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Good Vibrations Shoes Inc (PK)

Good Vibrations Shoes Inc (PK) (GVSI)

0.0022
0.00
(0.00%)
Closed November 17 4:00PM

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GVSI News

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GVSI Discussion

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delerious1 delerious1 3 days ago
Too true it complements the negative posters here perfectly
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surfkast surfkast 3 days ago
Pathetic would be a complement.
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delerious1 delerious1 3 days ago
American Blockchain Corp (GVSI:OTC Pink - Current Information)GVSI reached a new 1 week high of $0.0024, surpassing the previous highof $0.0024.
😂 2
delerious1 delerious1 3 days ago
Alert for GVSI - Reached a new 1 week high - 10:02AM ET 11/14/2024
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I-Glow I-Glow 3 days ago
Why is it great news - Sharp screwed by not getting the Attorney Opinion Letter filed on time.

It was more of the Sharp incompetence.

IG
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marcis marcis 3 days ago
This is great news

Where is the koolaid jar
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Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 3 days ago
1 week high of $0.0024, surpassing the previous highof $0.0024.

How desperate can a person be to point out a weekly high?

Pathetic

But no mention of the disastrous on year price history.

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delerious1 delerious1 4 days ago
American Blockchain Corp (GVSI:OTC Pink - Current Information)GVSI reached a new 1 week high of $0.0024, surpassing the previous highof $0.0024.
👍️ 2
surfkast surfkast 4 days ago
Buy: 683,530 Neutral: 666 Sell: 517,113
👍️0
Iggy_Bot Iggy_Bot 4 days ago
Got some nice buys coming in.
👍️ 2
Iggy_Bot Iggy_Bot 4 days ago
Thanks, we can put that bash to rest. glts
👍️ 3 🚀 1
Drugdoctor Drugdoctor 4 days ago
It has already happened... https://www.otcmarkets.com/otcapi/company/financial-report/416009/content
👍 2
surfkast surfkast 4 days ago
But I read how hard Georgie is working! SMH! LOL! Idiot!
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Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 5 days ago
More incompetence from Sharp.

Nothing new.
👍️ 1
delerious1 delerious1 5 days ago
GVSI American Blockchain news fron CEO George Sharp on ❌️

"As most of you are aware, $WNFT was downgraded to Pink Limited because of the lack of filing of an Attorney Letter concurrent with the Annual Report. The company regrets the error and expects to be labelled Pink Current within the next few days.
1:04 PM ¡ Nov 12, 2024
¡3,726 Views"
As most of you are aware, $WNFT was downgraded to Pink Limited because of the lack of filing of an Attorney Letter concurrent with the Annual Report. The company regrets the error and expects to be labelled Pink Current within the next few days.— Worldwide NFT (@WorldwideNFTInc) November 12, 2024
👍️ 1
Teetrixxx Teetrixxx 5 days ago
GVSI will be trading at 0.0020 untill mid 2025. 
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GrantHorvat1 GrantHorvat1 5 days ago
My New Years prediction?

By January 1 Gvsi is at a penny.
👍 2 🚀 2
GrantHorvat1 GrantHorvat1 5 days ago
I have to say I admire you and 3 or 4 others here. The sheer amount of time and effort you guys put into posting the same thing day after day, week after week, month after month...and by now year after year on a pink sheet Penny stock is truly remarkable...bordering on psychotic.

What exactly are you getting out of doing this? Do you not realize nobody cares anymore? It's like the left screaming everyone is a racist nazi...It's lost all meaning. Are you getting paid to do this? A grudge against Sharp? Don't you have jobs? A life? It's not normal.

Soon you will see all this effort was a complete waste of time...just like the election proved.



👍 4 👎️ 1 🚽 1
delerious1 delerious1 5 days ago
"But it is meaningless ....." ....wrong and you simply remove the proof?
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surfkast surfkast 5 days ago
I guess ignorance is bliss. The Nevada SOS and George accept the new name. But it is meaningless until FINRA processes it and it shows up on the daily list. Until then even the OTCM will not change the name.
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delerious1 delerious1 5 days ago
So you're saying there was no name change or Q3 filing? SMH

Disclosure Statement Pursuant to the Pink Basic Disclosure Guidelines
AMERICAN BLOCKCHAIN CORPORATION
A NEVADA Corporation
3535 Executive Terminal Drive, Henderson, NV 89052
________________________________
702-840-4433

SIC CODE:5181
QUARTERLY Report
For the Period Ending: SEPTEMBER

In answering this item, provide the current name of the issuer any names used by predecessor entities, along with the
dates of the name changes.
Exact Company Name: AMERICAN BLOCKCHAIN CORPORATION (hereinafter referred to as “we”, “us”, or “our”
or “the Issuer”).
Formerly known as: Good Vibrations Shoes, Inc. until March 2023


https://www.otcmarkets.com/otcapi/company/financial-report/415870/content
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I-Glow I-Glow 5 days ago
Sharp can't get FINRA to process a simple name and symbol change.

So it is still GVSI.

GVSI has too many Red flags for any sophisticated investors to touch it.

IG
👍️ 1 💯 1
delerious1 delerious1 5 days ago
American Blockchain Corp (GVSI:OTC Pink - Current Information)GVSI gave a bullish signal when the 5-day simple moving average above the 10-day simple moving average. At the time of the cross, GVSI was trading at $0.0024, above both averages.
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reaper247 reaper247 5 days ago
Whew, majorprofits, that was a close one. We surely dodged a bullet there.

Good thing for that last trade today for $2.2022 (1001 @.0022) or this would have closed at .0020 and wiped out that huge 20% gainer on Friday.

I was on pins and needles myself.

LOL, IMO and FWIW.
👍️ 1 😆 1 🚀 1
Major Profits Major Profits 5 days ago
Good thing for that last trade today for $2.2022 (1001 @.0022) or this would have closed at .0020 and wiped out that huge 20% gainer on Friday.

......................
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Tamboo Tamboo 5 days ago
President-elect Trump to appoint pro-crypto cabinet members to fulfill his promise of making the US the "crypto capital of the planet."
👍️ 1 🚀 1
delerious1 delerious1 5 days ago
Meanwhile American Blockchain GVSI will be happy to know that Doge is up another 7% for a new 52 week hi of .36
👍 1
delerious1 delerious1 6 days ago
Yes the same crew....if it was me I'd be afraid to show my face, let alone offer trading advice LMFAO
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Drugdoctor Drugdoctor 6 days ago
Yep, even more hilarious is same crew is still here telling everyone to sell again. The same crew that said sell right before the run to $1.97 from .0008. And they think we even hear them? Toooooo FUNNNNNNYYYYY
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Lime Time Lime Time 6 days ago
Can you provide more info on your $3000 claim?

