The Penny Stock Experience
This morning I decided to click on one of those annoying links and remembered fondly of how once upon a time I traded penny stocks . Anybody who tells you that there is a way to beat markets and prove yourself somehow consistently superior, clearly didn't day trade in the 90's. Bigger fools than you can imagine generated better return rates than the most skilled traders and investors of today. In fact, it is not a far stretch to say that a big reason America faces economic perils today is because there are just too many lucky idiots with too much money in their pockets.
The underlying message is that when things are good everybody can get rich, when they are tough even the skilled will starve. History has no mercy for losers, no matter what the circumstances. Conversely, the winners are great even if completely incompetent and undeserving. In times of peril, drastic people are the victims of drastic measures.
It brought back memories of Viragen . This bottom-of-the-barrell biotech never turned a profit in 25 years. Luckily, I made out well playing around with it back in 2004. Was it a news release? A pump and dump? Don't know. Don't care. I never had the pleasure of working in a bucket shop, but felt that the trickle-down effect which was in full bloom that day.
As you age, risk aversion grows, there's no two ways about it. Today, I wouldn't throw a fraction of what I used to on pure spec. The game is different today. I am curious if any of you guys trade pennies or know someone that does? I'd love to hear some tales...
With HFT being such a hotly debated topic, I wonder how far we are from the strange synergy of old-time bucket shops and new school arcades...morphing into one penny pushing monster?
I know many scam artists already do this, but with the sort of uncertainty spikes we've seen over the past year who's to say the Pink Sheets won't revert to their money laundromat mean of a century ago? With reactionary algorithms trading info, isn't the pump and dump, mini-tick, superfast, illiquid, non-transparent world of pennies perfect for today's bucketeers? Isn't this under-the-counter game ready for prime time?
For those who echo my bearish sentiments of us being in a de facto depression, warmed by the illusory quilt of recession/sluggish recovery/new normal, etc...how long before we start seeing the sort of old school stock scams Eddie wrote about not so long ago?
Check out the due diligence on this penny... smell it's yummy aroma, taste the gooey additives, think about how nice it would be, you're getting sleeeeeepy...
Buy from Midas...I'm your buddy.
Played with it back in 1998/99 after begging my parents for money (birthday, holiday, and everything else combined) it burned a 12 year old very bad lol. Lesson learned but I still enjoy the occasional dabble on seasonal or pure spec play once in a while. I guess inside I am nothing more than a thrill seeking gambler.
The last penny stock I bought was CAJT almost 3 years ago. It now trades at $0.0001 I was still in undergrad and certainly not as market savvy as I am now. Fortunately, I sold CAJT for a tidy profit just before an investigation was launched into the business practices of CAJT. I won't touch pink sheets today.
Been there, done that. Back in '06 hotstockmarket.com was my home. I still remember names like NDOL, FHAL and so many others. All gone of course by now.
However it was not all useless, because when you look at the big board in comparison, it seems so orderly and "easy." So at least for me it was useful, I just wish I did not play with it with real money...thankfully I had practically nothing back then :)
I just had a two thousand percent return trading one stock, CPMCF. Getting into penny stocks was the best thing that I did in college. I started trading in 08, didn't get the returns that I thought were worth the effort and started trading pennies, and I have not looked back since.
^^^ Nice, company actually struck silver tho and plenty of it, Penny stocks are ready for prime time I keep hearing about many pennys getting a lot of marketing way more than before.
Yea Barboon, but it all but guaranteed that CPMCF will hit rock bottom very soon. That rise is nothing but pure speculation. You have to know when to get in and when to get out. For the aforementioned stock, at one point during last week, volumes were in excess of 80 million, now it less than half that. P/E and any other metric for securities is worthless when you have 2000% returns in such a short period of time.
