AlumiFuel Power Corp - Quarter Report: 2009 October (Form 10-Q)
UNITED
STATES
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington,
D.C. 20549
FORM
10-Q
x
|
QUARTERLY
REPORT UNDER SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For
the quarter ended October
31, 2009
|
¨
|
TRANSITION
REPORT UNDER SECTION 13 OR 15 (d)
OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For
the transition period from
_______to_______
|
Commission
File No. 333-57946
ALUMIFUEL POWER
CORPORATION
(Exact
Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
Nevada
|
88-0448626
|
(State
or other jurisdiction of
|
(IRS
Employer
|
incorporation
or organization)
|
Identification
No.)
|
7315
East Peakview Avenue
Englewood, Colorado
80111
(Address
of principal executive offices) (Zip code)
(303)
796-8940
(Registrant's
telephone number including area code)
(Former
name, address and fiscal year)
Indicate
by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be
filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the
preceding 12 months, and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for
the past 90 days. Yes x No ¨
Indicate
by a check mark whether the Registrant is a large accelerated filer, an
accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting
company.
Large
accelerated filer ¨
|
Accelerated
filer ¨
|
Non-accelerated
filer ¨
|
Smaller
reporting companyx
|
Indicate
by check mark whether the Registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule
12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes ¨ No x
Number of
shares of common stock outstanding at December 1, 2009:
289,936,993
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Index
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
Page
|
||
Balance
Sheets at October 31, 2009 (unaudited) and December 31,
2008
|
F-2
|
|
Statement
of Operations for the three and nine months ended
|
||
October
31, 2009 and three and nine months ended October 31, 2008
|
F-3
|
|
Statement
of Changes in Shareholders' Deficit for the period from
|
||
November
11, 2007 through October 31, 2009 (unaudited)
|
F-4
|
|
Statement
of Cash Flows for nine months ended October 31, 2009 and
|
||
nine
months ended October 31, 2008
|
F-5
|
|
Notes
to Financial Statements
|
F-6
|
|
Item
2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition
|
||
and
Results of Operations
|
24
|
|
Item
3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market
Risk
|
28
|
|
Item
4T. Controls and Procedures
|
28
|
|
Part
II – Other Information
|
29
|
|
Signatures
|
31
|
|
F-1
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Consolidated
Balance Sheets
October
31,
|
December
31,
|
|||||||
2009
|
2008
|
|||||||
(Unaudited)
|
(Audited)
|
|||||||
Assets
|
||||||||
Cash
|
$ | 151,033 | $ | 292 | ||||
Accounts
receivable
|
— | 20,000 | ||||||
Deposits
|
— | 3,750 | ||||||
Prepaid
expenses
|
40,632 | 8,045 | ||||||
Notes
receivable (Note 5)
|
467 | 120,750 | ||||||
Investment
securities - marked to market (Note 1)
|
560,000 | 35,000 | ||||||
Property
and equipment, less accumulated depreciation
|
||||||||
of
$1076 (October 31) and $268 (December 31)
|
8,162 | 2,032 | ||||||
Deferred
debt issues costs (Note 4)
|
167,030 | |||||||
Other
assets
|
19 | 4,948 | ||||||
Total
assets
|
$ | 927,343 | $ | 194,817 | ||||
Liabilities
and Shareholders’ Deficit
|
||||||||
Current
liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accounts
and notes payable:
|
||||||||
Accounts
payable, related party (Note 3)
|
$ | 47,001 | $ | 46,757 | ||||
Accounts
payable, other
|
265,913 | 229,563 | ||||||
Derivative
liability, convertible notes payable (Note 4)
|
357,000 | — | ||||||
Notes
payable, related party (Note 3)
|
154,842 | 33,292 | ||||||
Notes
payable, other (Note 4)
|
35,200 | 75,654 | ||||||
Convertible
notes payable (Note 4)
|
38,750 | 225,000 | ||||||
Payroll
liabilities (Note 7)
|
66,972 | 52,576 | ||||||
Accrued
expenses
|
597 | 3,576 | ||||||
Accrued
interest payable:
|
||||||||
Interest
payable, convertible notes (Note 4)
|
2,645 | 21,426 | ||||||
Interest
payable, related party notes (Note 3)
|
26,446 | 914 | ||||||
Interest
payable, notes payable other (Note 4)
|
11,936 | 1,156 | ||||||
Total
current liabilities
|
1,007,302 | 689,914 | ||||||
Commitments
and contingencies
|
— | |||||||
Shareholders’
deficit: (Notes 1 & 9)
|
||||||||
Preferred
stock, $.001 par value; 10,000,000 shares authorized,
|
||||||||
-0-
(October 31) and 170,800 (December 31) shares
|
||||||||
issued
and outstanding
|
— | 171 | ||||||
Common
stock, $.001 par value; 500,000,000 shares authorized,
|
||||||||
289,936,993
(October 31) and 119,589,047 (December 31) shares
|
||||||||
issued
and outstanding
|
289,937 | 119,589 | ||||||
Additional
paid-in capital
|
8,773,537 | 1,517,040 | ||||||
Accumulated
deficit
|
(9,143,433 | ) | (2,131,897 | ) | ||||
Total
shareholders' deficit
|
(79,959 | ) | (495,097 | ) | ||||
Total
liabilities and shareholders' deficit
|
$ | 927,343 | $ | 194,817 |
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements
F-2
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Consolidated
Statements of Operations
(Unaudited)
Three
months
|
Three
months
|
Nine
months
|
Nine
months
|
|||||||||||||
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|||||||||||||
October
31,
|
October
31,
|
October
31,
|
October
31,
|
|||||||||||||
2009
|
2008
|
2009
|
2008
|
|||||||||||||
Operating
costs and expenses:
|
|
|||||||||||||||
Product
development expense
|
$ | 4,403 | $ | 2,611 | $ | 20,148 | $ | 16,905 | ||||||||
Selling,
general and administrative expenses
|
||||||||||||||||
Related
party (Note 3)
|
120,775 | 50,400 | 321,675 | 129,500 | ||||||||||||
(Gain)
loss on debt extinguishment (Notes 4 & 10)
|
(169,880 | ) | - | 31,094 | - | |||||||||||
Other
(Note 6)
|
259,798 | 223,229 | 800,679 | 521,901 | ||||||||||||
Total
operating costs and expenses
|
(215,096 | ) | (276,240 | ) | (1,173,596 | ) | (668,306 | ) | ||||||||
Other
income (expense)
|
||||||||||||||||
Unrealized
gain (loss) on investments (Note 1)
|
420,000 | (605,563 | ) | 455,000 | (605,563 | ) | ||||||||||
Stock-based
compensation (Note 9)
|
(1,407,044 | ) | - | (4,757,367 | ) | - | ||||||||||
Interest
(expense) income, amortization
|
||||||||||||||||
of
convertible note discount (Note 4)
|
(8,750 | ) | - | (16,952 | ) | - | ||||||||||
Interest
expense (Notes 3 & 4)
|
(84,638 | ) | (9,846 | ) | (97,920 | ) | (22,283 | ) | ||||||||
Fair
value adjustment of derivative liabilities (Note 4)
|
(21,466 | ) | - | (15,417 | ) | |||||||||||
(1,101,898 | ) | (615,409 | ) | (4,432,656 | ) | (627,846 | ) | |||||||||
Loss
before income taxes
|
(1,316,994 | ) | (891,649 | ) | (5,606,252 | ) | (1,296,152 | ) | ||||||||
Income
tax provision (Note 8)
|
- | - | ||||||||||||||
Net
loss
|
$ | (1,316,994 | ) | $ | (891,649 | ) | $ | (5,606,252 | ) | $ | (1,296,152 | ) | ||||
Basic
and diluted loss per common share
|
$ | (0.00 | ) | $ | (0.01 | ) | $ | (0.02 | ) | $ | (0.02 | ) | ||||
Weighted
average common shares
|
||||||||||||||||
outstanding
(Notes 1 & 9)
|
283,637,328 | 99,068,528 | 239,754,585 | 74,639,304 |
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial
statements
F-3
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Statement
of Changes in Shareholders’ Deficit
November
11, 2007 through October 31, 2009 (Unaudited)
Common
stock
|
Preferred
stock
|
Additional
paid-in
|
Accumulated
|
Total
shareholders
|
|||||||||||||||
Shares
|
Par
value
|
Shares
|
Par
value
|
Capital
|
deficit
|
deficit
|
|||||||||||||
Balance
at November 11, 2007 Inception Date
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
|||||||
Net
loss
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(24,545)
|
(24,545)
|
||||||||||||
Balance
at January 31, 2008
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(24,545)
|
(24,545)
|
||||||||||||
February
2008 through January 2009,
|
|||||||||||||||||||
sale
of common stock (Notes 1 & 9)
|
*
|
123,780,829
|
123,781
|
131,800
|
132
|
1,513,887
|
-
|
1,637,800
|
|||||||||||