If I make $100,000 this year in stock dividends, I'd need to pay $15,000 in income tax when I file in April.

If I take a loss of $15,000 from a penny stock I've held for years, removing it as a worthless security, then I would owe zero dollars in income tax.

Is this not correct?
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delerious1 delerious1 6 days ago
With the namechange to American Blockchain, couldn't have come at a better time since most Crypto is up today....am I right Tamboo?
👍 1 👎️ 1
delerious1 delerious1 6 days ago
This is going to be good....I can tell by the panic in the replies....it's started
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Lime Time Lime Time 6 days ago
American Blockchain FKA Good Vibrations Shoes. We will rocket in 2025 wait for it 🚀

BITCOIN is on huge fire. This will be next to run. Take advantage of these cheap shares! I did.
👍️ 1
Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 6 days ago
It's right there in black and white directly from Sharp himself yet the pumpers keep ignoring it or worse, lying about it and denying it.

It's pathetic.

FINRA will not process a corporate action such as a name change, symbol change or reverse (or forward) split while an issuer is deemed delinquent in its reporting requirements.
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Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 6 days ago
Yes it does remind me of his other 😎success in 2021 which went to $1.97 from .0008 cents

It has been pointed out to you and repeatedly ignored by you that the temporary increase in TSNP/HMBL's price was because it was part of a massive coordinated online pump and dump scheme that even Sharp criticized.

Neither $HMBL nor I pump. Period. End of story. The share price took off due to a combination of third party hype and short squeezing. This is not the company's fault. However, tortious interference comes with a price as those guilty of it will soon discover.— George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC (@GeorgeASharp) May 26, 2022

5/12 HUMBL never promoted its stock & it is not their fault that it went to a ridiculous $7+. Outsiders pumped the stock through social media & those that write ignorant advice newsletters like @insidrfinancial. It was FOMO & resulting short covering that caused HMBL to go $7+.— George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC (@GeorgeASharp) February 14, 2022

And TSNP didn't have all the SEC and FINRA problems that GVSI has.

It's pathetic that the only thing pumpers have to hang on to is hopium and a pump and dump scheme that had nothing to do with GVSI.

Now as far as GVSI is concerned, the missing audited financials from 2008 - 2013 makes GVSI delinquent and a dirty shell.

No audited financials means no reverse merger for GVSI and Sharp already said he abandoned getting GVSI audited, SEC registered and reporting and there are SIX YEARS of missing GVSI financial reports.

I had hope to start $GVSI as an SEC reporter, but after over a year of having two accounting firms work on it & discussions with the SEC, I begrudgingly agreed that I would not be able to get the books audited. https://t.co/tOP9FImksT— George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC (@GeorgeASharp) February 7, 2023

Our attorneys & auditors have concluded that it is impossible to audit $GVSI due to past corporate mismanagement of records/actions. Therefore, we are abandoning efforts to become an SEC reporter & are preparing an application for OTCIQ access to be filed with OTCM within 60 days— American Blockchain Corporation (@OTCpinkGVSI) June 30, 2022

This is just one of the many reasons (along with FINRA's Notice of Deficiency and the SEC restriction on its corporate actions) that GVSI will continue to have problems getting the SEC/FINRA approval of it's corporate actions.
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Major Profits Major Profits 6 days ago
Yep, and there were quite a lot of folks (the smug ones) who were so sure of themselves that it was gonna happen last year and who ridiculed others who said it wasn't. Oops.

Anyhow, I think GS changed the name at the STATE level so as to keep anyone else from getting it. But as GS has said about the FEDERAL level:
American Blockchain Corporation
@OTCpinkGVSI
Dec 28, 2023
$GVSI Name Change - The Issue, the Solution, and the Good News
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GCcP6AvXEAAr7Tg?format=png&name=small
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GCcQKhBXEAAsOTo?format=png&name=small
6:23 AM · Dec 28, 2023

The Issue
...FINRA will not process a corporate action such as a name change, symbol change or reverse (or forward) split while an issuer is deemed delinquent in its reporting requirements.
GL

Only a few vacancies left...
👍️ 1
Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 6 days ago
Even calling one out by NAME!
George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC
@GeorgeASharp
Gawd, I wish the pumpers would stop pumping my stocks. I mean you @*********
7:39 AM · Aug 7, 2023

Let's be specific as to who Sharp called out by name - Drugdoctor.

Gawd, I wish the pumpers would stop pumping my stocks. I mean you @Drugdoctor2014— George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC (@GeorgeASharp) August 7, 2023
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Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 6 days ago
George would have had to have filed within 10 days prior to the Nevada SOS filing. Either way FINRA did not process it or George did not file with FINRA.
Sharp did file for a name and ticker change and it was already denied by the SEC because of GVSI's delinquency. Sharp even posted this information on X about the SEC denial and that it responded to his filing for a name and ticker change with "concerns" about what prior managements "actions" (i.e. not filing any financial reports from 2008 - 2013 bofore the Form 15) but this is purposely ignored by lying pumpers.

Another in a long list of Sharp failures.
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delerious1 delerious1 6 days ago
Yes it does remind me of his other 😎success in 2021 which went to $1.97 from .0008 cents … and folks were trying to scare shareholders back then as well😎
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surfkast surfkast 6 days ago
There was a NEVADA name change which you already know is meaningless. There are filings as you posted excerpts. So sad.
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Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 6 days ago
Why does what Sharp did at HUMBL sound so familiar here? Lying to and gaslighting investors, hiding important information from investors and stringing investors along with fraudulent pumps while he enriches himself (and insiders), just like he's doing here with GVSI. Remember Sharp dumped his 20 million GVSI common shares right before the failed merger and then lied by saying he was never issued the shares.

Hindenburg Research has a long history of exposing scams and scammers like Sharp using forensic financial research. It has been written up by the Economist and referenced by the SEC in their investigations.

https://hindenburgresearch.com/about-us/

https://hindenburgresearch.com/humbl/

Hindenburg Research

HUMBL: Illusions of Grandeur, Collapsing International Deals, And Lurking Dilution

Published on May 20, 2021

• HUMBL is an early-stage fintech company with a $5.6 billion fully diluted market cap that recently reverse-merged onto the OTC. It ended its most recent quarter with ~$156,000 in revenue and currently has ~$4.5 million in cash. It had zero revenue in 2020.