I'm a senior right now, started trading pennies two years ago. I've had both terrific gains and horrible losses. Overall, I'm down by a substantial margin. I think the "gambler's mindset" is very prevalent in penny land, i.e. whenever you make money you spend it on trying to recoup your losses. I've definitely learned my lesson -- all of these pinksheet companies are scams. I remember one specifically that was trading at .0002, bought 1,000,000 shares, then they did a 1 for 2500 reverse split a month later. Lost that 200 bucks pretty quickly. I've also had a 1500% gain in 3 weeks, but not enough to cover the losses, which always hurt more than enjoying the gains. It's all pure speculation, news releases, pump & dumps, etc. I won't even begin with the dilution.,,
Awesome story mate. Just loved it! That's why I am so into best penny stocks trading
So I Bought This Penny Stock, Part 2 (Originally Posted: 01/07/2014)
Most of you guys probably remember the post I wrote a month ago about buying a penny stock and having it reverse split on me the next day. It was a stupid thing to do but it made for a funny story, so there's that. You might also remember that I actually bought two penny stocks that day, the other one purely at Patrick's insistence when he saw what a POS the first one was. I didn't go into detail on what I bought at the time, because I didn't want any of you guys throwing any money away on it, and I still don't. But the story deserves to be told, so here goes.
I was looking for a way to get long weed. I think the US is eventually going to wake up and decriminalize recreational drug use, and we're just now seeing the very beginnings of that with marijuana. So how does one profit from what appears to me anyway to be a fairly obvious trend? Well, I went looking for pot stocks. Let me tell you - there ain't any. Yet, anyway. If you want to get long weed, you're going to have to climb into the penny stock swamp.
So I found a few candidates. I decided what I was looking for was something tangentially related to grass, but not grass itself. In other words, I didn't want to invest in a dispensary because the laws could just as quickly swing the other way and then you're out a bunch of money. So I decided to buy MediSwipe (OTCBB:MWIPD). Only I bought it on 12/10 when the symbol was still MWIP. If nothing else, a reverse split buys your stock symbol an extra letter. I paid $.0161 per share, along with some ridiculous transaction fees. A couple days later when my new shares got delivered to my account (reduced in number by a factor of 10, natch) I sold out at $.1675, minus another round of egregious fees. So essentially a break even minus fees. I wiped my brow and called it a win.
But back to the day I bought it. I hit Patrick up on chat and told him what I just bought, and that another company looked good too but it was a lot more expensive. The other company was Growlife (OTCBB:PHOT). They're involved in pretty much every aspect of pot production that doesn't involve actually producing pot. At the time they were trading for $.09 a share. So you see, a lot more expensive than MWIP.
After checking them out (way more than I did, I'm ashamed to admit) Patrick told me I was crazy if I didn't at least commit as much money to PHOT as I did MWIP, because PHOT looked like a way better company. He was right, and I did it. PHOT started going up pretty much immediately, ran up to $.15 over the next week or so, so I doubled down on the position when it pulled back to $.13. So now I had twice as much at an average cost of $.11. Until Green Wednesday.
On Wednesday, January 1, recreational pot became legal in Colorado and it was something like what the end of Prohibition must have been like. They're estimating that $1 million worth of legal pot was sold in Denver alone last Wednesday, as people waited in line up to five hours to pay as much as $75 for an eighth of an ounce. And it's been off to the races for the pot stocks ever since.
I sold half my PHOT position last Thursday at $.196, essentially cashing out my investment. Now I'm playing with house money, and the stock closed at $.235 yesterday after trading as high as $.26 in the past couple sessions. But that's not even the most ironic thing. That P.O.S. MediSwipe is running like a big dog on the beach, too. The stock I sold for $.1675 a month ago closed at $.56 yesterday!
I guess the rising tide of bong water raises all ships.
Anyway, I thought you guys would get a kick out of this foray into all things herbal. Here's hoping all the other states see the shitload of tax revenue Colorado is going to make and follow suit.
Because my kids' college funds are now held exclusively in PHOT.
I always love the idea of penny stock trading until I actually buy in and get ruined by the spreads, illiquidity and volatility. Glad to hear someone is doing well out of it!
I would buy so much penny stock if I was hard sold over the phone. I would be a boiler room's wet dream.
I'm convinced two markets that will grow exponentially in the next few years, pot and e-sports. Remember this day...
