GBOE_chart.pngToday’s focus is on a company whose stock, as described by an iHub poster, ‘went from 0.005 to over $1.00 and down to worthless’. The company in question is GeoBio Energy, Inc. (PINK:GBOE), while the occasion is a non-paid trade alert.

The alert in support of GBOE stock is expected to give it a major boost on the market. Is it possible, though? Let us take a quick look at the facts. Yesterday, GBOE stock gave the market session a miss. Not a single share changed hands. No clear explanation has been provided either. What happened on Wednesday, however, was a performance to remember.

Two days ago, GBOE closed the session making a huge jump in the value. Clocking in at a four-week high of $0.087 per share, GBOE stock more than doubled in value, registering a staggering 117% surge and shifting 7.4 thousand shares throughout the whole session. The latter ended up considerably lower than the daily average trading volume, currently estimated at 22 thousand.

GBOE_logo.gifNow, third parties have embarked on a free advertising campaign to raise awareness about the company, which by the way, has not filed any official press releases for quite a long time. Whether that move will produce any substantial effects, remains to be seen in the forthcoming session. Yet, investors will most probably not forget that non-paid undertakings rarely produce any earth-shattering results apart from a one-off momentary movement.

GBOE may not be among the most prolific PR providers, but the company has so far been doing its best to stay relevant, as seen from a financial perspective. On May 23, GBOE filed a full-on 10-Q report with the SEC. The document, which covers the quarter ended Mar. 31, 2011, showed the following basic figures:

  • $36K in current, respectively total assets, 86% of which in cash;
  • $3.3 million in current liabilities;
  • zero revenues and a quarterly net loss in excess of $2 million.

As it seems, you don’t need to be a professor to evaluate the current financial health of GBOE. Unless the company comes up with some commercially viable projects, it will be unlikely to put its financial state in order.