Robin Carnahan, Secretary of State
Securities Division
600 W. Main Street
PO Box 1276
Jefferson City, MO 65102
(573) 751-2061
Penny Stocks
A Guide for Investors
This booklet is designed to provide you, the beginning
investor, with general information about
penny stocks and the markets in which they are
traded. Because there is so much fraud involving
penny stocks, this booklet serves mostly to warn
potential investors against becoming involved
with penny stocks. However, you should be aware
that many small, deserving, completely legitimate
companies issue stock that trades for pennies a
share in the over-the-counter market. The trick is
to be able to spot the potential fraud. We hope this
booklet will help you do just that.
What are penny stocks?
There is no set, accepted definition of penny
stock. Some people define it as stock priced under
one dollar, some under five dollars. Some people
include only those securities traded in the “pink
sheets”, some include the entire OTC market. The
Securities Division considers a stock to be a “penny stock” if it trades at or under $5.00 per
share and trades in either the “pink sheets” or on
NASDAQ. In addition, a true penny stock will
have less than $4 million in net tangible assets and
will not have a significant operating history. (In
other words, if a company has real assets, such as
equipment and inventory, and is engaged in
some real business, such as manufacturing, then
the Division does not consider the stock to be penny
stock even though the shares are low-priced.)
The “OTC” market
Penny stocks are not traded on a stock exchange
but are traded in the over-the-counter (OTC) market.
Part of the OTC market is the NASDAQ National
Market (NNM) of the NASDAQ National
(Association of Securities Dealers Automated
Quotation) System, which does not include
any penny stocks.
There are also non-NNM NASDAQ securities,
including some penny stocks. The NASDAQ
system has listing standards that change from time
to time and, depending on the standards, there may
be more or fewer penny stocks on NASDAQ. If
you purchase a low-priced security that is listed
on NASDAQ, it will meet certain minimum standards.
In addition, many NASDAQ prices are
quoted regularly in newspapers, allowing you to
follow the price of your security instead of forcing
you to rely on your broker for all price information.
The third major component of the OTC market
is the National Quotation Bureau’s (NQB) service,
commonly referred to as the “pink sheets”. The
NQB’s securities lists and price information, printed
on pads of long, narrow sheets of pink paper,
have, for all practical purposes, no meaningful listing
standards, and price information is sometimes
difficult, if not impossible, for the small investor
to obtain. Broker-dealers obtain their price information
by calling the trading desks of three “market
makers”. Obviously, small investors do not
have access to those traders and must rely on their
stockbroker for accurate price information.
Principal/Agency
In most securities transactions, your broker-dealer
acts as your agent, arranging a transaction directly
between you and a third party. In compensation
for arranging that trade, you pay your broker-dealer
a commission. In some instances, the brokerdealer
has the security you seek to purchase in
inventory, or wants the security you wish to sell.
The broker-dealer may trade with you on its own
behalf, as a principal in the transaction. When the
broker-dealer acts as a principal, and not as an
agent, the trade confirmation should say that on its
face. The broker-dealer is not paid a commission
in principal trades, but makes its money on the
spread, and by buying and selling at advantageous
times, the same as any other investor. A sizeable
portion of penny stock trades are principal transactions,
and an investor should be alert to the
potential conflicts of such transactions.
Bid/Ask
Penny stocks do not each have a single price at
which they are bought and sold, but a number of
different prices. The first difference is between the
bid price and the ask price. The bid price is how
much someone is willing to pay for the security, or
the price at which you could sell your shares. The
ask price is how much someone will sell their
securities for, or how much you will have to pay.
The difference between the prices is the spread.
The spread
To most investors, the spread represents a built-in
loss at the time of investment. For example, if you
purchased a stock that traded at 1/2 cent bid, 1 cent
ask, the bid would have to more than double in
price for you to break even (the “more than double”
comes from additional costs such as “ticket”
charges and other miscellaneous costs). Many investors
buy penny stocks believing that “trading at
12½ cents” means that they can buy and sell at
12½ cents. This simply is not the case, and any
salesperson who uses such a phrase is only telling
half of the truth. The spreads in penny stocks are
most commonly 25-33%, are often 50-100% and
sometimes are over 100%.