The day online sports betting becomes legal/starts trading I'm BUYING. I'm usually real conservative on multiples and look for value, but this is a long-term goldmine.
@"Edmundo Braverman" is turning into a real Tim Sykes. I have to say that I've been dabbling in penny stocks lately again too. Not quite the same success as Eddie's, but my 2 BioTech pennies are up quite nicely in the last few weeks and I really believe one of them still has quite a run up to go.
Pennies are fun and can be very profitable, but long term you need to have some sort of an edge to profit on these semi-liquid stocks.
I have to assume pot-based ETFs or hedge funds are not that far off in the future. Once we get more pot stocks, of course.
Medbox is up something like 250% since new years!!
i bought into PHOT at .166 on Jan 2nd (wish i had bought in a few days earlier tho!) and now its trading at .234 so i've made a decent profit.
"Running like a big dog on the beach" lol
iKnow that I'm not the only one who has seen this (since we are on the subject).... any thoguhts on this @Edmundo Braverman
http://www.businessinsider.com/high-times-private-equity-fund-2014-1
Just imagine the future deal toys...
Anyone look into companies that produce glass rather than pot?
http://www.businessinsider.com/high-times-private-equity-fund-2014-1?ut…
PHOT got a CNN shoutout:
http://money.cnn.com/2014/01/07/investing/marijuana-stocks/index.html?h…
@Edmundo Braverman
What platform do you prefer for penny stocks?
@"duffmt6" Nice, but they should have done a little more research. They said the stock has gone from 4 cents to 23 cents in 2014. It's actually never been under 19 cents this year.
@"Gstar88" I use OptionsHouse. Been with them for at least three years now and the platform is fantastic, especially if you're an option trader like me. Low rates and fast, accurate executions. Can't ask for too much more than that.
PHOT is up a balmy 65% today.
hopefully you really are holding on to the other half of your holding. Up another 60% today!
It's only at 48x revenue right now...
They did $1.3 million in revs in Q3 2013 and have actually been showing steady increase, BUT -
The 48x is actually understated as it's based on yesterday's close. Here's a nice tidbit as well:
What would the implications of this be on stock price?
I spoke with PHOT's IR today. If the vote goes through they would get a $40 million investment from CANX USA, which would be huge for future growth and crucial to turning a profit for the first time.
A few other notable things I picked up from the PHOT IR call:
1) Management: Very strong executive team. CEO used to work in Washington DC in regulation, President came from Yahoo/Microsoft, a number of other strong execs at the top of the company
2) There is no other competitor that does exactly what they do, and they are the only company in the space to fully report financials.
3) Strengths: Largest annual revenue and growth in the industry, high demand for market products, only 7 brick and mortar stores with many more on the way depending on incoming regulations. (New Hampshire, Alaska, and a number of other states with legislation in the works)
This seems like a pretty unique way to get in on the marijuana trend, and I am going to let this pullback ride out and get some skin in the game.
Thoughts @"Edmundo Braverman" ?
In the interest of full disclosure, I sold half of my remaining half today at 30 cents a share. The rest I'm not parting with before $20.
$20 x 738,500,000 shares outstanding = 14.8 billion market cap = Starwood Hotels/Marriott/Xerox/ConAgra Foods market cap...
I like your chances, Eddie
And what does everyone do in Starwood Hotels and Marriott? Smoke dope. Then what? They Xerox their tits and ass. After that? They get the munchies and reach out to ConAgra.
You're right. $50 or go home.
Thanks man!
So I bought MWIP at .50. I'm down 50% in 3 days...
No way I'm locking in these losses. Refuse to take the L...Guess I'm gonna play this long...
Growlife on its way back to earth. Trading at 0.21 right now. Eddie - looks like you played this one just right. That CNN article was timely.
The shorts are absolutely killing PHOT right now, which is totally predictable. @"timothysykes" might have even put a hit out on it. But when it gets back to a dime, I'll load up the boat again.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/1937121-growlife-what-are-they-smoking?…
^this plus the comments are an...um...entertaining read.
@Eduardo Braverman Unfortuantely can't post links yet but there is a recent detailed and lengthy post on Quora about an alleged P&D scam that you might find interesting.
