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VIALOGY A WEALTH MAKER (VIY)     

diamonds - 19 Jan 2007 16:58

from w-w-bb:

19.01.2007 - Total Rocketscience

The third and final company making up our Risk / Reward trilogy on shares for 2007 has so many investment negatives that most observers might not even give it more than a cursory glance. Although quoted on the London AIM market, it is based on the other side of the World, has reported revenues and cash flow of diddly squat and, more importantly, operates in an area of expertise so deep in boffinland that you need to be at least a 5 star techie to venture anywhere near it.

What originally persuaded us to give it a second look was the fact that legendary Stockmarket investor, Jim Slater, was pouring money into it via several successive rounds of financing. As we all know, Mr. Slater is a qualified accountant and hugely experienced corporate financier but clearly he is more at home in leafy Surrey than in the technologically rarified atmosphere of Southern California. However, he must have gleaned enough about what the company actually did to get extremely excited about it. In fact, by last Autumn, he had grown to like it so much that, to paraphrase the immortal Victor Kiam, he bought the remaining 51 % of the company that his vehicle, Original Investments, didn't already own.

The company in question was VIALOGY and, ever since it was fully reversed into Original just before Christmas, Slater's loyal band of followers have seen their highly speculative penny punt move on to the calculated risk category and been duly rewarded with a 50% shareprice improvement. We first latched on to this situation last April when we wrote a piece entitled The Cisco Kid ( see news archive ). To recap briefly, the company was set up by some brainboxes who had earlier worked together on supercomputing projects for NASA. Led by Dr. Sandip Gulati, the team appeared to have perfected software to detect and enhance extremely weak signals previously obscured by background noise. This may not seem particularly earthshattering to the layman but, apparently, the applications for this technology are not only revolutionary but almost limitless which suggests that an exponential rise in licensing income could well lie ahead.

Big news clearly travels fast on the Eastern seaboard because global behemoths Cisco and Boeing have already enlisted Vialogy to work on 2 major government inspired projects and these are just the ones that the company have been allowed to talk about publicly. As we reported in April, Cisco has contracted Vialogy to help with its IPICS programme which seeks to make sure that all emergency services and government agencies can communicate with each other quickly via computers and phones. The need to address this obvious requirement was highlighted by 9 / 11 when communications between different departments with different systems proved chaotic.

For its part, Boeing has recently confirmed that Vialogy has delivered a tenfold improvement in the accuracy and efficiency of the types of gyroscopes it uses in spacecraft and missile navigational systems. It is also known that both Cisco and Boeing see a major role for the technology in such areas as border controls and missile defence systems. Elsewhere a much smaller Texan company, Evolution Petroleum, is applying the technology to improving seismic evaluation of oil and gas deposits.

This initial clutch of applications is almost certainly just the tip of a very large iceberg that is going to float into view over the next few years and all that is required is a little patience. At todays price of 5.5p, Vialogy is valued at a mere 22m. To justify this valuation, the company would have to be earning say 2 million pretax. With cash reserves of 3 million and its heavyweight partners funding the projects it is involved in, Vialogy should be able to get through to breakeven without further recourse to shareholders. We would expect this stage to be reached sometime over the next 12 months. Thereafter, profits could / should escalate very dramatically as new applications and licensing income start to snowball.

On a two year view, shareholders could be rewarded extremely handsomely indeed. Vialogy is in so many ways akin to last weeks selection, CORAC. Both are now moving from the development stage to commercialization with the scales tipping away from blue sky risk towards the reality of cash flow. Both have mindblowing upside potential yet both have current shareprice action that makes drying paint look positively orgasmic. Although this presents an opportunity for latecomers, it is a frustrating byproduct of both companies involvement with highly sensitive technology and powerful, publicity shy partners. Moreover, the present lack of any meaningful numbers together with the sheer scale of future potential makes any serious stockbroker research well nigh impossible. All this will resolve itself in due course but, as they say in the Grolsch advert, all good things come to those who wait.

notlob - 02 Aug 2007 11:42 - 252 of 1209

too bad, then Cynic. This is a BB, if you want quiet, suggest go down the local library.