Another factor to keep in mind when evaluating
price information about penny stocks is that there
are two “bid” and two “ask” prices, the inside and outside bid and ask. As a general rule, the price
you will be interested in will be the outside bid and
ask, or the lower bid and the higher ask, as those
are the bid and ask prices to public customers.
Mark-ups
The last pricing factor concerning penny stocks is
called the mark-up. A broker-dealer who has held
the security in its account and subject to the risk of
market price fluctuation, may mark the price of the
security it sells to you up by a certain percentage,
on top of the spread. This is to compensate broker-
dealers for maintaining inventory sufficient to
supply demand for an orderly and liquid market.
What it means to the average investor is another
cost that creates a built-in loss at the time of investment.
In other words, the instant your transaction
is effected, your securities are worth less than
you paid for them.
Although it is no guarantee of a good price, you
are more likely to get a better price in an agency
transaction using a broker-dealer that has no interest
in the transaction, due to the pricing factors
above. In the typical penny stock transaction, the
broker-dealer buys from its customers at the bid
and sells at the ask, capturing as compensation the
spread, plus any mark-up.
Market makers
A market maker is a broker-dealer who stands
ready to buy or sell 100 shares of the stocks in
which it makes a market. When a transaction is
proposed, the market maker will give a price at
which it would be willing to effect that transaction.
The market maker’s price applies only to the first
100 shares. While the market maker system has
been widely criticized (after all, how much of a
commitment is it to buy 100 shares at a penny
apiece?) the system does offer investors some
level of fairness. The more market makers there
are in a given stock, the more likely they are to bid
against each other, and the price will more likely
move to a true “market” price. The names of the
market makers of securities traded in the pink
sheets are listed in the pink sheets.
Manipulation
Especially when there are few or only one market
maker, penny stocks are susceptible to price manipulation.
A common and easy manipulation is
for a broker-dealer to gather a large holding of a
penny stock at a very low price. Through the use
of high-pressure sales techniques, the sales force
of the broker-dealer hypes the stock and stirs up
demand, which seemingly justifies the continual
rise in prices given by the broker-dealer (which is
probably also the only market maker).
The price continues to rise until there are no
more investors who will buy, and then the bottom
falls out and the price plummets. Sometimes the
broker-dealer will buy back the securities at the
fallen prices to recapture the stockpile for a future
revival of the stock; more often investors are simply
left holding the worthless stock.
Initial public offerings
The price and market discussion above relate to
penny stocks already trading in the market. Stocks
are introduced into the market through an initial
public offering (IPO). In most cases, an IPO
would need to be registered with the Securities
Division, which applies a set of guidelines to the
offering to determine whether the offering is “fair,
just and equitable”. Although the “merit” system
of applying those guidelines is not foolproof,
fraudulent offerings are rejected and not granted
registration. For this reason, Missourians are not
usually victims of penny stock scams in an IPO,
but lose their money in the secondary market. In
the secondary market, there are broad exemptions
in the law that allow many penny stocks to trade in
Missouri without meeting the merit standards.
Legitimate penny stocks
Despite all of the problems with penny stocks and
the millions of dollars of loss involved with them,
there are legitimate companies whose securities
trade in the pink sheets at very low prices. Struggling
young companies just starting out are perfect
examples. Investment in such a company, held
through the company’s formative years, can pay
off well. Such an astute investment requires three
things: the ability to choose the right company, the
capital to invest and hold the investment, and luck.
In order to choose the right company, you must
know something about the business in which the
company engages. You must be able to evaluate
the feasibility of the company’s business plan and
the company’s ability to compete in its field of endeavor.
You must be able to evaluate the ability of
the company’s management to run the company. Finally, you must be able to evaluate the capitalization
and cash flow of the company.
If you find the right company, you must be able
to hold the investment for years to allow the company
to mature and for the stock to appreciate in
value. Investment in “growth” companies is
long-term investment. Furthermore, you must
have sufficient capital to be able to withstand total
loss of your investment. Investment in emerging
companies is always a high-risk investment.