It's currently the most upvoted post under the question 'What are the most successful scams that consumers are regularly subjected to?'. Here's part of the intro:
Here is PHOT's investor presentation from October for anyone who would like to check it out quick
http://growlifeinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/PHOT-October-2013-Investor-Presentationv7b.pdf
@"Edmundo Braverman" what are your thoughts on HEMP's 66% surge today?
I honestly haven't been paying attention, but a few of them have been going crazy. PHOT was around .20 a couple weeks ago and it's back up to .389 today. Easy double in a couple weeks. Good time to be slinging dope, apparently.
There is a big shareholder vote on Friday for PHOT on whether or not to dilute shares and bring in a big investment from CANX...that should cause some volatility one way or the other
On top of that, there is a ton of info starting to come around about legislation and votes to be held in the coming future. Apparently the vote for Alaska to legalize could be happening in August or so. With Oregon coming around the same time if I read it correctly.
Aaaand this is why you don't buy penny stocks:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanvardi/2014/04/10/sec-halts-trading-in…
Trading halted until April 25, and no guarantee it will start again then. Wow. I've traded in and out of it several times over the past 3 months. I've bought it for as little as 9 cents and sold it for as much as 70 cents, all in a 90-day period of time. I've also traded it between 50 and 60 cents at least four times, maybe 5, and more than once in the same trading session. That's normal, right?
Fucking penny stocks. So glad I was out when they stopped trading.
So I Bought This Penny Stock... (Originally Posted: 12/12/2013)
I bought a penny stock the other day. Like, literally. It was a penny and a half a share on the Bulletin Board. I'm not going to say what it was because I don't want any of you buying it and I definitely don't want to be accused of front running or pump-and-dumping or whatever. My only purpose in telling you guys this is to entertain you with a story about something stupid I did, and maybe to encourage you to do your research before getting into a trade. Because in this case I certainly didn't.
Anyway, I've been wanting to play a certain underrepresented sector of the market and as it turns out the only publicly traded companies in this sector are penny stocks on the Bulletin Board or the Pink Sheets. So I find four or five candidates and do some cursory research. I like two out of the group; one is trading for 9 cents a share and the other is a penny and a half. I end up buying both. The transaction fees on the 9 cent stock are hefty; the transaction fees on the penny and a half stock are staggering. Like, take your breath away. On the order of ~30% commissions to buy it. So of course I do.
Then I'm talking to Patrick, and of course I'm bragging about my recent purchase and how good it looks to have tens of thousands of shares in my account. He naturally gets curious and starts poking around the Internet (like I should have) and he comes across an interview from October with the company's CEO. In a word, the dude is sketchy as fuck. Patrick points out that you never trust a CEO in a pinstripe suit, and I can't argue with that logic. This was on Tuesday. Yesterday the stock went through a 1:10 reverse split. No, wait. It gets better. Not only did I buy a stock one day and have it go through a reverse split the next (I maybe should have Googled a little deeper and found out that was in the cards for this company), now I can't even sell it. And the ironic thing is that's it's up 31% post-split (adjusted for the split, naturally). As in, I bought this stock for .016 cents on Tuesday and it closed at .21 cents yesterday (which, post-split, is a move from 16 cents a share to 21 cents a share).
Why can't I sell? Well I was wondering that myself. So I called my brokerage. Turns out the new stock hasn't been delivered yet, and I can't sell something my brokerage doesn't own. Well how long does it take to deliver the new stock? No clue, says my brokerage. Sometimes a couple days, sometimes a couple weeks. Meanwhile the stock works it way back down to a penny a share while I'm waiting. So I tell my brokerage I want to short the stock and wait for my shares to be delivered to cover. No can do. Can't short anything under three bucks a share.
Goddammit.
So you see, kids, it pays to do your due diligence. Since the old shares are now worthless (the new shares have a new symbol and everything - which of course isn't reflected in my account because they haven't been delivered yet) my account is showing all the money as lost. Which is probably what's gonna happen long term to that position anyway, but still.