• The company aspires to be an Amazon or Alipay, imagining that it will facilitate payments to billions of people around the world by transcending borders and lowering costs using blockchain technology.  

• Our research shows the company has failed to deliver on even the most basic aspects of its business plan, including features it claimed were completed months ago. Six months after going public, its users can’t send or receive money on its “payment” app, let alone engage in low cost, cross-border crypto currency transactions.

• The vast majority of merchants appearing on HUMBL’s “Pay” platform don’t accept HUMBL Pay. Some didn’t even know they were on the platform and had never heard of HUMBL when we spoke with them.

• Despite HUMBL’s claims of disrupting the payments business, HUMBL uses another payment processor, Stripe, to support the few merchants on its platform who are accepting payments.

• We found that international deals announced over the last year – a key source of the company’s perceived legitimacy – never got off the ground or have quietly collapsed behind the scenes.

• For example, a partnership announced more than a year ago to bring HUMBL to Africa never got beyond the press release stage, according to an executive at its planned partner.

• A landmark $15.6 million deal to sell rights to HUMBL’s business in 15 countries in Oceania, including Australia and Tonga, collapsed. We found the partner for this major planned deal has no presence beyond a local entity filing, and operates out of a small residence.

• A deal to expand into India has been sidelined by COVID and regulations that prevent merchants from charging for digital payments, per HUMBL’s planned deal partner.

• An investment by a Singaporean company into HUMBL’s Asia business hasn’t resulted in any specific initiatives 6 months later, though directors at the company received shares valued at ~$14 million.

• HUMBL’s expansion into Mexico, where HUMBL’s CEO boasted of recruiting 300 merchants in 3 days, has only 2 merchants listed as accepting payments. Even those two told us they aren’t currently accepting HUMBL payments; the business in Mexico is on hold pending changes to the platform, according to a local merchant working with the company.

• Meanwhile, amidst these grand plans, HUMBL quietly issued preferred shares convertible into 5.54 billion common shares to insiders and family members, setting retail investors up for total annihilation when those shares unlock and become available for sale.

• The strategy was orchestrated in part by the company’s financial advisor and a major warrant holder, George Sharp, who gaslit investors following revelations of the issuance, later saying details on corporate action were withheld so as not to create “mass panic” and to save investors from themselves.

• Over the weekend, Sharp, who had made his account private days before, announced on Twitter that he was parting ways with HUMBL, leaving public shareholders little to show for these massive giveaways to insiders except ever-more grandiose plans that appear stuck at the vapor stage.

• HUMBL’s CEO, Brian Foote, responded to investor backlash by tweeting that he won’t convert his personal holdings of preferred shares until at least the end of 2022. He did not, however, offer the same assurances regarding 3 billion other shares, including those held by his family’s trust.

• In the past year, faith-based go-public transactions such as HUMBL have brought the investing public an endless parade of risky companies that boast of all the things they will someday revolutionize. Meanwhile, while investors are strung along by hope, and lulled into looking the other way, they face a literal reality of billions of shares becoming available to convert and sell.

Initial Disclosure: After extensive research, we have taken a short position in shares of HUMBL, Inc. This report represents our opinion, and we encourage every reader to do their own due diligence. Please see our full disclaimer at the bottom of the report.

Introduction

HUMBL says its mission is to help companies and businesses “rapidly migrate to the digital economy” through the blockchain.

In its go-public presentation, HUMBL CEO Brian Foote described his vision with a slide that compared HUMBL’s role in the development of the internet to that of Apple and Amazon.

The fledgling San Diego-based company already has 3 divisions, each with broad plans to revolutionize various digital economies:

• HUMBL Pay, which plans to rival Alipay and major payment processors, facilitating everything from payments to street merchants in Mexico to worker remittances in Tonga.

• HUMBL Marketplace, which plans to rival eCommerce giants by “allow(ing) consumers and merchants to connect more seamlessly in the digital economy.” It hosts several merchant stores that sell mostly handmade products like soap, pet beds, and jewelry and plans to offer sports and entertainment NFTs and digital tokens to track the authenticity of goods on its platform.

• HUMBL Financial, which aims to provide “simplified investing on the blockchain” and currently offers indices that create allocations for crypto portfolios.

Despite its ambitious plans, the company finished its recent March quarter with just ~$156,000 in revenue and a ~$1.4 million loss. [Pg. 22] It pays $3,250 per month to operate out of its WeWork office space and currently has ~$4.5 million in cash from recent sales of stock and warrants.

The company closed out 2020 with no revenue and a $713,000 net loss, according to its annual report.  

HUMBL went public after announcing a reverse merger deal in November, where it merged with a dormant flooring products business.

Shortly thereafter, the company’s market value peaked at about $50 billion on a fully diluted basis on the back of extreme blockchain enthusiasm among its OTC investor base.

After reviewing corporate filings and legal documents for HUMBL and various HUMBL-affiliated companies, and interviewing numerous former associates, business partners, and merchants, we believe that HUMBL is little more than a preliminary-stage startup propped up by techno-babble.

Currently, despite its penny stock status, HUMBL’s fully diluted market value stands at about $5.6 billion, making it one of the most overvalued illusions in the stock market today

Part I: HUMBL’s Opaque Transition To A Public Company

HUMBL announced a reverse merger with Tesoro Enterprises, Inc. on November 12th 2020, marking the beginning of its entrance onto the OTC Markets. The merger closed on December 3rd, 2020. [Pg. 2]

HUMBL Deal Is “Going to Bring Credibility Finally to the OTC”, Promoter Told HUMBL Investors

But HUMBL Shareholders Weren’t Told That Insiders Were To Be Issued Preferred Shares Convertible Into ~5.54 Billion Common Shares Until Over 4 Months Later

The HUMBL deal was shepherded by OTC investor George Sharp, who described himself during HUMBL’s debut webcast on December 9th as “an advocate for shareholder rights and honesty in the OTC.” [00:15] 

“I’m not easily impressed, but I was blown apart,” Sharp said about his introduction to HUMBL…This deal is going to bring credibility finally to the OTC.” [1:58, 2:45]

Right out of the gate, shareholders were left in the dark on a critical investment consideration—the number of actual fully diluted shares outstanding. This, of course, is key to understanding how much of the enterprise they actually would own and the company’s valuation.

The November press release announcing the deal was short on details, saying simply that HUMBL CEO Brian Foote had acquired “the control block of voting shares” and “a significant number of common shares.”

Rather Than Informing Its Shareholders That 5.54 Billion New Shares Would Be Created, HUMBL Issued 2 Press Releases Shortly After the Deal That Signaled Its Share Count Was Decreasing.

