(MOS) = Mosaic Company? (1/2)
I may have found a financial mechanism that could linke a payout from Saudi
Arabia to Obama, via Singapore: The Mosaic Company. There may be more
besides.
Looking at Q's posts, you see he stated that Saudi Arabia "Controls (assigned)
US / UK Politicians / Tech Co's (primary)." You also see that (MOS) controls
two groups–one made up of the (Alt + US Media), the other (US Politicians).
We were told early on that Obama was receiving a $29 million dollar payout via
Singapore. Finally, we were given a clue that [6] control the media–we
already know of the six corporations that control 90%, but both "Mossad" and
"Mosaic" have six letters.
You wouldn't think that a company that mines phosphate would be all that
interesting, but if you dig a bit some things stick out: its stock ticker is
MOS, it has a multi-billion dollar partnership with the government of Saudi
Arabia, some of its stock owners are noteworthy, much of its activity
corresponds to certain events, and its paperwork seems odd. Then there's the
novelty of Saudi Arabia having ties to a fertilizer company in the US, after
9/11, etc.
The company started as a merger between Cargill's fertilizer business and IMGC
global, with Cargill taking about 2/3 of the stock and IMG taking the
remainder. Things are pretty uneventful for awhile.
David T. Seaton joined the board in April of 2009–a few months after Obama
was elected, two months before his first trip to Riyadh. Seaton had been in
joint ventures with Saudi Arabia before. Side note: he recently stepped down
as CEO of Fluor.
In early 2011, Cargill splits off, and their share is distributed
(64% at this point, equivalent to 286 million shares). You can get more
background by looking at the DEF14A filings on 1.21.2011 with the SEC. It's
around this time that things really start to change.
If you look at Mosaic's filings on 2.3.2011, you'll see 11 "NO ACT"
entries–according to the SEC's website, "An individual or entity who is not
certain whether a particular product, service, or action would constitute a
violation of the federal securities law may request a "no-action" letter from
the SEC staff…that the SEC staff would not recommend that the Commission take
enforcement action against the requester based on the facts and representations
described in the individual's or entity's request." In other words, Mosaic
wanted to do something they weren't sure was legal, and the SEC said it would
probably be okay. No further details are given.
Within a few days, major restructuring occurs–the Margaret A. Cargill
foundation declares that they no longer hold any stock in Mosaic, and Mosaic
announces that there will be an "orderly distribution" of those shares. One of
the more interesting things about the documents that describe that process is
the fuckery with the name "MOS Holdings." Mosaic is based in Tampa, FL…but
there is another company named "MOS Holdings" in Florida as well, linked to
two guys: J.M. Highland, and Mark Gainor. I believe I came across a document
showing something being transferred from Mosaic to MOS Holdings, but I can't
seem to find it. Regardless, it's irrelevant to the link between SA and
Singapore.
If you look at the SEC filings, you notice five companies file form 13G with
the SEC at the same time–anyone controlling more than 5% of the shares needs
to do that once a year apparently. Four of them are from Singapore, and the
other is based in Mauritius (Dunearn Investments–but their website clearly
states they're also associated with Singapore). They are:
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Temasek Holdings 6.76%
-
Temasek Capital 6.51%
-
Seletar Investments 6.51%
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Dunearn Investments 6.51%
-
Sherwood Investments 5.04%
Temasek is owned by the Government of Singapore; despite that, they're
considered a private entity–their website states that they do not typically
make financial disclosures.