There is a bright side to this story, though. That other stock (which I only bought after Patrick convinced me I was stupid not to) was up 18% yesterday, and it's liquid as hell (several million shares traded each day). So maybe that'll make up for this other shitshow.
Anyway, I just thought you guys would get a kick out the fact that your old Uncle Eddie does stupid shit once in a while too. How I walked into this particular buzzsaw still has me baffled. I actually bought a stock the day before a reverse split, and now I can't even sell it. Who does that shit?
Was it LEHMQ?
LOL. +1
Better not let @DickFuld hear you say that.
Eddie makes...mistakes? I believe my world has been turned upside down.
On a serious note, I dont think I've ever owned a penny stock. I believe I will continue to avoid them for the time being.
Why is that? I have never heard of brokers dealing in physical certificates unless they are requested. Was this Reg T?
They're not actually dealing with physical certs, they just have to wait for the transfer agent to clue them in to who owns what as far as the new shares go. Obviously a stock trading for a penny and a half isn't a very high priority for a transfer agent, so it takes a while.
Haha, oh the joys of penny stocks!
My only penny stock story stems from the classic too-greedy-it-will-go-even-hire-EFF-it-tanked situation. Also bought a stock from an under represented segment, in this case at $0.08. Was feeling super rich as I watched it steadily tick up a bit each day till I was staring at a ~90% gain (including commission) with PLENTY of liquidity. Was the company actually doing ANY better? Absolutely not. Were certain short term sentiments fueling the rise? Absolutely. But 90% in a month and a half just isn't enough! No sir! this was going to be my ticket to the good life-jets, hot tubs, mansions, exotic animals and silk robes. I held strong to my ticket as over three weeks I watched it trend down from my 90% gain to a ~70% loss (plenty of opportunities to jump out along the way with a healthy gain). And there it sits.
What did I learn? When you buy a company that has consistently posted losses and it rises sharply (with no actual changes in the company itself), if it starts to fall, don't expect a rally. It's not coming. Sell.
Sounds like you own some vacant land.that is 50 miles from the nearest road.
Full disclosure, I own land that is at least 50 miles from the nearest road.
Love the title of this thread...you know the story is going to be good when it starts off with "So I bought this penny stock..."
You should really get an Interactive Brokers account if you want to mess around with equities like this.
This makes me laugh because it sounds pretty similar to one of my biggest learning experiences.
Two things I've learned through situations like this: 1. Penny Stocks are the equivalent of Roulette at the casino. Gamble away if you want for entertainment, but it's a tough way to make $. 2. You should just assume there is fraud in all "cheap" Chinese stocks. Seriously, don't go to sleep while owning one of these fuckers.
Never touched a penny stock and never will...
I was laughing my shit off this whole post. +1
Some brokers charge a flat fee for any stock trade, even penny stocks.
Never trade penny stocks... They are like a poison pill. SHIT liquidity most the time,also. Interactive brokers let you short penny stocks, but the fees are high. Only way you can make good moves with penny stocks is to trade using a psychological approach. ie: look for a penny stock that has been traded, with higher than usual volume, wait for the reversal, and short it. Proceed to cover when the volume is still high so you have liquidity coming out, and when traders who initially bought the penny stocks want out realizing they just got merked.
This is my world lol. My fund invests primarily in small cap resource stocks.
Christ, that's gotta be like peeing on an electric fence every day.
So many life lessons in this post lol
hahaha this was great, iMess around with penny stocks occasionally....but only on my practice account.
Just a quick update: the stock got delivered yesterday and I was able to sell out for a break even. I'll take it.
Ok, so the other stock I bought for .091 is now bidding .1289. I'm up about 42% in a week.
Sell, or double down?
http://www.randyclemens.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/doubledown.jpg
If the answer was to come in the shape of a summary of all the 'life lessons': Sell
I guess.
In Vegas when you loose at blackjack you continually double down until you win. You can only loose 2 ways, one you run out of money two, the table has a limit.
Alright. I got busy and didn't do anything with it today, and the stock closed at .138 bid. That means I'm up .047 a share, or 51.6% in a week. I kinda feel like I have to buy more at this point, on the off chance this thing goes to $20.
