and a single December 15 call at the bid. So apparently at least one REFR shareholder is sophisticated enough to be familiar with the concept of writing covered calls.
Thursday, August 09, 2007
Weighing the options, finding them lacking
What seemed at first blush to be an intriguing twist in the trading strategies surrounding this tightly-controlled stock, however, has, at least in the early going, proven to be a complete bust. The spread between bid and ask on all contracts, excepting those with zero bids, is at least 75 cents, and volume is a flat zero across the board.
There had been hopes on both the bullish and bearish side that the listing of options might add some much needed liquidity to this stock, but clearly the verdict today is, not so much.
Until Yahoo! add options for REFR to its quote pages (shouldn't be more than a couple of days, based on other recent CBOE option listings), you can check activity on the CBOE site here. For now, at least, there's very little to see. We'll be checking back later to see if a day of greater stock activity has any residual effect in the option exchange.
Update: The first trade in REFR options came just over two hours into the first trading day, a trade (presumably a purchase) of two August 15 calls at 65 cents each. As options represent 100-share blocks, that's a $130 trade. The following two hours have been silent on the options front, presumably to recover from that blistering flurry of activity.