Saturday, December 3, 2011

Dilution and Cash as a Strategic Weapon - 3Q

Cash Reserve - Now $1.5M
These expenses may delay or otherwise adversely affect our ability to achieve our profitability and debt reduction goals. We hope to eventually eliminate our litigation expense, but we must and will take all necessary steps to bring infringement of our patents to an end. We have reserved cash for this purpose.

Expand Litigation - Soon?
Operating expenses for the three months ended September 30, 2011 and 2010 were about $1.1 million and $1.0 million, respectively. Our operating expenses include significant professional fees which can be expected to increase moving forward as we defend against infringement and expand our patent litigation.

These expenses have increased in the latter half of 2011 and are expected to continue to increase into 2012 in advance of trial, and as we expand our litigation to protect the competitive advantage of our licensees by prosecuting additional producers and other parties infringing our patents. Consequently, litigation expenses may delay or otherwise adversely affect our ability to achieve our profitability and debt reduction goals. We hope to eventually eliminate our litigation expense, but we must and will take all necessary steps to bring infringement of our patents to an end. Despite these expected increases, our operating expenses can be expected to decrease overall as a percentage of revenue in future periods as we continue to realize increased economies of scale from our existing and new licensing activities.

Litigation AND Financing Directly Related to Building Cash Reserves
Our liquidity and capital resources were improved during the third quarter of 2011 as compared to prior periods. During the nine months ended September 30, 2011, we produced about $0.5 million in net cash from operating activities and about $3.3 million in net cash from investing activities, and used about $2.3 million in net cash in financing activities. The shift in early 2011 from relying on cash from financing activities to producing and using surplus cash from operating and investing activities was an important milestone for GreenShift and its shareholders. That said, the output of our licensees, the price for corn oil are variable and litigation costs can be expected to continue to increase. Thus, until we build up a meaningful cash reserve, we cannot rule out the possibility that we may seek financing to cover operating needs in the future. Our cash positions at September 30, 2011 and December 31, 2010 were about $1.5 million and $18,000, respectively.

License Agreements More than Cover Sales, Operating Expense, Professional Fees
Income from operations during the nine months ended September 30, 2011 was about $7.1 million, or about $2.1 million net of the $5.0 million in performance bonuses earned from YA Corn Oil during the nine month period. We anticipate improving on this result in future quarters in connection with the commencement and realization of full production by existing and new licensees. Our costs of sales and operating expenses moving forward will be primarily comprised of (1) technology royalties; (2) employee costs; (3) travel, materials and other expenses incidental to execution of our license support services; (4) general and administrative costs relating to our offices, utilities and insurance; and (5), professional fees relating to accounting, corporate and litigation activities. As discussed above, we expect that the license agreements we have executed to date will provide sufficient revenue to more than cover all of these costs on an ongoing basis.

*********************
If you follow my summary logic as outlined in blue (above each quote from the 3Q) you might agree that:

1.  The Cash Reserve is for litigation
2.  The Litigation is about to expand.
3.  The Cash Reserve will also expand - until it becomes "meaningful"
4.  The license agreements already executed will more than cover Sales and Operating Expense.


Up till now I am trying to basically restate what I think is already said in the 3Q.  Now this next step takes a step further - deduced from above:

5.  Present financing activities (IF ANY, stock sales/dilution) are being used to service the debt and add to the cash reserve.

SkunK? SO WHAT! 

Well, as a shareholder, I am not here to argue in favor of dilution - lets get that out of the way right away.  No one has to give me a history lesson here - I lived it :~).  Can we learn the lessons of the past without living in the past?  We do need to recognize where we are now and what has changed - luckily we are now profitable - with net income.  May I be so bold to state that dilution, if it is done in a limited fashion, [less than the percentage growth in net income], and the gained assets are moved to cash and the elimination of debt - then it directly adds to book value - tangible equity that will at some point directly affect the pps. 

How can we now sit with more cash than market cap?  How can we set at this pps with a small but valid earnings per share?   Two main reasons at this point:

1.  Lack of a (profitable) track record.  Pennyland is full of stocks that manipulate their books to show a quarter of profit.    In the 3Q GreenShift made a small but significant profit due to revenues from corn oil royalties.  As investors, we know that these royalties are not one time sales or asset manipulation,  but rather dependable, recurring, expanding royalties.  It may take a quarter or two for new money to notice the trend line and catch on.