December
2008, issuance of common
|
|||||||||||||||||||
stock
for debt (Notes 1 & 9)
|
*
|
8,219,178
|
8,219
|
50,000
|
50
|
141,731
|
-
|
150,000
|
|||||||||||
Net
loss
|
(2,135,444)
|
(2,135,444)
|
|||||||||||||||||
Balance
at January 31, 2009
|
*
|
132,000,007
|
$
|
132,000
|
181,800
|
$
|
182
|
1,655,618
|
$
|
(2,159,989)
|
$
|
(372,189)
|
|||||||
February
through May 2009,
|
|||||||||||||||||||
sale
of common stock (Notes 1 & 9)
|
*
|
11,506,850
|
11,507
|
58,300
|
58
|
186,735
|
-
|
198,300
|
|||||||||||
March
2009, issuance of common
|
|||||||||||||||||||
stock
for debt (Notes 1 & 9)
|
*
|
27,616,440
|
27,616
|
178,400
|
179
|
486,605
|
-
|
514,400
|
|||||||||||
May
2009, reverse acquisition of HPI
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Partners,
LLC and subsidiary (Notes 1 & 9)
|
22,825,993
|
22,826
|
-
|
-
|
556,215
|
(1,377,192)
|
(798,151)
|
||||||||||||
May
2009, issuance of warrants in
|
|||||||||||||||||||
HPI
Partners LLC acquisition (Note 9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,513,683
|
-
|
1,513,683
|
||||||||||||
May
2009, issuance of common stock upon
|
|||||||||||||||||||
exercise
of warrants (Note 9)
|
265,000
|
265
|
-
|
-
|
2,385
|
-
|
2,650
|
||||||||||||
May
2009, issuance of common stock for
|
|||||||||||||||||||
debt
(Notes 4 & 9)
|
4,171,940
|
4,172
|
-
|
-
|
204,425
|
-
|
208,597
|
||||||||||||
May
2009, issuance of warrants to subsidiary
|
|||||||||||||||||||
officers
and consultants (Note 9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,064,635
|
-
|
2,064,635
|
||||||||||||
May
2009, conversion of Series A preferred
|
|||||||||||||||||||
stock
to common stock (Notes 1 & 9)
|
34,397,261
|
34,397
|
(418,500)
|
(419)
|
(33,978)
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||||
May
through July 2009, issuance of common
|
|||||||||||||||||||
stock
in private placements (Note 9)
|
40,087,506
|
40,088
|
-
|
-
|
495,133
|
-
|
535,221
|
||||||||||||
August
through October 2009, issuance of common
|
|||||||||||||||||||
stock
in private placements (Note 9)
|
15,362,500
|
15,363
|
-
|
-
|
293,085
|
-
|
308,448
|
||||||||||||
September
2009, issuance of common stock
|
|||||||||||||||||||
for
debt (Notes 1 & 9)
|
607,996
|
608
|
-
|
-
|
82,627
|
-
|
83,235
|
||||||||||||
September
2009, issuance of convertible note
|
|||||||||||||||||||
and
warrant (Notes 4 & 9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
85,050
|
-
|
85,050
|
||||||||||||
September
2009, issuance of common stock
|
|||||||||||||||||||
for
debt offering (Notes 4 & 9)
|
900,000
|
900
|
-
|
-
|
116,100
|
-
|
117,000
|
||||||||||||
October
2009, issuance of stock options to
|
|||||||||||||||||||
officers,
directors & consultants (Note 9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,040,000
|
-
|
1,040,000
|
||||||||||||
October
2009, issuance of common stock
|
|||||||||||||||||||
for
warrant exercises (Notes 3 & 9)
|
195,500
|
195
|
-
|
-
|
25,219
|
-
|
25,414
|
||||||||||||
Net
loss
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(5,606,252)
|
(5,606,252)
|
||||||||||||
Balance
at October 31, 2009
|
289,936,993
|
$
|
289,937
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
8,773,537
|
$
|
(9,143,433)
|
$
|
(79,959)
|
||||||||
*
Restated, see Note 1
|
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements
F-4
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Statements
of Cash Flows
(Unaudited)
2009
|
2008
|
|||||||
Cash
flows from operating activities:
|
||||||||
Net
loss
|
$ | (5,606,252 | ) | $ | (1,296,152 | ) | ||
Adjustments
to reconcile net loss to net cash
|
||||||||
used
by operating activities:
|
||||||||
Stock
based compensation (Note 9)
|
4,757,367 | — | ||||||
Shares
issued for services (Note 4)
|
61,000 | — | ||||||
Loss
on debt extinguishment (Notes 4 & 10)
|
(181,191 | ) | — | |||||
Debt
issuance costs (Note 4)
|
117,000 | — | ||||||
Beneficial
conversion feature
|
63,000 | — | ||||||
Allowance
for bad debt (Note 5)
|
208,445 | — | ||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
6,790 | 153 | ||||||
Unrealized
(gain) loss on investments (Note 1)
|
(455,000 | ) | 605,563 | |||||
(Decrease)
increase in derivative liability (Note 4)
|
15,417 | — | ||||||
Amortization
of discount on debentures payable (Note 4)
|
16,952 | — | ||||||
Changes
in operating assets and liabilities:
|
— | |||||||
Accounts
and other receivebles
|
13,651 | (3,537 | ) | |||||
Prepaid
expenses and other assets
|
(29,597 | ) | (3,750 | ) | ||||
Accounts
payable and accrued expenses
|
41,389 | 38,710 | ||||||
Related
party payables (Note 3)
|
(60,950 | ) | — | |||||
Interest
payable
|
4,448 | 18,713 | ||||||
Net
cash used in operating activities
|
(1,027,531 | ) | (640,300 | ) | ||||
Cash
flows from investing activities:
|
||||||||
Purchase
of equipment
|
(6,938 | ) | (2,300 | ) | ||||
Purchase
of debt securities
|
— | (781,824 | ) | |||||
Issuance
of notes receivable (Note 5)
|
(63,175 | ) | (92,350 | ) | ||||
Payments
received on notes receivable (Note 5)
|
633 | — | ||||||
Cash
acquired in reverse acquisition (Note 1)
|
655 | — | ||||||
Net
cash used in investing activities
|
(68,825 | ) | (876,474 | ) | ||||
Cash
flows from financing activities:
|
||||||||
Proceeds
from debentures (Note 4)
|
315,000 | — | ||||||
Proceeds
from notes payable, related (Note 3)
|
43,247 | 149,000 | ||||||
Proceeds
from convertible promissory note (Note 4)
|
30,000 | 111,800 | ||||||
Proceeds
from notes payable, other (Note 4)
|
— | 50,000 | ||||||
Proceeds
from sales of common stock (Note 9)
|
1,096,401 | 1,347,000 | ||||||
Proceeds
from exercise of warrants to
|
||||||||
purchase
common stock (Note 9)
|
2,650 | — | ||||||
Payments
on notes payable, related (Note 3)
|
(112,313 | ) | (123,240 | ) | ||||
Payments
to placement agents (Note 4)
|
(173,050 | ) | — | |||||
Net
cash provided by financing activities
|
1,201,935 | 1,534,560 | ||||||
Net
change in cash and cash equivalents
|
105,579 | 17,786 | ||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents:
|
||||||||
Beginning
of period
|
45,454 | 14,933 | ||||||
End
of period
|
$ | 151,033 | $ | 32,719 | ||||
Supplemental
disclosure of cash flow information:
|
||||||||
Cash
paid during the period for:
|
||||||||
Income
taxes
|
$ | — | $ | — | ||||
Interest
|
$ | 27,362 | $ | 5,680 | ||||
Noncash
financing transactions:
|
||||||||
Accounts
payable converted to stock
|
$ | 90,414 | $ | — | ||||
Notes
and interest payable converted to stock, other
|
$ | 570,523 | $ | — | ||||
Notes
and interest payable converted to stock, related
|
$ | 61,400 | $ | — | ||||
Stock
issued in exchange for related party accounts payable
|
$ | 22,500 | $ | — |
See
accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements
F-5
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
Note
1: Basis of
presentation
The
interim unaudited financial statements presented herein have been prepared
pursuant to the rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission
(“SEC”) and for the three and nine month periods ended October 31, 2009 include
the financial statements of AlumiFuel Power Corporation (the “Company”) and its
subsidiaries HPI Partners, LLC (“HPI”) and AlumiFuel Power, Inc. (“API”). The
historical financial statements for the three and nine month periods ended
October 31, 2008 are those of HPI and API. Certain information and
footnote disclosures normally included in unaudited financial statements
prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles have been
condensed or omitted pursuant to such rules and regulations. The interim
unaudited financial statements should be read in conjunction with the Company’s
annual financial statements for the year ended January 31, 2009, notes and
accounting policies thereto included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K
as filed with the SEC and well as the financial statements of HPI Partners, LLC
included in the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K/A dated May 4, 2009 as
filed with the SEC on July 14, 2009.