Finally, there is simply an element of luck in
any stock investment. Luck plays an even greater
role in a market in which manipulation is so prevalent.
Some legitimate companies have had their
stocks manipulated to such an extent that they were
were forced out of business. Even without manipulation,
the success or failure of a fledgling business
is simply unpredictable.
Sources of information
Your broker can be a tremendous help in evaluating an investment. However, in the penny stock
area, there are many unscrupulous brokers whose
only goal is to sell. Be sure that the advice you
receive is balanced and addresses your investment
needs. When in doubt, avoid a penny stock investment,
especially if your broker “specializes” in
penny stocks.
The prospectus is the most comprehensive
source information about an IPO. It sets out where
your investment money will be used, describes the
capitalization, history and management of the
company and describes the cash flow system of
the company. If you need help interpreting the information
you find in the prospectus, the Division
has another pamphlet in this series entitled “How
to Read a Prospectus”.
Trade confirmations contain a wealth of information.
The confirmation will show basic information,
such as number of shares, but will also indicate
whether the transaction was agency or principal,
was solicited or unsolicited (it will say “unsolicited”
if you called your broker to place the
order without your broker having tried in any way
to get you to place the order) and, in the case of
most pink sheet and non-NASDAQ National Market
trades, provide the bid and ask at the time of
execution of the transaction.
Manuals such as Moody’s and Standard and
Poor’s have current financial information about
companies, and most penny stocks are listed in the
manuals.
Periodic reports filed with the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission have updated information
about companies that register with the SEC.
The most common report is a “10-K”.
Warning signs
Watch for the following warning signs to alert you
to a possible penny stock fraud:
High-pressure sales techniques. Investment
in a legitimate emerging company is long-term. A
good little company is not going to skyrocket in a
couple of weeks. Building a sound company takes
years; you have a few days or weeks to decide
whether the investment is right for you.
Blind pools and blank checks. Do not invest in
any security without being told exactly how your
money will be spent. Be sure you know which
properties the company plans to buy with the offering
proceeds and how much money is to be
spent on management and promoters.
Mismarked trade confirmations or new account
cards. Be very wary if your trade confirmation
is marked “unsolicited” if your broker did, in
fact, solicit the trade. While it may be a simple
mistake, unscrupulous penny stock brokers often
mark the confirmation as unsolicited to avoid the
registration laws and the “fair, just and equitable”
standard. Watch for misstatements about your net
worth, income and account objectives as well.
Investing in penny stocks is speculative business
and involves a high degree of risk. Often, brokers
will enhance the new account card to make it seem
that you are suitable for a penny stock investment
when you are not.
Unauthorized transactions. Be alert to placement
in your account of securities you did not
agree to purchase. In some instances, a broker may
try to pressure you into purchasing the stock,
claiming that since you have the stock, you must
pay for it. In some cases, the broker is temporarily “parking” the securities in your account, perhaps
to meet the minimum distribution of an IPO, or for
any number of reasons. In some cases, an unauthorized
trade is simply a mistake, but in any case,
complain immediately, both verbally and in
writing to your broker, your broker’s manager and
to the Securities Division.
Investigate before you invest
Millions of dollars are lost in the penny market
each year by Missourians. Those few who make
money in the market are largely investors in legitimate,
fledgling companies. Before you invest in
any penny stock, read about the company. Do not
allow yourself to be pressured into a transaction
that is not right for you. Check out the broker-dealer,
the salesperson and the stock itself with the Division.
The Securities Division registers brokerdealers
and their salespeople and has information
about their complaint histories and other information
about their experience in the securities business.
The staff of the Division is available between
8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. to answer questions and to
check registrations at the following numbers:
Registration of broker-dealers and their salespeople:
(573) 751-2061
Registration of securities:
(573) 751-4136
Questions and complaints:
(573) 751-4704
Toll-free hotline:
(800) 721-7996
Toll-free Investor Protection Hotline: 800-721-7996
Report complaints or make inquiries