The Stock Soared ~91% On the “Good News”

The day after the merger announcement, the company (still named Tesoro at the time) issued a press release stating that CEO Brian Foote had retired 551 million shares without consideration, lowering the overall share count.  

This “good news” of the CEO voluntarily tightening the share count sent HUMBL shares spiking 91% from the prior day. 

Four days later, on November 17, the company announced that Foote had locked up an additional 318 million shares, yet again signaling that the CEO was actively removing shares from the overall share count.

The press release tallied the total reduction in shares, reiterating the notion that Foote was focused on constraining the share count:

“Upon completion of the conversion, Tesoro’s issued and outstanding number of common shares will have been reduced by over 860 million shares since Mr. Foote became President of Tesoro.” 

It also included this reassuring statement, highlighting the expectation that there would be no new shares outstanding in 2021, an assertion that would later prove highly misleading:  

“The company does not anticipate that the number of common shares outstanding will increase during the remainder of 2020 and throughout 2021.” 

HUMBL’s Fully Diluted Market Valuation Hit $50 Billion At One Point, (Greater Than The Market Cap of Twitter) Without Its Regular Shareholders Even Realizing

On February 25th, The Company Announced A Reverse Split. Rather Than Taking the Opportunity to Inform Investors About Its Billions of Shares of Latent Dilution, Promoter George Sharp Told Investors “If You’re Worried About Dilution, Don’t Be”.

By early February, HUMBL’s stock soared to highs of $7.72 as the broader market rallied along with everything crypto. Its investors still had no idea that its fully diluted market cap had just reached ~$50 billion, putting it on par with Twitter.

On February 25, HUMBL announced that FINRA had processed its planned corporate actions including its share issuances and a 4-to-1 reverse stock split.

In the press release, HUMBL COO Jeffrey Hinshaw said one of the reasons for the move was to “pinpoint the true value of the common shares”. Yet at the time, HUMBL did not provide specifics on its massively dilutive preferred shares, making such precision impossible.

The next day, promoter George Sharp fielded questions from concerned shareholders about the corporate action, assuaging those who were concerned about potential dilution: “If you’re worried about dilution, don’t be.” [9:30]

On the same call, Sharp told investors he was simply doing them a favor by being opaque about the company’s corporate actions, such as the surprise reverse stock split announced at the same time:

“I made the conscious decision that we were not going to tell you and I’ll tell you why: it would have created mass panic…I don’t want to sound like I’m your mother, but we saved a lot of you from yourselves here.”  [9:55]

HUMBL Filed its Annual Report On April 14th, Disclosing For The First Time (And 4 Months After the Deal Closed) That New Preferred Shares Issued to Insiders Can Convert Into Over 5.5 Billion Shares, Beginning December 2021

It wasn’t until April 14 that shareholders learned the details of the reverse-merger.

The company’s delayed annual report revealed that HUMBL outstanding common stock, on a fully diluted basis, had actually increased by more than 600%, from 974 million shares to 6.5 billion shares.

Specifically, HUMBL’s 552,522 Series B Preferred Shares are eligible for conversion at a rate of 10,000-to-1, into 5,525,220,000 shares of common stock, as soon as December 3, 2021. [Pg. 31] That number then increased in the latest quarterly filing by another ~18 million shares to ~5.54 billion total. [Pg. 3]

HUMBL’s long silence around the dilution stood in sharp contrast to the 2 announcements it made in November regarding the reduction of common stock. It also represented a total about-face from its statement that it did not anticipate an increase in common shares outstanding in 2021.

Facing Criticism From Investors on the Dilution Surprise, HUMBL’s CEO Foote Tweeted That He Wouldn’t Sell Any Of His Personal Shares Until The End of 2022 

No Assurances Were Made Regarding the Other 3 Billion Shares, Including Those Held By Foote’s Family And Deal Partners

Following the disclosure, HUMBL’s stock price began to drop as some investors wised up to the latent dilution.

In an effort to quell the panic, HUMBL’s CEO responded by tweeting that he would not sell his “personal shares” until the end of 2022.

Foote appeared to be referencing the preferred shares issued to his entity, 30 Block LLC, which holds 2,497,070,000 common shares on an as-converted basis (45% of the total). [Pg. 4] 

Foote said nothing, however, about the 335,610,000 shares, on an as-converted basis, held by The Stephen L. and Sandra M. Foote Revocable Trust. [Pg. 5]   Based on background checks, Stephen and Sandra appear to be Brian’s parents. The HUMBL holdings in their trust are worth $292 million based on current prices. 

There are also no assurances about the other 3,028,130,000 shares that unlock on December 3, either, which represent ~$2.6 billion worth of stock at current market prices. [Pg. 9]

That latent dilution represents a ticking time bomb for a stock that currently trades about $15 million in volume per day.  

Promoter Further Gaslights HUMBL Investors By Making Light Of Extraordinary Dilution Risk, Telling Them They Ought To Sell Their Shares If They Really Think Insiders Are Going To Dump Them At Year End

Promoter George Sharp also responded on Twitter to the backlash following HUMBL’s disclosure, telling shareholders to sell if they think 6 billion new shares will suddenly appear. 

This strikes us as classic gaslighting. To respond to Sharp, about 3 billion shares will suddenly become available for sale in December.

Sharp also chastised investors for not recognizing that insiders had earned these shares. The following individuals now have shares, on an as-converted basis, with the following current valuations: 

Brian Foote, CEO of HMBL: $2.2 billion [Pg. 4]

Mark Grado, consultant for HUMBL and Block 30: $488 million [Pg. 5]

Jeffrey Hinshaw, Co-founder and COO of HUMBL: $353 million [Pg.5]

Michele Rivera, Global Partners and Team Lead at HUMBL: $250 million [Pg. 5]

Sharp has done extraordinarily well too. He parlayed his $200,000 investment in HUMBL into an investment valued at around $394 million as of March 9, according to his company Forwardly Inc.’s annual report. [Pg. 20 -21]

Now we examine whether HUMBL’s achievements to date have warranted anything resembling its current valuation. 

Part II:  HUMBL’s Hollow “Launch”

On April 16, the HUMBL Pay app launched in the US, Canada, Mexico, Australia, Singapore, and New Zealand.   

Investors had been hotly anticipating this moment – and perhaps some clarification – since HUMBL’s CEO Brian Foote first described the business with buzzword-laden detail in his earlier December update.