In the
opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting only of normal recurring
adjustments) which are necessary to provide a fair presentation of operating
results for the interim periods presented have been made. The results
of operations for the periods presented are not necessarily indicative of the
results to be expected for the year.
The
accompanying financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis,
which contemplates the realization of assets and the satisfaction of liabilities
in the normal course of business. As shown in the accompanying
financial statements, the Company has had very limited revenue through October
31, 2009, and has an accumulated net deficit of $9,143,443 from its inception
through that date. These factors, among others, may indicate that the
Company will be unable to continue as a going concern for a reasonable period of
time.
Interim
financial data presented herein are unaudited.
Acquisition
of HPI Partners, LLC and AlumiFuel Power Corporation
Pursuant
to an Agreement Concerning the Exchange of Securities by and among the Company,
HPI and the Security Holders of HPI (the “HPI Members”) dated March 4, 2009,
(the “Share Exchange Agreement”), the parties entered into a share exchange
whereby all of the issued and outstanding membership interests of HPI were
exchanged for 171,123,297 shares of the Company’s $0.001 par value common stock
and 418,500 shares of the Company’s $0.001 par value Series A Preferred
Stock. Through this transaction HPI and its wholly-owned subsidiary
API became wholly owned subsidiaries of the Company (the “Share
Exchange”). The 418,500 shares of the Company’s Series A Preferred
Stock automatically converted to 34,397,261 shares of the Company’s $0.001 par
value common stock effective May 28, 2009 following approval by the Company’s
stockholders of an increase in the number of authorized common shares sufficient
to effect the conversion. In addition, in exchange for a like number
of HPI warrants the HPI Members received warrants to purchase up to 14,302,500
shares of the Company’s $0.001 par value common stock that are exercisable until
March 4, 2012 at an exercise price of $0.12 per share. The Share
Exchange was effective as of May 5, 2009, upon closing of the transaction among
the parties. Mr. Henry Fong, President of the Company, was a manger
and member of HPI and in exchange for $253,000 in HPI membership interests Mr.
Fong, or entities in which he is an owner or affiliate, received: 253,000 shares
of Series A Preferred Stock that convert to 20,794,521 shares of common stock;
and 1,265,000 warrants. Mr. Thomas B. Olson, Secretary of the
Corporation, was a manager of HPI and an entity in which Mr. Olson is a minority
owner received: 44,300 Series A Preferred Shares that convert to 3,641,096
shares of common stock; and 221,500 warrants.
F-6
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
This
acquisition was treated as a reverse-merger with HPI being the accounting
acquirer including a recapitalization of its equity with Inhibiton Therapeutics,
Inc. as the legal surviving entity. Effective on May 28, 2009, the
Company changed its name from Inhibiton Therapeutics, Inc. to AlumiFuel Power
Corporation.
As part
of the recapitalization of HPI, HPI’s closing equity of $2,500,500 at the time
of the merger has been eliminated and the equity transactions since its
inception have been restated as if they were issued shares of the Company’s
common and preferred stock. Accordingly, the statement of changes in
shareholders’ deficit reflects the restatement of these transactions and
includes the elimination of the HPI equity as “May 2009, reverse acquisition of
HPI Partners, LLC and subsidiary”. This entry includes the addition
of the equity balances from Inhibiton Therapeutics, Inc. as of the merger date
as well as the elimination of the HPI equity balances.
The
assets of HPI and API acquired included furniture and fixtures, tools and
laboratory equipment, certain prototype reactors and 3,500,000 shares of
FastFunds Financial Corporation common stock valued at $210,000 on its
acquisition date of September 3, 2008.
The
3,500,000 shares of FastFunds Financial Corporation common stock are presented
on the balance sheet as “Investment securities – marked to market” and are
marked to their fair value at the end of each reporting period. The
shares were valued at $210,000 at their acquisition date and $105,000 at January
31, 2009 based on the then market price of $0.03 per share. At
October 31, 2009, the shares were valued at $560,000 based on the closing market
price of $0.16 per share on that date. Accordingly, the corresponding
increase in value of $455,000 was recorded as “Unrealized gain on investment” at
October 31, 2009 on the statements of operations.
While HPI
is the accounting acquirer following the transaction and had a fiscal year end
of December 31, the Company chose to continue with the Inhibiton fiscal year end
of January 31. Although the Company is presently evaluating its
options with respect to changing its year end, these financial statements are
presented based on a January 31 fiscal year end. Accordingly, for
comparison purposes, following is an unaudited balance sheet for HPI and its
subsidiary API as of January 31, 2009:
HPI
Partners, LLC and Subsidiary
Condensed
Consolidated Balance Sheets
January
31, 2009 (Unaudited)
Assets
|
||||
Cash
|
$ | 44,454 | ||
Accounts
receivable
|
20,000 | |||
Deposits
|
3,750 | |||
Prepaid
expenses
|
7,287 | |||
Notes
receivable
|
134,225 | |||
Investment
securities – marked to market
|
105,000 | |||
Equipment,
less accumulated depreciation of $306
|
1,994 | |||
Other
assets
|
5,815 | |||
$ | 325,525 | |||
Liabilities
and Members’ Deficit
|
||||
Current
liabilities:
|
||||
Accounts and notes
payable:
|
||||
Accounts payable, including
related parties
|
271,759 | |||
Notes payable, including related
parties
|
114,416 | |||
Convertible notes payable,
including related parties
|
225,000 | |||
Payroll
liabilities
|
52,576 | |||
Accrued expenses
|
5,962 | |||
Accrued interest payable,
including related parties
|
4,575 | |||
Total current
liabilities
|
21,426 | |||
Shareholders’
deficit (restated):
|
||||
Preferred stock, $.001 par value,
181,800 shares issued & outstanding
|
182 | |||
Common stock, $.001 par value
,132,000,007 shares issued and outstanding
|
132,000 | |||
Additional paid in
capital
|
1,655,618 | |||
Accumulated
deficit
|
(2,159,989 | ) | ||
Total members’
deficit
|
(372,189 | ) | ||
Total liabilities and members’
equity
|
$ | 325,525 |
F-7
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
Note
2: Summary of Significant
Accounting Policies
Use
of Estimates
The
preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that
affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities at the date of financial statements and the
reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting
period. Actual results could differ from those
estimates.
Cash
and Cash Equivalents
The
Company considers all highly liquid securities with original maturities of three
months or less when acquired to be cash equivalents. Cash equivalents
at October 31, 2009 were $151,033.
Stock-based
Compensation
The
Company accounts for stock-based compensation arrangements in accordance with
the provisions of, and accounts for stock-based compensation in accordance ASC
718 - "Compensation - Stock Compensation" (formerly Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 123 – revised 2004 (“SFAS 123R”) "Share-Based
Payment". The Company elected the modified-prospective method, under
which prior periods are not revised for comparative purposes. Details
of the Company’s stock based compensation expenses can be found under Note 7,
Capital Stock.
Debt
Issue Costs
The costs
related to the issuance of debt are capitalized and amortized to interest
expense using the straight-line method over the lives of the related
debt. The straight-line method results in amortization that is not
materially different from that calculated under the effective interest
method.
Financial
Instruments
At
October 31, 2009, the fair value of the Company’s financial instruments
approximate their carrying value based on their terms and interest
rates.
Derivative
Instruments
In
connection with the issuances of equity instruments or debt, the Company may
issue options or warrants to purchase common stock. In certain circumstances,
these options or warrants may be classified as liabilities, rather than as
equity. In addition, the equity instrument or debt may contain embedded
derivative instruments, such as conversion options or listing requirements,
which in certain circumstances may be required to be bifurcated from the
associated host instrument and accounted for separately as a derivative
liability instrument. The Company accounts for derivative instruments under the
provisions of ASC 815 - "Derivatives and Hedging" (formerly SFAS No. 133,
"Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities").
