 What's up, guys? Chicago trader here checking in with the weekly fundamental video. Hopefully you guys had a good trading week, because I'm recording this on Friday after the BPTH craziness. With that being said, there was a name that I have been kind of tracking over the last few weeks. And I figured I'd just kind of share my research with you real quickly and kind of the story and a little bit about what I've found. Pull up this chart here. So it's one of these bad boys that just you can see. I mean, adjusted splits, like $10,000 or something. What initially got me interested was I something came across my news feed about the CEO issued a letter. And basically here it was on January 9th. So I kind of got to read through this and it was right down here. So you can see basically it talks about the terms of the company's equity financing through a third party of their series C redeemable, convertible preferred stock. So toward the end, he basically talks about with the sharp decline in trading price of the company's common stock during 2017, it resulted in substantial dilution to shareholders, which continues today. So that's where I kind of initially got interested. I have seen people post about this name before. But I kind of wanted to go in and look at it myself. So just a couple of months later, if we scroll to the top, so they go from 40 million shares all the way to 123, which is absolutely insane. And then we go all the way to Q3, which was filed recently. They actually did a reverse split not too long ago. So there's 12 million. So they did a 25 to one reverse split. So reverse split adjusted, there's about 300 million shares outstanding, a massive increase. So for me, I figured it's probably about done. I got to dig in through. So let me just see what I found here. So basically, yeah, this whole stock purchase agreement and the convertible will save you a spare of the time. So the company was in a bunch of trouble with its debt. And the old CEO of the time, Richard Azar, came through with one of the subsidiary companies, bought some assets, bought some debt, and it's convertible. That's not uncommon for you to see some of these small companies, some of their board members may have another company, some of the directors may have, and they kind of come in and try to rescue the company. For them, so he buys up this purchase agreement. We scroll on down. It's kind of funny. I'll get into it. I'll just jump to it now. Basically, there were some terms that the CEO's side company and this company here, CEI, they closed the deal and they didn't agree, let's just say, on the fees. I think there's like a $1.2 million fee upon closing. And they kind of got into some litigation. So the CEO quits Richard Azar. And he's got all these convertibles to dump.