Didn't you used to work in a boiler room? This is usually how a pump-and-dump works...
In my case, I'm hoping for a second pump, so I can actually dump this time.
Penny Stocks... Never Again (Originally Posted: 08/17/2013)
I was messing around with micro caps and smaller today for the first time. I normally trade mid caps and up.
My P&L on the day ended up being practically $0. But my account is $400 lower than it was in the morning.
Where did all my monies go? Are commissions and exchange fees not factored into P&L? And even then, I only made like 10 trades. The fees were pretty high for these tiny stocks, but not THAT high. I thought they were factored into P&L. My account value has always changed by the a daily P&L.
I use OptionsHouse if it matters.
lol
goddamnit
You should have consulted Tim Sykes, the god of penny stocks, before trying it on your own!
Wait till you try and cash out...
Guys.... I'm gonna lose all my fucking money tomorrow if I don't figure this shit out. I don't wanna call my broker. They as weird questions like what street did I grow up on.
Hahaha. No wonder you fail so much at trading.
Nice job changing your post after realizing it was retarded.
haha, one of the more clever troll attempts.
The shit stock you're toting is only up 2.2% today (on 2x ADV after a few hours of trading) and still down ~28% from Tuesday. If that's your definition of gapping, then you better retake your Investing 101.
There's a reason why retail investor and retard share the first few letters. You're a prime example of that.
Classic. And true, for the most part.
I enjoyed my 3%.
What ticker is this? I thought you were all about SSN?
SSNI I mostly made that thread because it started dropping after I bought and it was my attempt to move the market. And I thought it would be funny. I was gonna post a pic of a thigh gap too, but I forgot. But everything worked out okay.
brb, calling SEC.
lol
I love how this thread got front-paged when all it consists of is people quoting each other haha
FIFY
hey bro, don't give up, try harder tomrrow, #YOLO
yolo2late
2late4dis
I do not remember posting this. Oh god, I went out in public in that condition.
lol
If you're an idiot investor,
Penny stock investing is a sophisticated form of gambling.
fixd
lmao
Steps To Get The Perfect List of Penny Stocks (Originally Posted: 05/20/2010)
You must treat your investment in these stocks like a business in order to become successful in the stock market. Although penny stocks fetch remarkable profits but they are always very risky investments. You must find the profit producing stock list for yourself only to avoid the pitfalls or potential risks of investing in these stocks. In order to manage and monitor your penny stocks portfolio, you must maintain a researched list.
You can ensure your penny stocks investing profit potential by keeping an organized list of these stocks which you hold. It highlights your best performing stock. Because most people do not realize the importance of keeping an organized list of owned stocks, they never get success on this platform of stock market. But a good list of stocks must be done only after a thorough study of the stock market. A manual research or conjoint research from many other sources may be taken into consideration while making the list. Even you can obtain the advice of those who are already very old in this game. The second reliable source for building an effective stock list can be efficient stock market analysts. They make in-depth studies of these stocks and give you accurate real time picks. They monitor the movement of the stocks. The third and the most reliable source which can help you in creating an organized list is the subscription to different online penny stocks news letters. They send you free mails featuring reliable stock picks. They provide you stock investing information in three vital pieces. They let you know the best deal for you. They help you to ascertain at what price a stock should be purchased and what price you should let it go. They finally help you to find the right stock which can give you maximum profit. They generally come with an offer of 8 weeks which means that if you are not satisfied with the accuracy of their stock picks within a period 8 weeks then you can turn out the subscription for the newsletter. Because these newsletters are free, they do not cost you time or money. After getting the stock picks from them, the only job left for you is to evaluate the recommended stock picks and select among the stocks which you own to keep in your listing and start building organized list of penny stocks which will help you play safely in the stock market with all uncertainties.
To know more about this, visit us at: http://www.stockrich.com/
LMAO penny stocks. We are bankers. We only buy stocks that cost more than $100 per share. Now get the fuck out.
where is the sales pitch for the watch?
anyone ever thought of scamming the penny stock scammers? i.e. search out the spam with an algorithm and short those stocks before them
Highly unlikely you can short a penny stock - it'd be very difficult to get the borrow.