F-8
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
Recently issued accounting
pronouncements
In June
2009 the FASB established the Accounting Standards Codification ("Codification'"
or "ASC") as the source of authoritative accounting principles recognized by the
FASB to be applied by non-governmental entities in the preparation of financial
statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the
United States ("GAAP"). Rules and interpretive releases of the Securities and
Exchange Commission issued under authority of federal securities laws are also
sources of GAAP for SEC registrants. Existing GAAP was not intended to be
changed as a result of the Codification, and accordingly the change did not
impact our financial statements. The ASC does change the way the guidance is
organized and presented.
Statement
of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS'") SFAS No. 165 (ASC Topic 855),
"Subsequent Events", SFAS No. 166 (ASC Topic 810), "Accounting for Transfers of
Financial Assets-an Amendment of FASB Statement No. 140", SFAS No. 167 (ASC
Topic 810), "Amendments to FASB Interpretation No. 46(R)", and SFAS No. 168 (ASC
Topic 105), "The FASB Accounting Standards Codification and the Hierarchy of
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles-a replacement of FASB Statement No.
162" were recently issued. The Company does not believe that these new
pronouncements have applicability to the Company or their effect on the
financial statements would not have been significant. The Company
evaluated for subsequent events through the issuance date of the Company’s
financial statements.
Accounting
Standards Update ("ASU") ASU No. 2009-05 (ASC Topic 820), which amends Fair
Value Measurements and Disclosures - Overall, ASU No. 2009-13 (ASC Topic 605),
Multiple-Deliverable Revenue arrangements, ASU No. 2009-14 (ASC Topic 985),
Certain Revenue Arrangements that include Software Elements, and various other
ASU's No. 2009-2 through ASU No. 2009-15 which contain technical corrections to
existing guidance or affect guidance to specialized industries or entities were
recently issued. These updates have no current applicability to the Company or
their effect on the financial statements would not have been
significant.
The
Company does not expect that adoption of these or other recently issued
accounting pronouncements will have a material impact on its financial position,
results of operations or cash flows.
Note
3: Related
Party
Related
Party Accounts Payable
The Board
of Directors has estimated the value of management services at the monthly rate
of $8,000 and $2,000 for the president and secretary/treasurer,
respectively. The estimates were determined by comparing the level of
effort to the cost of similar labor in the local market and this expense totaled
$90,000 at October 31, 2009. At October 31, 2009, the Company
owed $400 to its officers for management services.
During
the nine month period ended October 31, 2009, HPI paid a corporation affiliated
with the Company’s officers a management fee that totaled $32,000 for services
rendered as managers of the Company, all of which was paid during the
period.
In
September 2009, the Company's board directors authorized a bonus program for the
Company's officers related to their efforts raising capital to fund the
Company's operations. Accordingly, the Company's president and
secretary are eligible to receive a bonus based on 50% of the traditional
"Lehman Formula" whereby they will receive 2.5% of the total proceeds of the
first $1,000,000 in capital raised by the Company, 2.0% of the next $1,000,000,
1.5% of the next $1,000,000, 1% of the next $1,000,000 and .5% of any proceeds
above $4,000,000. The amount is capped at $150,000 per fiscal
year. During the nine months ended October 31, 2009, the Company paid
$28,674 to a corporation owned by Messrs. Fong and Olson under this bonus
program.
F-9
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
The
Company’s subsidiary, API, pays its chief technology officer and its general
counsel/executive vice president each $6,500 per month in management
fees. In addition, API pays a management fee of $6,500 to a company
owned by the Company’s officers for services related to its accounting and
corporate governance functions. For the nine month period ended
October 31, 2009, these management fees totaled $175,500, $65,000 of which was
recorded as legal and accounting expense during the period. As of
October 31, 2009, the Company owed $46,601 in accrued management fees and
related expenses.
In
February 2009, our secretary/treasurer, Thomas Olson, converted $22,500 in
accrued management fees due him to 300,000 shares of our $0.001 par value common
stock. The shares were valued at $0.075 per share, the market price
of our common stock on the date of issuance. In October 2009, David
Cade, President of API, used $10,465 in accrued expenses to exercise warrants to
purchase 80,500 shares of our common stock at $0.13 per share. Also
in October 2009, Michael McAllister, API's vice president/general counsel used
$14,950 in accrued management fees to exercise warrants to purchase 115,000
shares of our common stock at $0.13 per share
The
Company rents office space, including the use of certain office machines, phone
systems and long distance fees, from a company owned by its officers at the rate
of $1,200 per month, based on the amount of space occupied by the Company and
use of the office equipment and services. Rent expense totaled
$10,800 for the six months ended October 31, 2009.
Prior to
the acquisition of HPI by the Company, HPI was paying a company owned by the
Company’s officers rent of $500 per month for the use of limited office space as
well as certain office machines, phone systems and long distance
fees. This rent expense totaled $2,000 for the period from February
through May 2009.
Accounts
payable to related parties consisted of the following at July 31,
2009:
Management
fees payable to officers
|
$ | 46,989 | ||
Accrued
expenses payable to subsidiary officer
|
12 | |||
Total
accounts payable, related party
|
$ | 47,001 |
Related
Party Notes Payable
AlumiFuel Power
Corporation
From time
to time the Company has issued various promissory notes payable to a trust
created by the president of the Company for the benefit of his children, in
exchange for cash used for working capital purposes with a total principal
balance at January 31, 2009 of $157,310. The notes bear an
interest rate of 8% and are due on demand. During the nine month
period ended July 31, 2009, the Company repaid $20,310 in principal and $14,690
in interest on these notes. As of October 31, 2009, $137,000 in
principal remained outstanding with $24,687 in accrued interest on all notes
payable to the trust.
As of
January 31, 2009, the Company owed $26,200 in principal to a company owned by
the president for various promissory notes issued during prior
periods. The notes bear an interest rate of 8% per annum and
are due on demand. During the nine months ended October 31, 2009, an
additional $12,300 in notes payable were issued while the Company paid the
entire principal balance on these notes along with $4,963 in accrued interest on
the promissory notes. At October 31, 2009, no principal or accrued
interest remained outstanding on all notes payable to this
affiliate.
At
January 31, 2009, the Company owed $671 in principal on promissory notes payable
to the president. The notes bear an interest rate of 8% per annum and
are due on demand. During the nine months ended October 31, 2009, an
additional $8,600 in notes payable were issued while the Company made payments
totaling $9,236 in principal and $140 in interest on these
notes. As of October 31, 2009, $35 in principal and $1 in
accrued interest remained payable on these notes.
F-10
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
In
periods prior to January 31, 2009, the Company executed promissory notes with
companies affiliated with the Company’s officers that totaled $27,084 at January
31, 2009. During the nine month period ended October 31, 2009, and
additional $11,747 in notes payable were issued. These notes carry an
interest rate of 8% per annum and are due on demand. During the nine
month period ended October 31, 2009, $33,977 in principal and $4,8146 in accrued
interest was repaid on these notes leaving a balance due at October 31, 2009 of
$4,855 in principal and $130 in accrued interest payable.
As of
January 31, 2009, the Company owed $5,500 on a promissory note issued to a
partnership affiliated with the Company’s president. This note
carries an interest rate of 8% and is due on demand. As of October
31, 2009, the entire balance of this note remains outstanding with accrued
interest payable of $1,008.
During
the Nine month period ended October 31, 2009, the Company issued a promissory
note to a partnership affiliated with its president and secretary in the amount
of $5,000. This note carries and interest rate of 8% per annum and is
due on demand. As of October 31, 2009, $5,000 in principal and $220
in accrued interest remained outstanding on this note.
During
the nine month period ended October 31, 2009, the Company issued a promissory
note to a company owned by its president and secretary in the amount of
$400. This note carries and interest rate of 8% per annum and is due
on demand. As of October 31, 2009, $400 in principal and $16 in
accrued interest remained outstanding on this note.
HPI Partners,
LLC
During
2008, the HPI issued various promissory notes payable to one of its managers,
Henry Fong, in exchange for loans totaling $69,900. Each note carried
an interest rate of 10% per annum and was due on demand. During the
year ended December 31, 2008, the Company repaid $52,336 in principal on these
notes leaving a principal balance due at December 31, 2008 of
$17,564. During the three months ended March 31, 2009, the entire
principal balance of these notes plus $536 in accrued interest was converted to
$18,100 of membership interest in HPI that converted to 1,487,672 shares of
Company common stock in the Share Exchange. As of October 31, 2009,
$119 in accrued interest remained payable on these notes.
