Misplaced Pages

Fund.com: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 22:48, 6 May 2008 editUserDœ (talk | contribs)1,193 editsm very spammy..reads like an ad g11← Previous edit Revision as of 22:48, 6 May 2008 edit undoUserDœ (talk | contribs)1,193 editsmNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
{{db-g11} {{db-g11}}
'''Fund.com Inc.''' (OTCBB: FNDM.OB) is a publicly traded Internet company operating in the financial services, product development, licensing and publishing sectors, based in New York, NY. The company serves the needs of financial institutions, investors and the general consumer seeking information regarding investment ] options, including ], ], ] (ETFs), ], etc. Fund.com considers itself the sole company comprehensively focusing on the fund market for all potential investors. '''Fund.com Inc.''' (OTCBB: FNDM.OB) is a publicly traded Internet company operating in the financial services, product development, licensing and publishing sectors, based in New York, NY. The company serves the needs of financial institutions, investors and the general consumer seeking information regarding investment ] options, including ], ], ] (ETFs), ], etc. Fund.com considers itself the sole company comprehensively focusing on the fund market for all potential investors.


Line 47: Line 47:
* *
* *

Revision as of 22:48, 6 May 2008

This article may meet Misplaced Pages's criteria for speedy deletion because in its current form it serves only to promote or publicise an entity, person, product, or idea, and would require a fundamental rewrite in order to become encyclopedic. However, the mere fact that a company, organization, or product is a page's subject does not, on its own, qualify that page for deletion under this criterion. This criterion also does not apply where substantial encyclopedic content would remain after removing the promotional material as deletion is not cleanup; in this case please remove the promotional material yourself, or add the {{advert}} tag to alert others to do so. See CSD G11.%5B%5BWP%3ACSD%23G11%7CG11%5D%5D%3A+Unambiguous+%5B%5BWP%3ANOTADVERTISING%7Cadvertising%5D%5D+or+promotionG11

If this article does not meet the criteria for speedy deletion, or you intend to fix it, please remove this notice, but do not remove this notice from pages that you have created yourself. If you created this page and you disagree with the given reason for deletion, you can click the button below and leave a message explaining why you believe it should not be deleted. You can also visit the talk page to check if you have received a response to your message.

Note that this article may be deleted at any time if it unquestionably meets the speedy deletion criteria, or if an explanation posted to the talk page is found to be insufficient.

Nominator: Please consider placing the template:
{{subst:db-spam-notice|Fund.com|header=1}} ~~~~
on the talk page of the author.

Note to administrators: this article has content on its talk page which should be checked before deletion.

Administrators: check links, talk, history (last), and logs before deletion. Consider checking Google.
This page was last edited by UserDœ (contribs | logs) at 22:48, 6 May 2008 (UTC) (16 years ago)

Fund.com Inc. (OTCBB: FNDM.OB) is a publicly traded Internet company operating in the financial services, product development, licensing and publishing sectors, based in New York, NY. The company serves the needs of financial institutions, investors and the general consumer seeking information regarding investment fund options, including hedge funds, mutual funds, exchange-traded fund (ETFs), index funds, etc. Fund.com considers itself the sole company comprehensively focusing on the fund market for all potential investors.

For financial institutions, Fund.com offers proprietary licensed content, and constructs and publishes equity-based indices, notes and annuities. Fund.com will license indices and sell leads to structured product providers, including the proprietary Equities Hedge Fund Index that brings hedge fund returns to the mass market. Fund.com is affiliated with Equities magazine, a trade publication serving retail and institutional industries.

For consumers, Fund.com Inc. is a free, consumer-friendly online information source that explains, analyzes, clarifies and highlights investment funds. Their mission is to Educate, Direct, Guide and Evaluate investors of any level of experience, as expressed in the acronym EDGE.

History

Fund.com Inc. was formed in 2007 by Internet entrepreneurs Daniel Klaus, Lucas Mann, and Darren Rennick, who subsequently enlisted the executive services of Wall Street industry veterans; appointing Ray Lang the CEO, Greg Webster, president and Phil Gentile, COO.

The team took Fund.com public by executing a reverse merger with Eastern Services Holdings in January 2008. The merger resulted in the name change to Fund.com Inc, a unique ISBN number, and the ticker “FNDM.BB” on the OTC BB securities market.

Company Structure

Fund.com operates through three fully owned subsidiaries. The first, Fund.com Technologies operates Fund.com’s Internet properties and develops web investment content and tools. The second, Fund.com Managed Products Inc., specializes in developing asset management products. This subsidiary’s primary focus is to identify, construct, publish and license investment fund indexes. Fund.com Managed Products Inc. fully owns another subsidiary: Fund.com Capital Inc., which makes active (non-passive) investments in other financial institutions, fund management companies and strategic products.

Domain Name Sales

In March, 2008 Clek Media announced the company had brokered the sale of the domain name “Fund.com” for nearly $10,000,000 in an all-cash transaction, to the company Fund.com Inc. Fund.com Inc never put out a press release on the transaction. The purchase price is the highest recorded price in history, followed by Porn.com (9,500,000) Business.com (7,500,000) and Diamond.com (7,500,000.) Below is a list of the highest priced domain names:

  1. Fund.com 9,999,950 2008
  2. Porn.com 9,500,000 2007
  3. Business.com 7,500,000 1999
  4. Diamond.com 7,500,000 2006
  5. Beer.com 7,000,000 2007
  6. Asseenontv.com 5,100,000 2000
  7. SEO.com 5,000,000 2007
  8. Auction.com 4,500,000 Reserve 2007
  9. Dermatology.com 4,500,000 Reserve 2007
  10. HorseRacing.com 4,500,000 Reserve 2007
  11. Slots.com 4,500,000 Reserve 2007
  12. PuertoRico.com 3,500,000 Reserve 2007
  13. Shop.com 3,500,000
  14. Altavista.com 3,300,000 2002
  15. Creditcheck.com 3,000,000 2007
  16. Scotland.com 3,000,000 Reserve2007
  17. Student.com 3,000,000 Reserve 2007
  18. Vodka.com 3,000,000 2006
  19. Wine.com 2,900,000 1999
  20. CreditCards.com 2,750,000 2004

References

link title