Foote has offered the following descriptions of the business:

• “a mobile app in a limited sandbox” 

• “an elastic layer of Web Three that moves seamlessly across borders” 

• “a silo-buster” that “curates channels” 

• a “Synthetic continuum” that offers “an immersible experience” on a consumer’s “happy path”

Vertical #1—HUMBL Pay App: In A December Investor Call, CEO Foote Explained The Features Built “Right Now”, Which Included Sending And Receiving Money

Halfway through the December call, Foote cut to a slide summarizing all the app’s working features: “O.K. I’m a shareholder. What do you guys have built right now?”   [Dec. 9 Call – 25:22] 

Foote explained: 

“Right now, in the barn, we have – send money, request money, receive money, exchange money, stable coins.” 

Four Months Later, Those Basic Features Weren’t Functioning At Launch

On April 16, two months behind schedule, HUMBL launched HUMBL Pay, described as “a new way to connect, share and pay around the world.”

Yet we found through our testing that there is no way to send, receive, or request money between users or to even know which users are on the platform.

This becomes clear when attempting to search for the company’s most popular user. Among those helping generate excitement about the HUMBL launch was Nick Carter, former lead member of the 1990s hit boy band The Backstreet Boys. 

Carter told his nearly 675,000 Twitter followers that he’d signed up for HUMBL Pay and displayed a screen shot of his username. 

But when we tested the system, we found it didn’t recognize individual users – not even Nick Carter.

Futhermore, there is no indication that users can do anything with stablecoins. All told, the consumer features that Foote claimed to be functional 4 months earlier don’t seem to work.

Despite The Shortcomings Of The HUMBL Pay App, It Immediately Received Rave Reviews On The Apple Store, Suggesting Attempts To Alter Perceptions About The Launch

The Number of New Reviews Has Tapered Off to Nearly Zero, Indicating a Sharp Drop-Off In Interest

One would expect that buzz around a popular ‘paradigm shifting’ app would lead to an increase in users, popularity, and reviews over time.

Given the limitations of HUMBL Pay, the company seems to have experienced the opposite. The app had a few days of rave reviews followed by a complete collapse, trickling off to zero new reviews less than 2 weeks after launch.

Additionally, despite the lack of functioning features, a flood of 5-star reviews posted to the Apple Store didn’t line up with reality, suggesting a concerted effort to alter perceptions around the app and its launch.

A typical review praised the app’s ability to “send money back and forth between family and friends” – something HUMBL Pay clearly couldn’t do.  

Another reviewer claimed to be deleting PayPal, Venmo, and Etsy as HUMBL does everything those apps do – another blatantly untrue statement.

We Sampled Merchants Listed On the App And Found That Only About 5% Were Set Up To Take Payments 

Several We Spoke With Didn’t Know How They Got Listed On The Platform

HUMBL also launched features for merchants. The press release announcing the launch of HUMBL Pay explained that users would be able to “discover merchants; as well as pay, tip, rate and review those same merchants in contactless transactions.”  

But Step 1, discovering merchants, was a problem. Almost all of the merchants appeared to be in San Diego or NYC. And, searches for a region, say NYC, pulled up inaccurate listings, including merchants in Kansas City and Detroit.

Even after successfully locating a merchant on the system, we found there’s a good chance they don’t accept HUMBL. We reviewed 200 merchant listings on HUMBL Pay and found just 9 merchants out of those 200 who were identified as taking payments via the app. 

Partial List of merchants downloaded from the HUMBL Pay app 

We called numerous HUMBL Pay-listed merchants to ask if they take HUMBL payments. Here’s what a sample told us: 

• Doughnut Plant, NYC: “Never heard of it.” “We use Level Up.”

• Barleymash, San Diego: “I doubt we take it because I’ve never heard of it.”

• Los Tacos No. 1, NYC: “We take Apple Pay and Samsung Pay – that’s it.”

• A salesman at Hudson Toyota in Jersey City said he’d need to run it by his manager and called back to explain: “We looked into it and they allow customers to pay with crypto currencies so we wouldn’t be able to accept it.”

So how did all these businesses end up on the platform? 

On the day of the launch, Foote had posted on Twitter, encouraging people to “populate” the app with “ratings, reviews, installs.” 

As a result, HUMBL Pay may have been populated with hundreds or even thousands of merchants who didn’t enter their own information into the app and don’t even know what it is.

In HUMBL’s Q1 filing, the company stated that it had 13,000 “merchant accounts” on its platform. It appears the company is including in that metric vast numbers of merchants who have never heard of the company let alone use its payment services. [P. 39]

When we reached out to one of the 9 merchants actually accepting HUMBL payments — Derrick’s Personalized Exercise in the NYC area — Derrick told us that he already accepted PayPal and credit cards. He said he added HUMBL Pay because he is a HUMBL shareholder: “I thought I’d go all in.”

All told, organic actual demand seems rather thin.

Vertical #2—HUMBL Marketplace: There are Only 23 Merchants On HUMBL’s Shopify-Like Service

One We Spoke With Gave A Glowing Review, But When We Asked If He Was Compensated To Promote HUMBL He Declined To Answer, Citing An NDA With the Company

HUMBL has a second vertical that it hopes will connect consumers and merchants that it calls HUMBL Marketplace, where merchants can operate an online business and accept online payments for products such as soap, pet beds, and zodiac sign-inspired coffees.

HUMBL Marketplace looks like a preliminary attempt to compete with Shopify and other ecommerce solutions. HUMBL Marketplace has a total of 23 merchants on its platform as of this writing. (By comparison, Shopify reported 1,749,000 merchants using its software at the end of 2020. [Pg. 11]) 

We called several merchants and successfully connected with Jake Hubenak at The Meat Project. He told us that HUMBL had approached him about putting his barbeque seasoning business on the platform because someone at HUMBL used and liked the products.  

Hubenak told us “not a day goes by” when he doesn’t get an order through HUMBL. 

It was a glowing endorsement. But, when we asked if he got paid to promote HUMBL, he said he couldn’t talk about that because of a confidentiality agreement. 

HUMBL does not disclose whether it pays its merchants to endorse the platform, and a person might reasonably assume that a merchant would not need to be paid to feature his or her products on a selling platform.  

Note that FTC rule § 255.5 requires disclosure of compensation for testimonials, yet we saw no disclosure of any endorsement deal.

Despite Claims Of Disrupting The Payments World, HUMBL’s Marketplace Offering Currently Uses Stripe To Process Merchant Payments

We confirmed that the few merchants in the U.S. described as accepting payments – either through HUMBL Pay or HUMBL Marketplace – could actually receive payments.