During
2008, the Company issued various promissory notes payable to a company owned by
one of its managers, Henry Fong, in exchange for loans totaling
$24,100. Each note carried an interest rate of 10% per annum and was
due on demand. During the year ended December 31, 2008, the Company
repaid $21,682 in principal on these notes leaving a principal balance due at
December 31, 2008 of $2,418. During the three months ended March 31,
2009 an additional $13,500 was loaned to the Company while $12,366 was repaid on
these notes. On March 4, 2009, $3,500 of the remaining balance of
these notes was converted to a like amount of membership interest in HPI that
converted to 287,671 shares of Company common stock in the Share
Exchange. An additional $2,000 was loaned in May 2009 leaving a
principal balance due at October 31, 2009 of $2,052 with accrued interest of
$104.
In
December 2007, the Company issued a convertible note payable to a company owned
by one of its managers, Henry Fong, in exchange for $25,000. This
note carried and interest rate of 10% per annum and was due on January 17,
2008. As of December 31, 2008, the entire principal balance of this
note remained due and outstanding. On March 13, 2009, the entire
principal balance plus $3,000 in accrued interest was converted to a $28,000
membership interest in HPI that converted to 2,301,370 shares of Company common
stock in the Share Exchange. As of October 31, 2009, $83 in accrued interest
remained payable on these notes.
F-11
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
During
the year ended December 31, 2008, the Company issued various promissory notes
payable to a company owned by its Managers, Henry Fong and Thomas B. Olson, in
exchange for loans totaling $46,800. Each note carried an interest
rate of 10% per annum and was due on demand. During the year ended
December 31, 2008, the Company repaid $33,490 in principal on these notes
leaving a principal balance due at December 31, 2008 of
$13,310. During the three months ended March 31, 2009, $2,101 of
these funds was repaid in cash and on March 4, 2009, the balance of $11,209 plus
accrued interest of $591 was converted to $11,800 of membership interest in HPI
that converted to 969,863 shares of Company common stock in the Share
Exchange. As of October 31, 2009, $78 in accrued interest remained
payable on these notes.
Notes and
interest payable to related parties consisted of the following at July 31,
2009:
Notes
payable to officers; interest at 8% and due on demand
|
$ | 35 | ||
Notes
payable to affiliates of Company officers; interest at 8% and due on
demand
|
154,807 | |||
Notes
payable, related party
|
154,842 | |||
Interest
payable related party
|
26,446 | |||
Total
principal and interest payable, related party
|
$ | 181,288 |
Note
4: Notes
Payable
AlumiFuel Power
Corporation
During
the year ended January 31, 2006, the Company received proceeds of $30,000, in
exchange for a promissory note from an unaffiliated third party. The
entire balance of this note remained outstanding at October 31,
2009. The promissory note was issued at an interest rate of 8% per
annum and is due on demand. Accrued interest payable on the note
totaled $11,119 at October 31, 2009.
During
the year ended January 31, 2008, the Company received proceeds of $5,200 in
exchange for a promissory note from an unaffiliated third party. The
entire balance of this note remained outstanding at April 30,
2009. The promissory note was issued at an interest rate of 8% per
annum and is due on demand. Accrued interest payable on the note
totaled $749 at October 31, 2009.
HPI Partners,
LLC
In
December 2007, the Company issued a note payable to an unaffiliated third party
in exchange for $25,000. This note carried an interest rate of 10%
per annum and is due on demand. During the year ended December 31, 2008, an
additional $20,000 was loaned to the Company and $44,346 was repaid leaving an
unpaid principal balance of $654. During the six month period ended
July 31, 2009, this entire amount plus $68 in accrued interest was applied to a
receivable from this company leaving no balance due.
In
February 2008, the Company issued a note payable to an unaffiliated third party
in exchange for $50,000. This note carried and interest rate of 10.5%
per annum and was due 90 days following its issuance and later extended to July
1, 2008. As of December 31, 2008, the entire principal balance of
this note remained due and outstanding. On March 13, 2009, the entire
principal balance of this note plus accrued interest of $1,900 was converted to
$51,900 of membership interest in the Company that converted to 4,265,754 shares
of Company common stock in the Share Exchange. As of October 31,
2009, $69 in accrued interest remained payable on these notes.
F-12
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
In
December 2008, the Company issued a note payable to an unaffiliated third party
in exchange for $25,000. This note carried and interest rate of 10%
per annum and was due on December 31, 2008. As of December 31, 2008,
the entire principal balance of this note remained due and
outstanding. On March 13, 2009, the entire principal balance of this
note plus $600 in accrued interest was converted to a $25,600 membership
interest in the Company that converted to 2,104,110 shares of Company common
stock in the Share Exchange. As of October 31, 2009, $51 in accrued
interest remained payable on these notes.
Under the
terms of the Share Exchange Agreement, HPI issued to the Company a promissory
note in the amount of $200,000 bearing an interest rate of 5% per annum that is
due and payable by HPI to the Company on or before March 4,
2014. This note does not appear on the Company’s balance sheet given
the inter-company payable was eliminated in consolidation.
AlumiFuel
Power Corporation Convertible Promissory Notes
May 2008
Notes
In May
2008, the Company issued notes payable to two accredited investors for the
issuance of $55,000 of 10% unsecured convertible notes in private transactions
(the “May Notes”). The May Notes are convertible at 75% of the
average closing bid price per share of the Company’s common stock for the twenty
days immediately preceding the date of conversion subject to a floor of $0.05
per share. The Company evaluated the Notes’ conversion terms to determine if
they gave rise to an embedded derivative that would need to be accounted for
separately under ASC 815 (formerly SFAS No. 133 and Emerging Issues Task Force
(EITF) 00-19 "Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments Indexed to, and
Potentially Settled in, a Company's Own Stock"). The Company
determined that the conversion feature of the Notes represents an embedded
derivative since the Notes are convertible into a variable number of shares if
converted. Since the May Notes are convertible into a variable number
of shares upon conversion, the conversion feature is not considered to be
conventional and therefore must be bifurcated from the debt host and accounted
for as a derivative liability. Accordingly, the fair value of these
derivative instruments of $30,037 was recorded as a liability in the
consolidated balance sheet with the corresponding amount recorded as a discount
to the May Notes. The change in the fair value of the derivative
liability will be re-measured at each balance sheet reporting date with any
difference recorded as other income (expense) in the consolidated statement of
operations.
The fair
value of the derivative instruments was calculated at issue date utilizing the
following assumptions:
Issuance Date
|
Fair Value
|
Term
|
Conversion
Price
|
Market
Price on
Grant Date
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
May
2, 2008
|
$16,333
|
1
year
|
$0.09
|
$0.12
|
101%
|
2.1%
|
May
21, 2008
|
$13,704
|
1
year
|
$0.068
|
$0.09
|
101%
|
2.1%
|
At July
31, 2009, the Company revalued all derivative liability balance of the May
Notes. Therefore, for the period from their issuance to July 31,
2009, the Company recorded an expense and decreased the previously recorded
liabilities by $9,504 resulting in a derivative liability balance of $20,533 at
July 31, 2009.
In
September 2009, all principal and accrued interest totaling $7,426 was converted
to 607,996 shares of our $0.001 par value common stock at a conversion price of
$0.103 per share. Accordingly, the derivative liability balance at
July 31, 2009 of $20,533 was reduced to zero and the principal balance on the
May Notes of $55,000 and accrued interest was converted to equity.
F-13
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
December 2008 and January
2009 Notes
During
the year ended January 31, 2009, the Company issued notes payable to an
accredited investor for the issuance of $200,000 of 12% unsecured convertible
notes in three private transactions (the “December Notes”). The
December Notes are due and payable on May 10, 2009 and are convertible into the
Company’s common stock at $0.05 per share. The Company has determined that the
conversion feature does not represent an embedded derivative as the conversion
price is known and is not variable making them conventional. The
Company determined there was a beneficial conversion feature related to the
December Notes based on the difference between the conversion price of $0.05 and
the market price of the Company’s common stock at the date of each note issuance
and recorded as interest expense $200,000 with an offset to additional paid-in
capital. The outstanding principal and interest of $208,597 on these
notes were converted on May 8, 2009 to 4,171,940 shares of $0.001 par value
common stock.
September 2009 Convertible
Note
In
September 2009, we issued a note payable to an accredited investor for a $30,000
12% unsecured convertible note (the “September Note”). The September
Note is due and payable on December 4, 2009 and is convertible into the
Company’s common stock at $0.05 per share. The Company has determined that the
conversion feature does not represent an embedded derivative as the conversion
price is known and is not variable making it conventional. The
Company determined there was a beneficial conversion feature related to the
December Notes based on the difference between the conversion price of $0.05 and
the market price of the Company’s common stock the note issue date and recorded
as interest expense $63,000 with an offset to additional paid-in
capital. The entire principal balance of this note plus accrued
interest of $572 was payable at October 31, 2009.