'bout time you posted something useful then, instead of whingeing on.

fliper - 06 Aug 2007 07:19 - 253 of 1209

Signs Memorandum of Understanding with Taiwan's Industrial Technology Research
Institute



London, 6 August, 2007 - ViaLogy plc (LSE: VIY), a leading innovator of
real-time network-centric signal processing platforms, today announces that it
has signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Taiwan's Industrial
Technology Research Institute (ITRI) to integrate its products, SPMTM and
MicroSPMTM, with sensor systems developed by ITRI spin-out companies for uses in
safety, security, surveillance and infrastructure management

yukio - 09 Aug 2007 23:19 - 254 of 1209

dow down 387 points, could see viy go below 9p

notlob - 10 Aug 2007 00:01 - 255 of 1209

yawn

fliper - 10 Aug 2007 09:21 - 256 of 1209

Do you think yukio will buy below 9p ?

halifax - 10 Aug 2007 13:06 - 257 of 1209

It would be nice to buy at 8p the price institutions paid in the recent placing.

yukio - 10 Aug 2007 15:54 - 258 of 1209

yeah they paid 8p a share when it was 15p, most have probably sold it and made their profits, just leaves you private investor suckers to keep buying it all the way back to 4p.

cynic - 10 Aug 2007 16:03 - 259 of 1209

don't be so waspish - uncalled for ...... that said, that the institutions paid 8p is certainly no guarantee that sp cannot fall below that ...... btw, it is very likely that the institutions were obligated to hang on to their shares for say a year before being allocated any

yukio - 10 Aug 2007 16:41 - 260 of 1209

people say " institutions" but nobody knows who they were, maybe they didnt buy at 8p because of any faith in viy, maybe they just saw i as an opportunity to make a fast buck on a share that was 90% higher than what they were paying for it, there was no mention of any selling lockin, if you were offered something you could sell and make an immediate 90% profit would you take it.

cynic - 10 Aug 2007 16:52 - 261 of 1209

maybe, if, perhaps, just possibly ...... but definitely all unsubstantiated hypothesis angled to try to make "facts" to fit your theory

yukio - 10 Aug 2007 23:36 - 262 of 1209

like the bit about not having to raise money again, they had to raise $8 million just to get money to market their products, and whats so legendary about jim slater apart from the fact he is rich, an ex british leyland accountant lol, does nobody remember the slater walker scandal.

notlob - 11 Aug 2007 07:59 - 263 of 1209

oh dear oh dear, poor old yukio
what a sad,bitter and twisted individual he must be.

yukio - 11 Aug 2007 16:27 - 264 of 1209

notlob you must be a bit sad being 40% down on viy, yes we know you bought at 4p so dont go on about that again, when its back at 4p thats when you will be bitter and twisted thinking about how you could have sold at 15p like most of the wise people in viy,their gain is your loss.

notlob - 12 Aug 2007 09:22 - 265 of 1209

yukkey, you fool, its called run your winners, and VIY is up well over 100%+ for me (more like 140%+ actually) with plenty more to come.

sounds like you can only repeat my post back to me!
run out of words? (and money!!!)
tyring saying something original, but I assume thats too much for your pea-brain.

cynic - 12 Aug 2007 09:34 - 266 of 1209

why don't you two start up your own thread ..... it's like Punch & Judy ...... but who stole the sausages?

notlob - 12 Aug 2007 10:14 - 267 of 1209

cynic, watch out that the crocodile don't come along and eat you all up!!!
thats the way to do it!

fliper - 13 Aug 2007 16:26 - 268 of 1209

Dr. John Mai, ViaLogy's Manager for RFID Platforms, said: 'ITRI has
relationships with the major technology-related businesses in Taiwan. This
collaboration will accelerate adoption of SPMTM for large-scale industrial
applications. We are already working on integrating innovative sensor solutions
being developed at ITRI to quickly expand and scale up its installed-user base.'


Dr. Wu Chi Ho, Director of the Power Control and Sensing Application Technology
Division, of the Energy and Environmental Research Laboratories within ITRI,
commented: 'We believe ViaLogy's SPMTM and MicroSPMTM platforms present
exciting solutions to fill gaps in our development and commercialisation
process. Their IP-enabled sensor interoperability software offers us a path to
rapidly bring our infrastructure monitoring projects to enterprise-level end
users in the oil and energy market sectors, both within Taiwan and
internationally.


'ViaLogy's ability to add new sensors and support new network interoperability
protocols within 72 hours is very attractive for our scaling requirements

yukio - 13 Aug 2007 16:55 - 269 of 1209

markets in a strong rebound today yet viy is down again, 7p on the horizon

notlob - 14 Aug 2007 11:43 - 270 of 1209

VIY moving up, next stop 20p.....

yukio - 14 Aug 2007 16:42 - 271 of 1209

viy tried to move up, and came back down again, cant even sustain a tiny rise for more than a few hours, next stop 6p.
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