A late April Fool’s

Contact: Ben Kolada, Tim Miller

Contrary to a published press release (and several media outlets that took the bait), Google is not acquiring Wi-Fi provider ICOA. A poorly written press release published Monday morning led many to initially believe the deal was being done for $400m. However, a cursory look at the announcement’s grammatical errors, as well as the 3,700x price-to-trailing sales multiple, gave clue that something was amiss.

The oddball pairing had the flavor of one of Google’s notorious April Fool’s pranks, but neither Google nor ICOA was laughing. Representatives from both companies told us the announcement was false and both denied publishing it. ICOA even went so far as to say they are not having this kind of conversation with anyone at the moment.

That’s not to say the prank didn’t have a purpose. One explanation the release was published is rooted in the volatility of penny stocks, and the relative ease of inflating a penny stock’s value. Following the announcement, shares of ICOA, which trade at less than a penny on the OTC Pink Sheets, shot up nearly five-fold on heavy trading volume. Throughout the swing, more than 300 million shares traded hands, compared with the stock’s three-month average daily trading volume of less than three million shares.

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