Convertible
Debentures
In
September, 2009, the Company engaged a placement agent to act as its agent in
the offer and sale of up to $700,000 of 6% unsecured convertible debentures in
transactions with private investors (the “Debentures”). The offering
is on a “best efforts” basis with a minimum offering amount of
$100,000. In connection with the transaction, the Company executed an
Escrow Agreement in which all funds related to the offering will be deposited
until the minimum offering amount of $100,000 is reached and a first closing
occurs. Once the minimum offering amount is reached, funds
raised up to the maximum offering amount will be released from escrow at future
closings from time-to-time as prescribed in the offering documents.
Among
other terms of the offering, the Debentures are due three years from the final
Closing Date for each Debenture under the securities purchase agreement (the
“Maturity Date”), unless prepayment of the Debentures is required in certain
events, as called for in the agreements. The Debentures are
convertible at a conversion price (the “Conversion Price”) for each share of
common stock equal to 75% of the lowest closing bid price per share (as reported
by Bloomberg, LP) of the Company’s common stock for the twenty (20) trading days
immediately preceding the date of conversion. In addition, the
Debentures provide for adjustments for dividends payable other than in shares of
common stock, for reclassification, exchange or substitution of the common stock
for another security or securities of the Company or pursuant to a
reorganization, merger, consolidation, or sale of assets, where there is a
change in control of the Company.
F-14
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
The
outstanding principal balance of each Debenture bears interest, in arrears, at
six percent (6%) per annum, payable (i) upon conversion, or (ii) on the Maturity
Date, in cash or shares of our common stock at the Conversion
Price. Upon the occurrence of an Event of Default (as defined in the
offering documents), the Company is required to pay interest to the Holder of
each outstanding Debenture, at the option of the Holders (i) at the rate of
lesser of eighteen percent (18%) per annum and the maximum interest rate
allowance under applicable law, and (ii) the Holders may at their option declare
the Debentures, together with all accrued and unpaid interest, to be immediately
due and payable.
The
Company may at its option call for redemption all or part of the Debentures
prior to the Maturity Date. The Debentures called for redemption
shall be redeemable for an amount equal to 120% of the outstanding principal and
interest if called for redemption prior to the date that is six months from the
date of issuance, or 131%, if called for redemption on or after the date that is
six months after the date of issuance. If fewer than all of the
outstanding Debentures are redeemed, then all of the Debentures shall be
partially redeemed on a pro
rata basis.
Further
terms call for the Company to maintain sufficient authorized shares reserved for
issuance under the agreement equal to 300% of the number of shares issuable upon
conversion of the debentures. In addition, if the closing bid price
of the Common Stock is below $0.05 on three (3) consecutive trading days, then
the Company shall seek to implement a reverse stock split in a ratio of at least
one-for-five.
On
September 29, 2009, the Company executed Securities Purchase Agreements (the
"Purchase Agreements") with various accredited investors (the "Holder" or
"Holders") for an aggregate of $220,000 in Debentures. An additional
closing was completed on October 15, 2009 for an aggregate of $95,000 in
Debentures. During the nine month period ended October 31, 2009, we
received net proceeds from the Debenture closings of $258,950 after debt
issuance costs of $56,050 paid to the placement agent, Divine Capital Markets,
LLC. Additionally, Divine Capital Markets, LLC received a one-time
issuance of 900,000 shares of our $0.001 par value common stock upon completion
of the first closing. These shares were valued at $117,000 or $0.13
per share, the market price for our common stock on the date of
issuance. These debt issuance costs totaling $173,050 at October 31,
2009, as well as for any future closings issued will be amortized over the three
year term of the Debentures. As of October 31, 2009, $6,020 of these costs had
been expensed as debt issuance costs.
We have
determined that the conversion feature of the Debentures represents an embedded
derivative since the Debentures are convertible into a variable number of shares
upon conversion. Accordingly, the convertible Debentures are not considered to
be conventional debt under EITF 00-19 and the embedded conversion feature must
be bifurcated from the debt host and accounted for as a derivative liability.
The Company believes that the aforementioned embedded derivatives meet the
criteria of ASC 815 (formerly SFAS 133 and EITF 00-19), and should be accounted
separately as derivatives with a corresponding value recorded as a liability.
Accordingly, the fair value of these derivative instruments have been recorded
as a liability on the consolidated balance sheet with the corresponding amount
recorded as a discount to the Debentures. Such discount will be accreted from
the date of issuance to the maturity date of the Debentures. The change in the
fair value of the liability for derivative contracts will be credited to other
income (expense) in the consolidated statements of operations at the end of each
quarter. The $315,000 face amount of the Debentures were stripped of their
conversion feature due to the accounting for the conversion feature as a
derivative, which was recorded using the residual proceeds to the conversion
option would be attributed to the debt. The beneficial conversion feature (an
embedded derivative) included in the 2006 Debenture resulted in an initial debt
discount of $315,000 and an initial loss on the valuation of derivative
liabilities of $10,229 for a derivative liability balance of
$325,229.
The fair
value of the Debentures was calculated at issue date utilizing the following
assumptions:
Issuance Date
|
Fair Value
|
Term
|
Assumed
Conversion
Price
|
Market
Price on
Grant Date
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
9/29/2009
|
$207,429
|
3
years
|
$0.105
|
$0.13
|
195%
|
1.38%
|
10/15/2009
|
$117,800
|
3
years
|
$0.075
|
$0.12
|
196%
|
1.38%
|
F-15
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
At
October 31, 2009, the Company revalued the derivative liability balance of the
Debentures. Therefore, for the period from their issuance to October
31, 2009, the Company recorded an expense and increased the previously recorded
liabilities by $31,771 resulting in a derivative liability balance of $357,000
at October 31, 2009.
The fair
value of the Debentures was calculated at October 31, 2009 utilizing the
following assumptions:
Fair Value
|
Term
|
Assumed
Conversion
Price
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
$357,000
|
3
years
|
$0.075
|
195%
|
1.38%
|
HPI
Partners, LLC Convertible Promissory Notes
In
December 2007, the Company issued notes payable for the issuance of $125,000 of
10% unsecured convertible notes (the “December Notes”). Included in
the December Notes was $25,000 received from an entity controlled by Henry Fong,
a manager of the Company, and described in Related Party Transactions
above. The December Notes were due and payable thirty days from their
issuance and were convertible into a membership interest in HPI on a $1.00 for
$1.00 basis. HPI determined the conversion feature did not represent an embedded
derivative as the conversion price was known and was not variable making them
conventional. HPI further determined there was no beneficial
conversion feature related to the December Notes as there was no difference
between the conversion price and the price paid by HPI’s then members in
previous equity transactions.
In March
2008, the Company issued additional notes payable for the issuance of $100,000
of 10% unsecured convertible notes (the “March Notes”). The March
Notes were due and payable thirty days from their issuance and were convertible
into a membership interest in HPI on a $1.00 for $1.00 basis. HPI determined the
conversion feature did not represent an embedded derivative as the conversion
price was known and was not variable making them conventional. HPI
further determined there was no beneficial conversion feature related to the
March Notes as there was no difference between the conversion price and the
price paid by HPI’s then members in previous equity transactions.
On March
13, 2009, the entire principal balance of these notes plus $25,000 in accrued
interest was converted to $250,000 of membership interest in
HPI. Included in this amount is $28,000 converted by a company owned
by Henry Fong, a manager of the Company. The remaining $222,000 of
these notes from third parties converted to 18,246,576 shares of Company common
stock in the Share Exchange. As of October 31, 2009, $528 in accrued
interest remained payable on these notes.
Note
5: Notes
Receivable
During
the year ended January 31, 2009, HPI loaned $133,125 to FastFunds Financial
Corporation (“FFFC”), an affiliate of the Company. Each of these
loans carries an interest rate of 8% per annum and are due on
demand. During the nine months ended October 31, 2009, HPI loaned an
additional $36,875 and the Company loaned FFFC an additional $26,300 for a total
outstanding balance due from FFFC at October 31, 2009 of $196,300. At
October 31, 2009, there was $15,985 in interest receivable due from FFFC on
these notes. Management of the Company evaluated the likelihood of
payment on these notes at October 31, 2009 and determined that an allowance of
the entire balance due is appropriate. Accordingly, the Company
recorded a loss on debt extinguishment of $196,300 on the Company’s statement of
operations at October 31, 2009.
As of
October 31, 2009, the Company has $467 notes receivable from a
non-affiliate. This notes is due on demand, carries an interest rate
of 8% and has accrued interest payable of $9. At July 31, 2009 the
Company had a $253 note receivable due from an affiliated
entity. This note carried an interest rate of 8% and was due on
demand. The entire principal balance and $1 of accrued interest was
paid on this note during the quarter ended October 31, 2009 leaving no balance
due.
