DISCLAIMER - Empire, a corporation formed in the state of Florida and its affiliates (collectively referred to herein as the “Advertiser”). The Advertiser publishes favorable information (the “Advertisements”) about publicly traded companies (each an “Advertised Issuer,” or collectively the “Advertised Issuers”) to increase the demand for and price of the Advertised Issuer’s securities. The Advertisements may be created by the Advertiser, third parties hired by the Advertiser, the Advertised Issuers themselves, or other parties engaging the services of the Advertiser.
In exchange for the compensation set forth at the end of this Disclaimer, the Advertiser publishes or causes the publication of the Advertisements on its websites, in newsletters, sms, audio services, live interviews, featured “research” reports, message boards and social media, third party websites, and in email communications (collectively the “Media”), pursuant to terms and conditions that are agreed upon between the Advertiser and the Advertised Issuer (the “Campaign”). This Disclaimer provides important information required by Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”) and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, and Section 17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), to specifically disclose: (i) the nature and amount of the Advertiser’s compensation, (ii) information concerning the Advertised Issuer’s securities that the Promoter holds or intends to acquire, (iii) whether the Advertiser intends to sell any securities of the Advertised issuer it holds during the Campaign while the Advertisements recommend that investors purchase, (iv) that the Advertiser may engage in buying and selling of the Advertised Issuer’s securities before, during, and after the Campaign.
The information in the Advertisements may be provided to the Advertiser by the Advertised Issuer and/or other parties hired by the Advertiser. The Advertiser may also obtain information contained in the Advertisement from publicly available sources such as the OTC Markets Group, Google, NASDAQ, NYSE, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Edgar database, and other available sources. The Advertiser does not endorse, verify, research, confirm or verify the truthfulness or completeness of any of the information used to create the Advertisements or that is contained in the Advertisements. The Advertisements do not provide sufficient information for investors to make an informed investment decision. The Advertisements are a snapshot and should not be considered as complete, accurate, truthful or reliable. Purchasing the Advertised Issuer’s securities based on the Advertisements creates a very high risk of financial loss. Investors may encounter difficulties determining what, if any, portions of the Advertisements are material or non-material, making it all the more imperative that each investor conduct his or her own independent investigation of the Advertised Issuer with the assistance of legal, tax and financial advisors (the “Advisors”). Investors should review information published on the websites of the OTC Markets Group, NASDAQ, NYSE and the Securities and Exchange Commission and undertake a full review of the business, financial condition, industry, risks, prospects and other information concerning the Advertised Issuer. An investor should only make an investment if he or she can afford a loss of their entire investment without a material change to his or her financial condition and/or standard of living.
If the Advertisement states that an Advertised Issuer’s securities are consistent with future economic trends, or even if your independent research indicates that, you should be aware that economic trends have their own limitations, including: (a) that economic trends or predictions may be speculative; (b) consumers, producers, investors, borrowers, lenders and government may react in unforeseen ways and be affected by behavioral biases that the Advertiser is unable to predict; (c) human and social factors may outweigh future economic trends that the Advertiser states may or will occur; (d) clear cut economic predictions have their limitations in that they do not account for the fundamental uncertainty in economic life, as well as in ordinary life; (e) economic trends may be disrupted by sudden jumps, disruptions or other factors that are not accounted for in economic trends analysis; in other words, past or present data predicting future economic trends may become irrelevant in light of new circumstances and situations in which uncertainty, rather than a predicted economic outcome, becomes reality; or (f) if the trend predicted involves a single result, and ignores other scenarios that may be crucial to make a decision in the event of unknown contingencies. The Advertiser disclaims, expressly and implicitly, all warranties of any kind and as such, any use of the Advertisement is at the recipient’s own risk. The Advertiser is not responsible or liable for any person’s reliance on or use of the Advertisement, including any success or failure that is directly or indirectly related to such person’s use of the Advertisement. The Advertiser specifically cautions recipients of the Advertisement that the Advertisement should not be considered to be true or complete and as such, should not be relied upon for any purpose. The Advertiser is not responsible for misleading or untrue statements or omissions in the Advertisements and is not responsible for actions taken by any person who relies upon the Advertisement. The Advertiser is not nor is it qualified to act as: (i) an investment adviser or an entity engaging in activities that would be deemed to be providing investment advice that requires registration either at the federal or state level, (ii) a broker-dealer or an individual acting in the capacity of a registered representative or broker-dealer, (iii) a stock picker, (iv) a securities trading or investment expert, (v) a securities researcher or analyst, (vi) a financial planner or one who engages in financial planning, a party who provides advice about buy, sell or hold recommendations as to specific securities; or (vii) a party or an agent offering securities for sale or soliciting their purchase. References in the Advertisements that refer to any security as a “stock pick” means it is a stock advertised by the Advertiser and is not an indication the security has been picked, chosen, selected, researched or recommended by the Advertiser or that Advertiser is qualified to select, research or recommend stocks.