But the acceptance of such payments doesn’t look to be part of a major disruption to the global payments space. HUMBL discloses on its website that it is not a licensed money transmitter:

“HUMBL, Inc. is not a money services business and does not hold itself out to be such. All money transmission services are being provided exclusively by third parties…HUMBL does not offer money transmission services.”

Instead, a review of HUMBL’s merchant contract shows that transactions are actually being done behind-the-scenes by Stripe, one of the largest online payment processors in the world, who would reasonably be assumed to be a competitor of HUMBL. 

Vertical #3—HUMBL Financial: Complex Setup and Reliance on Third-Party Exchanges

Beyond HUMBL Pay and HUMBL Marketplace, the final piece of the HUMBL enterprise is HUMBL Financial:

“HUMBL Financial™ created its BLOCK ETX products to simplify digital asset investing for customers and institutions seeking exposure to a new, 24/7 digital asset class.”

The vertical generated $2,156 in revenue as of last quarter. (Numbers not in thousands) [Pg. 38]

While the company aims to simplify investing in digital assets, we created an account and experienced the opposite. To access HUMBL’s crypto index products, users need to go through a convoluted process.

First, users need to purchase a license key. Then, HUMBL requires users to grant the app access to the user’s account already set up at an established exchange like Binance, Coinbase Pro, or Bittrex.

From there, users can invest in “index products” through the pre-existing exchange architecture. Index products are baskets of cryptocurrencies that are periodically rebalanced. HUMBL charges $5/month for the service.

Users on social media complained about the process, finding it confusing:

It seems clear that the features are preliminary and that HUMBL lacks the proprietary development-base to truly offer a seamless, integrated product.

HUMBL Claims That The App Uses 20,000 Lines Of Proprietary Code To Create Its Trading Strategies

Yet The “Strategies” Appear To Involve Simple Crypto Positions, Then Periodically Rebalancing Them

HUMBL claims it uses “over 20,000” lines of proprietary code to create crypto trading strategies for its users.

Yet many of the trading strategies offered by HUMBL appear quite simple. For instance, the Block 3 product had just purchased a portfolio of 50% BTC, 25% ETH, and 25% of Litecoin when we signed up for it. Later, the allocation shifted to 50% BTC, 25% Litecoin, and 25% DigiByte.

(Source: HUMBL Financial website)

We don’t think a simple product is a bad thing, but it is unclear how thousands of lines of code factor into optimizing such a portfolio and what would justify the $5/month fee.

PART III: HUMBL’s Vanishing International Deals

A key part of HUMBL’s perceived credibility is its claim to be making meaningful inroads as a payments business operating in markets around the world. According to CEO Brian Foote:   

“The 375 million people using Apple Pay are not the total addressable market. HUMBL was built to serve the other 7 billion global consumers for whom the cost, use, and movement of money is on a very different grid.” 

HUMBL Says It Got 300 Mexican Merchants Sign Up In The First 3 Days Of Its Launch

Months Later We Found Zero Activity

On the company’s first call with investors back in December, Foote explained that one reason HUMBL is based in San Diego is its proximity to Mexico: 

“Part of the reason our business was born here is the majority of merchants in Mexico are in cash still, like so physical paper bills and coins.” 

At the time, Foote said the company was surprised by the strong demand for the app among merchants in Mexico:

“I challenged our Mexico sales team. I said ‘OK. Go sign up 100 merchants in a week.’ They came back with 300 merchants in three days.” [Dec. 9, 2020 call, 26:00]

Five months later, however, we couldn’t find anywhere near 300 merchants on HUMBL Pay in Mexico.

Using the map feature, we located 19 merchants in total and identified 2 as accepting HUMBL payments. We reached out to ask about the app:

• Villa Café in Baja: We were told that they had the HUMBL system but had not yet been trained on it.

• Nicky’s Fish and Chips in Iztapalapa, Mexico City: An employee told us they had never heard of HUMBL but that the restaurant accepted credit cards.

“Borderless Day In Baja” Promotional Video Vanishes From HUMBL Website; Mexico Merchant Says Everything Is On Hold

On December 1st, HUMBL announced a successful pilot with merchants in Mexico. The release quoted a tour operator named Fernando Cuevas:

“HUMBL® instantly makes life easier for me, my business and my customers here in Mexico. Being able to pay people for goods and services digitally with HUMBL®, enables my customers to spend more time enjoying their trips, and less time seeking out ATM’s and cash payment options everywhere we go.”

On December 9th, the company posted a video to its website called “A Borderless Day In Baja” which featured a group of visitors touring Mexico with Cuevas, using HUMBL to pay merchants and transfer money to each other.

The video included a stop for a photo op with a Tijuana donkey named Monica painted with zebra stripes.[1] The owner of the zebra donkey accepted HUMBL, per the video:

A disclaimer at the end of the video stated that “all money transmission services are being provided exclusively by third parties” and that the video contains “live and simulated transactions”.

Those simulations still haven’t turned into reality, it seems, despite Mexico being included as one of the markets in which HUMBL Pay was said to have “launched” on April 16.

We contacted Cuevas via WhatsApp in late April. In addition to being the tour guide in HUMBL’s video, Cuevas was also named HUMBL’s “lead affiliate sales representative in the region”. He indicated that the app isn’t ready, writing that until modifications are made to the app, no merchants in Mexico will be able to use it. He then quickly deleted the messages and told us he couldn’t speak on the matter further.

An employee at the Hilo Negro winery and wine bar that featured in the closing segments of the promo video told us they accepted a variety of international and Mexican payment methods but not HUMBL:

“We only use Visa, Mastercard, Carnet (a Mexican transactions service) and also Samsung Pay…No, no we don´t use that one (HUMBL).”  

The “Borderless Day In Baja” video has been removed from HUMBL’s website, though it can still be found on Vimeo.

All told, we found no sign that HUMBL is revolutionizing business in Mexico. We think the company should clarify how many active merchants in Mexico have used the app and the total transaction volume to date.

HUMBL CEO Called Deal With India-Based Payment Processor DIPL A Chance “To Work For 1.4 Billion India Customers” 

More Than a Year Later, A Deal Partner Says The HUMBL Partnership Was Quashed By COVID And That Economics May Be Impossible

On March 20, 2020, HUMBL announced a deal with Digital India Payments (DIPL), a company that processes payments for 30,000 merchants in India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Maldives, Myanmar and Sri Lanka. 

A successful entry into the India market would have been a massive stepping stone toward HUMBL´s stated ambition of serving “7 billion global consumers”.

Foote was quoted as saying:  

“We look forward to putting HUMBL technologies to work for 1.4 billion India customers alongside (DIPL).” 

