Anonymous ID: bbf2b1 July 21, 2019, 10:15 a.m. No.7121463   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1503

>>7121368

more of the article. I don't think WSOP is MSM, but anons can decide for themselves.

 

Epstein bought 800 shares of LinkedIn for his charity, Gratitude America, on March 2, 2016 at a cost of $119.27 per share, close to the high for that day. That was a very odd purchase for a so-called physics and math genius. On Wall Street, there are two rules: don’t try to catch a falling knife and the trend is your friend. LinkedIn was a falling knife. Since the beginning of the year in 2016 it had lost 47 percent of its value. Reuters reported on February 5 that “At least seven brokerages downgraded the stock from ‘buy’ to ‘hold’ or their equivalents, saying the company’s lofty valuation was no longer justified.” (On Wall Street a ‘hold’ is code for ‘sell.’) Forbes had written on February 10 that “We think the bottom for this stock is closer to $20/share.”

 

The trend in LinkedIn was not his friend but Epstein plunked down $95,414 for his charity to buy its stock and an unknown amount for himself.

 

According to the merger proxy that was eventually filed by LinkedIn with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Epstein’s purchase turns out to have been made just 15 days after the CEOs of LinkedIn and Microsoft sat down for the first time to chat about a merger. The merger proxy reveals the following:

 

“On February 16, 2016, Jeff Weiner, LinkedIn’s chief executive officer, met with Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s chief executive officer, to discuss the ongoing commercial relationship between the companies and ways to enhance it. At this meeting, Messrs. Weiner and Nadella discussed ways in which the two companies could work together more closely and, in the context of that discussion, among other things, the concept of a business combination was raised.”

 

The day after the deal was announced, June 14, 2016, Epstein cashed out, making a profit of $58,235 for his charity, a return of 61 percent in a little over 3 months. How much did he make for himself on this and other such deals? The public has a right to know and the Feds need to obtain that information, reveal it to the public, along with the names of any titans on Wall Street or elsewhere that Epstein was getting a quid pro quo from in exchange for destroying the lives of young school girls.