The Advertiser has conflicts of interest because: (i) it only publishes favorable information and is paid to do so, (ii) the Advertiser may hold or acquire an Advertised Issuer’s securities while publishing the Advertisements during the Campaign (iii) the Advertiser may sell the Advertised Issuer’s securities during the Campaign while publishing favorable information that instructs or causes investors to buy, (iv) the Advertiser may hold or receive shares of the Advertised Issuer for a much lower price than that paid by investors, (v) the Advertiser’s sale of the Advertised Issuer’s securities will likely cause investors to suffer losses, (vi) the Advertiser may sell shares during the Campaign for a profit while recipients of the Advertisements suffer a loss, (vii) any party that engages and/or compensates the Advertiser may sell shares of the Advertised Issuer while the Advertiser is disseminating the Advertisement, and (viii) the payment of shares to the Advertiser will dilute investors and lower the value of their investment in the Advertised Issuer’s securities.
Most, if not all, of the Advertised Issuers are high risk investments and their securities are high risk, illiquid, unstable and subject to wide fluctuations in trading price and volume, which may make it difficult for investors to sell their shares. During the Campaign, the trading volume and price of the securities of an Advertised Issuer will likely increase significantly solely because of the demand created by the Campaign. As such, when the Campaign ends, the volume and price will likely decrease to a price at least as low as it was prior to the Campaign. As a result, investors who hold shares of the Advertised Issuer when the Campaign ends will probably lose most, if not all, of their investment. The Advertisements may be sent to potential investors at different times through different types of media. The Advertisements may be disseminated seconds, minutes, hours, days or even weeks apart. The Advertisements may be sent to potential investors multiple times by different types of Media controlled by the Advertiser. Upon the Advertisements being provided to the first recipients, the trading volume and price of the Advertised Issuer’s securities may increase. In the event of such an increase, the first recipients who invested will likely pay lower prices than those paid by subsequent recipients of the Advertisements. The Campaigns are designed so that purchases of the Advertised Issuer’s shares by investors receiving the Advertisements will cause the price and trading volume to increase in stages as the Advertisements are received by different groups of investors at different times. As the price of an Advertised Issuer’s securities increases due to the Campaign, the earlier recipients may sell their shares. Subsequent investors may therefore purchase the Advertised Issuer’s shares from investors who received the Advertisement before them, and purchased at lower prices, which will likely cause increases in price and volume. The later an investor receives an Advertisement, the more likely it is that he or she will purchase shares sold by earlier recipients of the Advertisement, pay inflated prices, and suffer increased trading losses.
The Advertiser’s compensation may consist of cash or securities of the Advertised Issuers. The amount of cash or securities paid to the Advertiser is set forth at the bottom of this Disclaimer. The Advertiser may sell securities of the Advertised Issuers for less than target prices set forth in the Advertisement. If the Advertisement publishes any percentage gain of an Advertised Issuer from the previous day’s close in the Advertisement, it is not and should not be construed as an indication that the future stock price or future operational results will reflect gains or otherwise prove to be advantageous to an investment. The Advertisement may state that an Advertised Issuer’s stock price has increased over a certain period of time. That period of time may be arbitrary, and the prediction is not the result of any professional analysis; as such, you should not rely that information. The Advertisement should not be interpreted in any way, shape, form or manner whatsoever as an indication of the Advertised Issuer’s future stock price or future financial performance. The Advertiser may receive unrestricted shares as compensation for the campaign or acquire such shares in open market transactions before and during the Campaigns, and may intend to sell the shares it acquires at any time, even during the Campaigns, while publishing the Advertisements. When the Advertiser sells the shares it holds, the price at which investors can sell their shares will likely decrease, which will likely cause investors to suffer trading losses. If the Advertiser is compensated in improperly unrestricted securities of the Advertised Issuers, either directly or indirectly from persons who claim to be non-affiliates of such Advertised Issuer, the Advertiser and the Advertised Issuer or third party could be subject to SEC enforcement action, including allegations of an illegal distribution in violation of Section 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act. The Advertiser may intend to sell any shares of an Advertised Issuer that it holds or receives as compensation during the Campaign while the Advertisement recommends investors purchase the Advertised Issuer’s securities. The Advertiser may be hired and compensated by the Company or other parties including officers, directors, shareholders or other stock Advertiser who want to sell their securities of the Advertised Issuer during the Campaign. These parties will sell their shares for more money if there is an increase in the trading price and/or volume of an Advertised Issuer’s securities. Recipients of the Advertisement could purchase securities sold during the Campaign by the Advertiser or by other parties compensating the Advertiser. As soon as the Advertiser sells the securities it holds, it may choose to end the Campaign, which would likely cause a material decline in the Advertised Issuer’s stock price and volume.
The source of the Advertiser could be compensated by the Issuers, non-affiliate or affiliate shareholders of the Issuers or other third parties who could derive a financial or other benefit from an increase in the trading price and/or volume of an Issuer’s securities. In addition, affiliates of the Advertiser may be hired by an Issuer to provide services to the Issuer. The details of Advertiser’s and its affiliates (including family members) compensation and security ownership is set forth below. Empire has been compensated $127,000 USD One Hundred Twenty-Seven Thousand dollars USD cash via bank wire and 225,000 Shares valued at approx. Two Hundred Eighty-One Thousand dollars USD of the Common Stock of Global Wholehealth Partners Corp by third Party for Advertising and Marketing services for Global Wholehealth Partners Corp. We will not sell or trade any shares during active email marketing; however, we reserve the right to sell shares after the campaign has been completed. The information in our disclaimers is subject to change at any time without notice. |