The ambitious plan involved providing DIPL’s merchants with software to enable banking and other services for its customers: 

“HUMBL Hubs will be offering walk-in services to customers, such as cash pickup, foreign exchange, fair lending, bill payments, pre-paid cards, store credits, travel bookings, internet and cell phone minutes from local merchant (“agent”) locations” 

We spoke with Nayan Raut, the managing director of Kloden Technologies, who was the consultant for  DIPL in negotiations with HUMBL and was listed as the contact in the press release announcing the deal. He told us that the partnership never went ahead, primarily because DIPL´s agent network largely shut down due to the pandemic.

He noted there were longer term issues, explaining that government regulations in India do not allow a payment platform to charge merchants or consumers any percentage, hampering HUMBL’s planned business model.

“As a consumer, however much I pay the merchant, the same amount goes into his bank account. In terms of digital payments there is 0% MDR (Merchant Discount Rate). That is so (the government) can push digitalization.” 

Describing DIPL as a start-up, Raut said he believed DIPL may collapse, along with the deal, as a result of India´s COVID crisis.

“I´m a little worried about DIPL. If they don´t have business for a year or so it will be very difficult for them to survive. I don´t know if they will survive.”

In short, it appears that beyond the press release, HUMBL’s India deal didn’t happen, probably won’t happen, and if it somehow did happen, wouldn’t make HUMBL any money due to regulatory hurdles.

HUMBL Deal With Nigeria’s One Kiosk Was Billed As “A Powerful Economic Driver” For Small Businesses and Communities 

More Than A Year Later, An Executive Says The Deal Never Got Off-The-Ground

On April 3, 2020, HUMBL announced a deal with Laos, Nigeria-based One Kiosk, which brings together merchants and online delivery services. 

At the time, One Kiosk’s CEO said his company had seen a boom in online ordering due to COVID-19 and he believed an ability to pair the company’s service with HUMBL’s financial services would be “a powerful economic driver.” 

Foote claimed HUMBL would use its platform to help local small businesses compete with larger companies:   

“HUMBL helps them get in the game against big box competitors.” 

But HUMBL didn’t help get anyone into the game. 

We reached out to Olatunbosun Babatunde, One Kiosk’s Chief Technology Officer, to check in on the project. He responded: 

“Thank you for reaching out. HUMBL actually reach out to us and they wanted One Kiosk to use their payment system on our platform as a way of entering the African market. But it never went beyond that.” 

HUMBL Announced a Landmark Deal To Sell Rights For 15 Oceania Countries for up to $15 Million To An Unnamed Partner

But The Deal Later Collapsed. We Found The Proposed Deal Partner Was An Entity With No Apparent Physical Or Online Presence, Based Out of a Personal Residence

In a letter to shareholders on January 22, 2021, Foote told investors that the company had secured “our first of multiple option payments on the distribution rights deal in [the] Oceania region” with “plans to enter the region with this group”.

According to a filing months later, an Australian entity called Tuigamala Group Pty Ltd (TGP) had paid $600,000 in December for an option to purchase the territory rights, with plans to invest an aggregate $15 million. [Pg. 33] The initial $600,000 payment also granted TGP 12.5 million warrants at $1 each, worth as much as $84 million at HUMBL’s peak.

Given HUMBL’s description of its plans, one might expect TPG to have had a significant foothold in the region, such as a network of merchants or consumers.

But we could find no online or physical evidence of TPG’s existence aside from its filings with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission.  The entity was created on September 16, 2019 and is owned by Julius Elisara Tuigamala, per the filings.  

The company’s principal place of business appears to be Tuigamala’s house in New Zealand at 37 Claremont Street, Kellyville Ridge NSW 2155. 

In the end, TGP never made any further payments to purchase the country rights and terminated negotiations, but kept the 12.5 million warrants. [Pg. 33] It is unclear whether TGP has exercised the warrants or sold any stock thus far..

Just As We Were Preparing to Publish, George Sharp Exited Stage Left And Blamed Others For The Company’s Performance Decline

Just as we were getting ready to publish, a not-so-unexpected chain of events occurred.

Promoter George Sharp, who had been taking heat on Twitter for HUMBL’s falling share price, made his Twitter account private.

He explained the move was due to “too many smart asses” making “smart ass comments”.

Then, over the weekend, Sharp announced to his private Twitter group that he was parting ways with HUMBL, blaming certain transactions and announcements over the last nine weeks with which he disagreed.

Despite resigning in disagreement, Sharp assured investors that he was still buying shares and that HUMBL’s CEO was still the “Elon Musk of blockchain”.

Conclusion: Investors Are Being Strung Along By Hope, Facing A Tidal Wave of Coming Selling Pressure

Like SPACs, reverse mergers create an avenue for taking companies public quickly and with substandard disclosure requirements. Both have regularly been used to provide opportunities for insiders and early investors to extract wealth from unsuspecting retail investors before those investors realize there’s often little substance to the “business”.

In the past year, such faith-based go-public transactions have brought the investing public an endless parade of risky companies that boast of all the things they will eventually revolutionize.

When presented with the opportunity to prove milestones, these companies often falter, blaming the difficulties of predicting the future.

But HUMBL hasn’t succeeded at implementing features it said were already completed, while talking up evermore speculative and complex lines of business. Its marquee deals, announced loudly as evidence of its legitimacy and progress, have mostly quietly disappeared or stagnated.

Meanwhile, while investors are strung along by hope, and lulled into looking the other way, they face a December reality of literally billions of shares becoming available to convert and sell. We have repeatedly seen how this scenario plays out, and seems to never end well for once-optimistic shareholders. Best of luck to all.
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delerious1 delerious1 6 days ago
😎So you're saying there was no name change or Q3 filing? SMH
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Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 6 days ago
If George Sharp said that the SEC administrative proceeding against GVSI, where the SEC asked him for the missing financials from 2008-2013 that caused the FINRA Notice of Deficiency was "UNWINNABLE"...

https://www.sec.gov/litigation/apdocuments/ap-3-19407.xml

For those wondering why $GVSI didn't file this sooner, counsel had quite a battle getting answers from FINRA and the SEC on how to end this unwinnable battle which was begun by previous management. We finally reached an agreement with the SEC.
https://t.co/KRN4h0hthw— American Blockchain Corporation (@OTCpinkGVSI) June 4, 2023

(Notice how Sharp doesn't mention what the agreement was but GVSI has done nothing to rectify filing ANY audited financials which is what the SEC/FINRA has asked for and Sharp has even admitted GVSI needs to do but hasn't and Sharp's been in control for three years now)

...and Sharp admits that GVSI is delinquent because of those missing financials...