F-16
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
Note
6: Other
Expense
Other
expense for the three and nine month periods ended October 31, 2009 and 2008
consisted of the following:
Three
months ended October 31, 2009
|
Three
months ended October 31, 2008
|
Nine
months ended October 31, 2009
|
Nine
months
ended October 31, 2008
|
|||||||||||||
General
and administrative
|
$ | 43,818 | $ | 40,145 | $ | 129,060 | $ | 92,148 | ||||||||
Salaries
and employee benefits
|
89,423 | 109,591 | 272,913 | 205,317 | ||||||||||||
Legal
and accounting
|
27,870 | 10,344 | 117,490 | 48,387 | ||||||||||||
Professional
services
|
98,688 | 63,149 | 281,216 | 179,549 | ||||||||||||
$ | 259,798 | $ | 223,229 | $ | 800,679 | $ | 521,901 |
Note
7: Payroll
Liabilities
Following
the formation of API in May 2008, the HPI hired certain former employees of
Hydrogen Power, Inc. and maintained an office in Seattle, Washington for a
period of approximately five months. During that time, the HPI paid
wages to these employees without the benefit of a payroll management
service. Upon the HPI’s move from Seattle to Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania in October 2008, the Company retained the services of a payroll
management service to handle its payroll functions. During that
period from May to October 2008, the Company recorded $52,576 in payroll
liabilities due from wages paid to its employees. During the nine
month period ended October 31, 2009, $4,583 of this amount was paid and the
Company accrued estimated penalty and interest expense totaling $18,979 leaving
a balance of $66,972. This amount is included on the balance sheets
at July 31, 2009 as “payroll liabilities”.
Note
8: Income
Tax
The
Company records its income taxes in accordance with Statement of Financial
Accounting Standard No. 109, “Accounting for Income Taxes”. The
Company has incurred significant net operating losses since inception resulting
in a deferred tax asset, which was fully allowed for; therefore, the net benefit
and expense resulted in $-0- income taxes.
Note
9: Capital
Stock
Reverse
Acquisition of HPI Partners, LLC and Subsidiary
As part
of the recapitalization of HPI resulting from the Stock Exchange transaction,
HPI’s closing equity of $2,500,500 at the time of the merger has been eliminated
and the equity transactions since its inception have been restated as if they
were issued shares of the Company’s common and preferred
stock. Accordingly, equity balances on the balance sheets, statements
of operations and statements of changes in shareholders’ deficit have all been
restated to reflect the recapitalization of HPI. As a result of the
recapitalization, the statement of changes in shareholders’ deficit includes the
elimination of the HPI equity as “May 2009, reverse acquisition of HPI Partners,
LLC and subsidiary”. This entry includes the addition of the equity
balances from Inhibiton Therapeutics as of the merger date as well as the
elimination of the HPI equity balances.
F-17
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
As of
January 31, 2009, HPI had $1,787,800 in membership interests outstanding that
when restated became 132,000,007 shares of the Company’s common stock and
$181,800 shares of Series A preferred stock. During the period from
February through May 2009, HPI sold an additional $198,300 in membership
interests that were restated to become 11,506,850 shares of common stock and
58,300 shares of Series A preferred stock of the Company. In
addition, during that same period, HPI converted notes payable and debts
payable, as well as issued membership interests for fees or services totaling
$514,400 that became 27,616,440 shares of common stock and 178,400 shares of
Series A preferred stock upon restatement.
Common
Stock
In
February 2009, we issued 300,000 shares of our common stock to our
secretary/treasurer in exchange for $22,500 in management fees due to
him. These shares were converted at $0.075 per share, the closing
price for our common stock on that date. As this transaction occurred prior to
the Stock Exchange transaction, these shares are included in the statement of
changes in shareholders’ deficit under “May 2009, reverse acquisition of HPI
Partners, LLC and subsidiary”.
During
the three month period ended April 30, 2009, we issued 450,000 shares of our
common stock to unaffiliated accredited investors pursuant to a private
placement. The shares were sold for $26,932 or $0.06 per
share. As these transactions occurred prior to the Stock Exchange
transaction, these shares are included in the statement of changes in
shareholders’ deficit under “May 2009, reverse acquisition of HPI Partners, LLC
and subsidiary”.
In April
2009, we executed a consulting agreement through which the consultant received a
warrant to purchase up to 265,000 restricted shares of our $0.001 par value
common stock for $0.01 per share exercisable for one year. These
warrants were exercised for 265,000 shares of common stock on May 6,
2009. The warrants were valued at $23,850 based upon the
Black-Scholes option pricing model. The Company recorded $23,850 of
stock based compensation expense during the three month period ended April 30,
2009.
The fair
value of the warrants was calculated at issue date utilizing the following
assumptions:
Issuance Date
|
Fair Value
|
Term
|
Conversion
Price
|
Market
Price on
Grant Date
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
April
2009
|
$23,850
|
1
Year
|
$0.01
|
$0.10
|
122%
|
0.5%
|
Pursuant
to the Share Exchange Agreement, we issued 171,123,297 shares of the Company’s
$0.001 par value common stock and 418,500 shares of the Company’s $0.001 par
value Series A Preferred Stock. The 418,500 shares of the Company’s
Series A Preferred Stock automatically converted to 34,397,261 shares of the
Company’s $0.001 par value common stock effective May 28, 2009 following
approval by the Company’s stockholders of an increase in the number of
authorized common shares sufficient to effect the conversion.
During
the year ended January 31, 2009, the Company issued notes payable to an
accredited investor for the issuance of $200,000 of 12% unsecured convertible
notes in three private transactions (the “December Notes”). The
outstanding principal and interest of $208,597 on these notes were converted on
May 8, 2009 to 4,171,940 shares of $0.001 par value common stock or $0.05 per
share.
During
the period three month period ended July 31, 2009, the Company sold 40,087,506
shares of its common stock to accredited investors for total proceeds of
$535,221 or the equivalent of $0.013 per share. Pursuant to the Share
Exchange Agreement, the Company agreed to private placement of up to $300,000 of
its common stock to be offered to the HPI Members at a per share price equal to
$0.0122, the equivalent price for each share of the Company’s common stock
issued to the HPI Members in the Stock Exchange.
F-18
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
During
the period three month period ended October 31, 2009, the Company sold
15,362,500 shares of its common stock to accredited investors for total proceeds
of $308,448 or the equivalent of $0.02 per share.
In
September 2009, $55,000 in principal and accrued interest totaling $7,426 from
the May Notes was converted to 607,996 shares of our $0.001 par value common
stock at a conversion price of $0.103 per share.
In
September 2009, we issued 900,000 shares valued at $117,000 to the placement
agent conducting our Debenture offering. These shares were valued at
$0.13 per share, the market price for our common stock on the date of
issuance.
In
October 2009, we issued 195,500 shares upon the exercise of warrants by officers
of our operating subsidiary, API. These warrants were exercised using
$25,414 in management fees and accrued expenses payable to those
officers. The warrants were exercised at $0.13 per
share.
Preferred
Stock
On May 4,
2009, the Company filed the Series A Preferred Stock Certificate of Designation
that provided for up to 750,000 shares of $0.001 par value preferred stock to be
issued with each share automatically converting into 82.19178 shares of the
Company’s $0.001 par value common stock immediately upon approval by the
Company’s stockholders of an increase in the number of authorized common shares
sufficient to effect the conversion. Pursuant to the Share Exchange
Agreement, we issued 418,500 shares of the Company’s $0.001 par value Series A
Preferred Stock to the members of HPI. The Company’s stockholders
approved the increase in authorized shares effective May 26, 2009 and the
418,500 Series A shares automatically converted into 34,397,261 shares of the
Company’s $0.001 par value common stock effective May 28, 2009 upon the filing
of Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation with the Nevada Secretary of
State.
Warrants
In
connection with the Share Exchange Agreement with HPI, the Company issued
warrants to purchase 14,302,300 shares of common stock of the Company to the HPI
Members. These warrants expire on March 4, 2012 and have an exercise price of
$0.12 per share. These shares were considered issued as of March 4,
2009, the date the Definitive Agreement was executed for the transaction, and
valued at $886,743 based upon the Black Scholes option pricing model. This
amount was recorded as stock based compensation expense during the quarter ended
July 31, 2009.