2.  Debt.  Cash on hand does not pay off debt.  Yet cash on hand can balance debt.  If we held 20 million in cash and 20 million in debt would the debt still be scary?  Of course the plan is to pay off debt AND raise cash on hand, however I think you see my point.  As the debt is lowered and the cash is increased our real book value increases - and that will directly affect share price - and directly benefit shareholders.  Yes it would be different if it was being used to fund operating costs - like in the past - then we were literally only "buying time".  Since we only have inventory - and own few other physical assets - cash is even more important to demonstrate our substance.

Strategic Weapon
With Prevost no longer mentioned after the Markman, and with the defendants sanctioned for their tactics and clinging to the one year rule, one might guess that through their eyes the best option left is to simply outlast GreenShift.   IF this is the case - then cash-on-hand becomes GreenShift's strongest strategic weapon.  Cash-on-hand is the biggest club one has to beat down the morale of the "we can out last 'em, lets wait them out" pool of defendants.  Nothing says "we got all the time in the world" like a huge cash reserve.  In my opinion, nothing will move the defendants to settlement faster than an increasing, meaningful cash reserve.   

Conclusion 
If dilution is happening at a limited rate [less than the rate of increase of earnings per share], and if the assets gained are used to increase the intrinsic book value by directly decreasing debt and increasing cash on hand - then I would argue that it may very well benefit shareholders in the mid to long term.  If, as a strategic weapon in the litigation; an increasing, meaningful cash reserve begins to precipitate significant settlements, then it may benefit shareholders immediately.

SkunK

22 comments:

slashnut said...

this is going to be a bad week for gers.. im selling all of my shares.. will be headed back to under a .001

Anonymous said...

Not the real Slashnuts.

Anonymous said...

Wow, if someone is trying to impersonate Slashnuts to try and drive the pps down, us longs are really on to something:) Go Gers!!!!!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

KK and DW were right. Poet and Icms patents rejected like they expected. Sounds like Poets next.

GreenShift will continue to protect the competitive advantage of its licensees. David Winsness, GreenShift’s Chief Technology Officer, said that “We are aware of no practical method to recover corn oil from stillage that is not covered by our patents, including processes involving ‘staged’ recovery of oil from emulsion layers, recovery of oil following cold fermentation, and use of chemical additives. We welcome and expect innovation, however, we also expect any and all use of our technologies to be lawful.”

GreenShift intends to take all necessary steps to bring infringement of its patents to an end, including filing additional lawsuits at the appropriate time. GreenShift further plans to seek additional relief for instances of willful infringement.

Anonymous said...

can valero license patents thats rejected? whats the point in that?

Anonymous said...

It's starting to get fun watching the gers saga unfold. More good times over the next year as the pps rockets one day....glta

Anonymous said...

Does anybody know whens Poet lawsuit starts? Does Gers have to wait til valero sells oil or can lawsuit start now?

nobody123789 said...

Skunk,

I hope you are right as we both have lived this melodrama. I do need to point out the obvious; there are a number of "ifs" in your scenario. One thing that KK needs to do that he has not done in the past is to demonstrate concern for the common share holder; for the "ifs" not to be so daunting. In my view the militancy with which he addresses possible settlements is very critical. If he attempts to fulfill a blood lust with the dastardly infringers there is much less likelihood of settlement in the near term. The impact of decent settlements now on the common shareholder would be very positive. This is an example of his choosing between his personal interest and what would be best for the common shareholders. .

Anonymous said...

Get a life loser who tries to immitate slashnuts.

Ethanol Producer #9 said...

I have proof, from a previous ICM employee, that DVG is working these boards. You could call it a smoking gun. I'm working with my lawyer to file lawsuits in Nebraska as well as Kansas. I'll keep everyone informed as much as possible.

Anonymous said...

Eth prod #9, you rock! Go get DVG! A big THANK YOU!:)

Anonymous said...

I think we can look at Center Ethanol as the role model for future settlements.

However it was easier to settle when the tab was lower.

Two infringers. The first, Center Ethanol settles and pays the royalty over the past year. Another holds out a year, pays nothing over the past year and sees which way the markman winds blows. Now they want to settle. It is not fair to Center and the rest of the legitimate customers to not charge at least the past year of royalties.

No one wants to reward infringement by letting plants settle for nothing at this point and getting a finacial edge over their competition.

That would encourage others to infringe for another year and then get another free year.

We should not go for blood, but then again, if you reward infringement, then you will only get more of it.

Anonymous said...

To fake Slashnut,

What you just did was illegal. Pretending to act like someone else (slashnuts) is ilegal. Eventhough you took off the S at the end, it's still fraud as the intent was cleary presented.