$GVSI Name Change - The Issue, the Solution, and the Good News pic.twitter.com/fllFyJiI67— American Blockchain Corporation (@OTCpinkGVSI) December 28, 2023

Here, the filing of the Form 15 did not absolve GVSI of it's delinquency. Nor does making the company Pink Current, as was accomplished during 2023. While the company is in good standing with OTC Markets, in the eyes of the SEC and FINRA, GVSI remains a delinquent reporter. FINRA will not process any corporate action such as a name change, symbol change or reverse (or forward) split while an issuer is deemed delinquent in its reporting requirements.

- George Sharp
December 28, 2023

...and Sharp already said he can't audit GVSI...

Our attorneys & auditors have concluded that it is impossible to audit $GVSI due to past corporate mismanagement of records/actions. Therefore, we are abandoning efforts to become an SEC reporter & are preparing an application for OTCIQ access to be filed with OTCM within 60 days— American Blockchain Corporation (@OTCpinkGVSI) June 30, 2022

How can he say that he'll get a Form 10 registration statement filed next year for a merger if he already said that doing that was "UNWINNABLE" and that he can't audit GVSI's books (because of the missing financials)?

Sharp thinks his followers are morons and he's right.

All this doesn't add up yet they keep pumping this garbage and Sharp continues to lie to shareholders.

Sharp dumped all of his 20 million GVSI common shares and then lied about never having been issued those shares.

The 20 mil shares of $GVSI that was listed with my holdings in today's revised filing, were previously stated in SEC filings, but were overlooked in the original OTCM disclosure. These shares were purchased out of the market prior to my custodianship app. & gave me standing.— George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC (@GeorgeASharp) February 21, 2023

For those asking, I was never issued the 20 million $GVSI shares in question, which is why they do not appear on subsequent filings. Contrary to what those who like to "pay me back" would like you to believe, I did not sell those shares.— George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC (@GeorgeASharp) February 6, 2024

https://www.otcmarkets.com/otcapi/company/financial-report/359659/content



https://www.otcmarkets.com/otcapi/company/financial-report/391857/content





.
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Major Profits Major Profits 6 days ago
"That means you have no clue about what is going on. It is also clear that you are blocked by GS."
I agree. Here is what GS said:
George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC
@GeorgeASharp
$GVSI - forget about it until mid 2025.
8:48 AM ¡Jun 19, 2024
But some can't forget about it. Can't blame them, I guess, as some might be so far underwater now for believing all the previous HYPEIUM which, btw, lead to this:


But kudos to this trader for his honesty:
Gotta be a man of my word and admit that the Bashers were right all along. High risk/High Reward and the longs lose here it appears. Good luck to all.[February 6, 2024]
I have many on iggy as they are just trying to get a pump going now and it's tiresome. Not just that, but GS had this to say about the pumperazzi:
Pumpers have an agenda
Stop listening to pumpers! [Jul 8, 2022]
George Sharp - CEO of FORW, SRNW, WNFT & GVSI
@GeorgeASharp
Guys, please do NOT BUY any stock including ones with which I am involved because of the unauthorized pumping of this guy or anyone else. Professional pumpers have their own agenda.
5:14 AM ¡ Nov 16, 2022 ¡Twitter Web App
George Sharp - CEO of FORW, SRNW, WNFT & GVSI
@GeorgeASharp
One more time: Anybody buying $GVSI OR ANY STOCK because of guys like the one in the video should get out of the stock market NOW! Only pay attention to information provided by the company, not to so called FURUs who are pumping for their own benefit.
7:11 AM ¡ Jan 3, 2023
Even calling one out by NAME!
George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC
@GeorgeASharp
Gawd, I wish the pumpers would stop pumping my stocks. I mean you @*********
7:39 AM ¡ Aug 7, 2023
GLTU

$GVSI SO FAR
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Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 6 days ago
Sorry, did you see this from the 3rd Quarter Financials?? It's all there....

Sorry, did you see that the SEC information proves you wrong??

Sharp also dumped his 20 million common shares and then lied about never having been issued those shares.

The 20 mil shares of $GVSI that was listed with my holdings in today's revised filing, were previously stated in SEC filings, but were overlooked in the original OTCM disclosure. These shares were purchased out of the market prior to my custodianship app. & gave me standing.— George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC (@GeorgeASharp) February 21, 2023

For those asking, I was never issued the 20 million $GVSI shares in question, which is why they do not appear on subsequent filings. Contrary to what those who like to "pay me back" would like you to believe, I did not sell those shares.— George Sharp - Advocate for truth in the OTC (@GeorgeASharp) February 6, 2024

https://www.otcmarkets.com/otcapi/company/financial-report/359659/content



https://www.otcmarkets.com/otcapi/company/financial-report/391857/content

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surfkast surfkast 6 days ago
OTCM will not change the name until it appears on the Daily List. Clowns can post anything they want to believe, but as has been stated by many here, especially the great DD by Hi_Lo nothing is official unless FINRA processes the name change which obviously they will not. George would have had to have filed within 10 days prior to the Nevada SOS filing. Either way FINRA did not process it or George did not file with FINRA.

Anything else is pure nonsense.
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delerious1 delerious1 6 days ago
😎The Future's So Bright,, I Gotta Wear Shades🚀
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delerious1 delerious1 6 days ago
Sorry, did you see this from the 3rd Quarter Financials?? It's all there....



Exact Company Name: AMERICAN BLOCKCHAIN CORPORATION (hereinafter referred to as “we”, “us”, or “our”
or “the Issuer”).
Formerly known as: Good Vibrations Shoes, Inc. until March 2023

AMERICAN BLOCKCHAIN CORPORATION
(FORMERLY GOOD VIBRATIONS SHOES, INC.)
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS (UNAUDITED)
NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2024 AND 2023

https://www.otcmarkets.com/otcapi/company/financial-report/415870/content
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Hi_Lo Hi_Lo 6 days ago
Formerly known as: Good Vibrations Shoes, Inc. until March 2023
It' CURRENTLY known as Good Vibrations Shoes by the SEC - NOT American Blockchain Corporation.

Straight from the SEC website:

https://www.sec.gov/edgar/browse/?CIK=1068618

"Good Vibrations Shoes, Inc"

The SEC trumps anything done at the state level.

But keep lying and pumping this garbage.
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delerious1 delerious1 6 days ago
Somethings up....traffic is heating up....2 years current Fins are coming soon.......We'll mark you down as being "Mostly Satisfied"
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