I know a guy in Canada who pulls down 7 figures using a list of grandmothers and mass-sending "confidential" earnings report to the "wrong" fax number for a flat fee for pump-and-dump schemes. Of course, the downside is that he has interpol and FBI warrants open for his arrest, and can't fly in to or over Europe or the US...
this guy got some nerves
Id sit ut aut quasi sit labore. Officia dicta harum quidem optio rerum. Excepturi non saepe et quia totam.
Perspiciatis ullam sapiente mollitia enim dignissimos voluptatem. Molestiae aut reiciendis commodi. Nisi nesciunt aut dolores illum omnis autem quibusdam.
See All Comments - 100% Free
WSO depends on everyone being able to pitch in when they know something. Unlock with your email and get bonus: 6 financial modeling lessons free ($199 value)
or Unlock with your social account...
Fugit autem consequatur minima consequuntur sequi expedita occaecati. Asperiores rerum nisi reprehenderit est. Explicabo placeat quam id rerum amet voluptates. Quo omnis ad dicta similique dolore et impedit commodi. Id ipsam est occaecati veniam. Hic reprehenderit sapiente consequatur eligendi. Temporibus iste ut distinctio tenetur sunt distinctio.
Ad accusantium eaque sunt placeat ut. Et exercitationem omnis aperiam deserunt reprehenderit rerum. Corporis qui officia quia non animi voluptate fugiat. Nihil commodi rem est quibusdam reiciendis consequatur.
Et occaecati porro voluptas et maxime autem consequatur. Quae perspiciatis enim optio fugiat aliquid in sunt. Tempore sapiente consequatur repellat. Non dolores nam et corporis.
Qui voluptatem asperiores enim necessitatibus voluptas ab dignissimos. Voluptatem omnis aut nihil excepturi dolorem explicabo necessitatibus. Quia nostrum animi molestiae voluptates neque minus ut.
Officia iste neque est quisquam sint eligendi. Dolor eum architecto officiis quaerat aut. Vel ut assumenda suscipit corrupti hic ea ipsum. Tempore sit quo veniam. Id beatae ipsum tenetur sint. Voluptate quod sit praesentium molestiae consequuntur natus quis.
Rem officiis natus eveniet perspiciatis eum. Consequatur ut aut omnis ex dolorum non facere.
Qui aperiam eligendi ducimus totam aliquid optio quam ea. Ea culpa et consequatur consequatur. Perferendis laboriosam sequi reprehenderit.
Nemo sint dignissimos officiis magni ad quo voluptatem. Aliquam ut occaecati voluptatum cupiditate quasi voluptatem. Omnis et qui architecto at et aut quis. Pariatur ut ut id quas.
Veniam minus quaerat minus libero explicabo ut rem et. Rerum id ut totam aut tempora.
Quasi quidem quidem est aliquam est quas labore. Dolorum aut illo odio aut. Qui commodi sint possimus doloremque. Laudantium fugiat quo quo vitae impedit et aut.
Alias repellendus dolores necessitatibus ad. Ut ut minima distinctio eos et vitae voluptatem similique. Quo enim eveniet quis eaque sint dignissimos enim. Autem dolores assumenda illo laboriosam suscipit sit ut nihil.
Nobis quisquam voluptates saepe quidem. Et inventore illum totam ut et molestias. Saepe et saepe officia excepturi. Quos eum voluptatibus consequatur exercitationem autem. Iusto voluptatem occaecati adipisci ullam rerum voluptatum. Qui laudantium est perspiciatis fugit.
Optio ut minus veritatis repellat quibusdam veritatis vero omnis. Fuga aut maiores in ipsam. Iste voluptatem ex tempora et occaecati ut.
Laborum ea voluptas labore occaecati officiis. Qui alias perspiciatis id quia sequi deleniti. Eaque expedita sint libero adipisci ut. Accusamus aut vel nisi deserunt molestiae tenetur. Qui ut provident harum voluptate excepturi qui quas consequatur. Eius incidunt facere eum harum minima.