By law, you will have to be identified whether its by You or thru investigation. My bet will be my team's investigation.

I will prosecute you to the fullest what you did. I will go full throttle since I do not have to pay any legal fees (that's a hint).

Look forward in meeting with you soon.

This is a guarantee and promise. Will work on this Monday morning first thing :)

nobody123789 said...

You are throwing around a number of threats. I have a suggestion, for whatever it is worth. Stop the chest beating, do what you need to do and when/if it ever comes to a closure let us know. Otherwise, it sounds like an empty attempt at intimidation,

Anonymous said...

Maybe ur slashnut or vdg. Maybe ur the impostor.

nobody123789 said...

You just impeached your "proposed" actions as having no legitimacy. Do you have any commentary or insights to share on the delicate condition and this critical time in the maturation of our company? We would love to hear them.

Anonymous said...

EP9,
Many here have long suspected this. Can you give us a bite to chew on?

fortune cookie said...

comments from one feeling threatened suggests an admission of guilt

Yul Brenner said...

nobody12378 why defend an imposter slashnut?

slashnut said...

my name is slashnut and im selling my shares just like i said i was. prosecute me to the fulllest .. also prosecute yul brenner for impersonating him lol

Anonymous said...

100000000 bid not bad?

Anonymous said...

On November 27, 2006, almost two years after the filing of GreenShift’s ‘858 Patent, Flottweg and its former CEO filed for a U.S. patent entitled “Method of and Device For Increasing the Yield of Oil Production In a Process of Producing Bio-Ethanol" bearing serial number 11/604,435 (the “Flottweg Application”). In its 2006 application and during the continued prosecution of the Flottweg Application at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (the “PTO”), Flottweg has attempted to claim that it invented a process to extract corn oil from ethanol stillage based on the use of Flottweg’s Tricanter centrifuge.

The PTO has rejected the pending claims in the Flottweg Application on the basis that GreenShift’s pre-existing patent application directed to its corn oil extraction process, in combination with other prior art, renders Flottweg’s claims obvious. In an office action rejecting all of Flottweg’s pending claims, the PTO underscored the distinction between GreenShift’s corn oil extraction process itself and the equipment used in GreenShift’s corn oil extraction process, and the PTO stated the following in connection with the cited pre-existing GreenShift patent application:

“The means or device for recovering oil [taught by GreenShift in its patent application] … may comprise any suitable device for separating oil from a mixture, such as a gravity separator (which advantageously requires no additional energy input to effect separation and, thus, further enhances efficiency), a centrifuge, a disk-stack centrifuge, a centrifugal decanter, or an evaporator. … Moreover, in addition to a self-cleaning bowl type centrifuge as the means for recovering oil from the thin stillage, a nozzle bowl disk stack centrifuge would work, as could a horizontal centrifugal three phase decanter.”
“Any claim that use of Flottweg’s horizontal decanters or ICM’s repackaged ‘corn oil Tricanter system’ will avoid liability for infringing our patents is false,” said Kevin Kreisler, GreenShift’s Chief Executive Officer. “Flottweg and any other equipment suppliers, service providers or other parties that knowingly subsidize, contribute to or induce infringement of our patents will be held accountable.”

Hindsight is 20/20, and Completely Irrelevant

David Winsness, GreenShift’s Chief Technology Officer, added: “ICM and others have stated their view that our corn oil extraction patents were issued in error and should be declared invalid as obvious and unpatentable. It is significant that Flottweg’s Application and correspondence with the PTO demonstrates that Flottweg and its former CEO clearly disagree with ICM’s view and believe instead that corn oil extraction from stillage is a novel and patentable process.”

Kreisler continued: “ICM designed and/or built about 105 ethanol facilities, each without the ability to extract corn oil from stillage at start-up. The entire industry produced ethanol at reduced efficiency and sacrificed billions in lost profits by not recovering the 40 billion pounds of corn oil that passed through the fleet without extraction between 1980 and 2004, the year our patents were filed. There is a common sense reason for Flottweg’s November 2006 ‘awakening’ and the total absence of backend corn oil production prior to 2004: extracting corn oil from stillage was not obvious to those skilled in the art at the time of filing of our patent application in 2004.”

“Thousands of skilled engineers, operators, plant managers, and owners designed, built and operated billions of gallons of ethanol production facilities without backend corn oil extraction for decades before GreenShift showed up. The fundamental process steps we developed to extract corn oil from stillage may be clear to many in hindsight, but any argument that our patents should be declared invalid because corn oil extraction is obvious today is a distortion of the law and can only fail.”

 
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