The fair
value of the warrants was calculated at issue date utilizing the following
assumptions:
Issuance Date
|
Fair Value
|
Term
|
Conversion
Price
|
Market
Price on
Grant Date
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
March
4, 2009
|
$886,743
|
3
years
|
$0.12
|
$0.07
|
195%
|
1.4%
|
Also in
connection with the Share Exchange Agreement with HPI, the Company issued
warrants to purchase 10,276,028 shares of common stock of the Company to parties
that assisted the Company in the transaction, including 3,082,808 to FFFC. These
warrants expire on March 5, 2012 and one third have an exercise price of $0.10
per share, one third have an exercise price of $0.15 per share and one third
have an exercise price of $0.18 per share. These shares were
considered issued as of March 4, 2009, the date the Definitive Agreement was
executed for the transaction, and valued at $626,941 based upon the Black
Scholes option pricing model. This amount was recorded as stock based
compensation expense during the quarter ended July 31, 2009.
F-19
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
The fair
value of the warrants was calculated at issue date utilizing the following
assumptions:
Issuance Date
|
Fair Value
|
Term
|
Conversion
Price
|
Market
Price on
Grant Date
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
March
4, 2009
|
$216,619
|
3
years
|
$0.10
|
$0.07
|
195%
|
1.4%
|
March
4, 2009
|
$206,857
|
3
years
|
$0.15
|
$0.07
|
195%
|
1.4%
|
March
4, 2009
|
$203,465
|
3
years
|
$0.18
|
$0.07
|
195%
|
1.4%
|
On May 5,
2009, the Company issued warrants to purchase 31,968,515 shares of common stock
of the Company to David Cade, the Chief Executive Officer of API, John Boyle,
the Chief Technology Officer and consultant to API, and Michael McAllister, the
General Counsel and Vice President of API. These warrants vest in three tranches
including one-third upon issuance, one-third on May 5, 2010, and the final third
on May 5, 2011. The warrants expire five years from their vesting
dates or May 5, 2014, May 5, 2015 and May 5, 2016,
respectively. These warrants have an exercise price of $0.13 per
share, the market price for the Company’s common stock on the issue
date. These shares were valued at $4,134,595 based upon the Black
Scholes option pricing model. Because these warrants vest over a two
year period, the value of those portions that vest in 2010 and 2011
totaling $2,759,948 will be expensed over the two year vesting life of the
warrants.
The fair
value of the warrants was calculated at issue date utilizing the following
assumptions:
Issuance Date
|
Fair Value
|
Term
|
Conversion
Price
|
Market
Price on
Grant Date
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
May
5, 2009
|
$1,374,647
|
5
years
|
$0.13
|
$0.12
|
225%
|
1.9%
|
May
5, 2009
|
$1,374,646
|
6
years
|
$0.13
|
$0.12
|
225%
|
2.3%
|
May
5, 2009
|
$1,385,302
|
7
years
|
$0.13
|
$0.12
|
225%
|
2.6%
|
In
October 2009, Mr. Cade exercised 80,500 warrants and Mr. McAllister exercised
115,000 warrants. These shares were exercised using $25,414 in
management fees and accrued expenses payable to those officers at $0.13 per
share.
In
September 2009 we issued a warrant to purchase 150,000 shares of our $0.001 par
value common stock upon the issuance of the September Note. The
warrant is exercisable for a period of three years and is exercisable at $0.06
per share. We calculated the fair value of this warrant using the
Black-Scholes option pricing model to be $22,050. This amount was
recorded as "stock-based compensation" on our statements of operations during
the three and nine months ended October 31, 2009.
The fair
value of the warrant was calculated at issue date utilizing the following
assumptions:
Issuance Date
|
Fair Value
|
Term
|
Conversion
Price
|
Market
Price on
Grant Date
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
September
4, 2009
|
$22,050
|
3
years
|
$0.06
|
$0.155
|
195%
|
1.38%
|
F-20
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
A summary
of the activity of the Company’s outstanding warrants at January 31, 2009 and
October 31, 2009 is as follows:
Warrants
|
Weighted-average
exercise price
|
Weighted-average
grant date fair value
|
||||||||||
Outstanding
and exercisable at January 31, 2009
|
4,213,719 | $ | 0.39 | $ | 0.10 | |||||||
Granted
|
56,962,044 | 0.13 | 0.10 | |||||||||
Expired
|
(250,000 | ) | 0.50 | 0.00 | ||||||||
Exercised
|
(460,500 | ) | - | - | ||||||||
Outstanding
and exercisable at October 31, 2009
|
60,465,263 | $ | 0.15 | $ | 0.10 |
The
following table sets forth the exercise price range, number of shares, weighted
average exercise price and remaining contractual lives of the warrants by groups
as of October 31, 2009.
Exercise
price range
|
Number
of options outstanding
|
Weighted-average
exercise price
|
Weighted-average
remaining life
|
|||
$0.50
|
2,936,219
|
$ 0.50
|
1.0
years
|
|||
$0.25
|
27,500
|
0.25
|
1.5
years
|
|||
$0.10
to $0.18
|
56,351,544
|
0.13
|
4.4
years
|
|||
$0.06
|
1,150,000
|
0.06
|
2.4
years
|
|||
60,465,263
|
$ 0.15
|
2.7
years
|
Stock
Options
On March
4, 2009, our board of directors authorized the Inhibiton Therapeutics, Inc. 2009
Stock Incentive Plan which was amended on May 6, 2009 and approved by our
stockholders effective on May 26, 2009. The plan allows for the
issuance of up to 20,000,000 shares of our common stock through one or more
incentive grants including stock options, stock appreciation rights, stock
awards, restricted stock issuances and performance shares to officers,
directors, employees and consultants of the Company. The plan is
administered by our board of directors.
During
the nine months ended October 31, 2009, the Company granted officers, directors
and consultants 1,350,000 options to purchase shares of common stock at an
exercise price of $0.07 per share and 10,000,000 options to purchase shares of
common stock at an exercise price of $0.105 per share (the market value of the
common stock on the date of each grant). The options were valued at
$1,133,150 based upon the Black-Scholes option pricing model. The
options were fully-vested at the date of the grant and therefore the Company
recorded $1,133,150 of stock based compensation expense during the nine month
period ended October 30, 2009.
F-21
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
The fair
value of the stock options was calculated at issue date utilizing the following
assumptions:
Issuance Date
|
Fair
Value
|
Term
|
Exercise
Price
|
Market
Price on
Grant Date
|
Volatility
Percentage
|
Interest
Rate
|
March
2009
|
$93,150
|
5
years
|
$0.07
|
$0.07
|
213%
|
1.94%
|
October
2009
|
1,040,000
|
5
years
|
$0.105
|
$0.105
|
226%
|
2.38
|
All
options outstanding at October 31, 2009 are fully vested and
exercisable. A summary of outstanding stock option balances under the
2005 Stock Incentive Plan and the 2009 Stock Incentive Plan at January 31, 2009
and at October 31, 2009 is as follows:
2005 Stock Incentive
Plan
Options
|
Weighted-average
exercise price
|
Weighted-average
remaining contractual life (years)
|
Aggregate
intrinsic value
|
||||
Outstanding
at January 31, 2009
|
425,000
|
$0.35
|
3,4
|
$0
|
|||
Options
granted
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||
Outstanding
at
October
31, 2009
|
425,000
|
$0.35
|
3.4
|
$0
|
2009 Stock Incentive
Plan
Options
|
Weighted-average
exercise price
|
Weighted-average
remaining contractual life (years)
|
Aggregate
intrinsic value
|
||||
Outstanding
at January 31, 2009
|
0
|
$0.00
|
0
|
$0
|
|||
Options
granted
|
11,350,000
|
$0.10
|
4.3
|
$0
|
|||
Outstanding
at
October
31, 2009
|
11,350,000
|
$0.10
|
4.3
|
$0
|
Note
10: Agreements
License
Agreement
In August
2008, the Company executed a License Agreement between the Company, the
University of South Florida Research Foundation, Inc. and the University of
Florida Research Foundation, Inc. (“License Agreement”) through which the
Company will acquire the exclusive right and license to make, have made, use,
import, sublicense and offer for sale any products or processes derived from the
ICA-1 process the Company has been funding since September
2004. Under the agreement, the Company currently owes a $40,000
Technology Access Fee, which has not yet been paid. Among other
things, the terms of the agreement call for the Company to raise a total of at
least $500,000 in external funding in support of the technology advancement by
June 30, 2009, and requires certain cash payments and royalties to the licensors
beginning as early as three years from the agreement date upon the initiation of
certain applications and studies as well as when and if any products are
licensed and produced. In addition, the Company must pay quarterly
license fees to the licensors beginning in April 2009 of $2,500, which increases
annually to as much as $25,000 should the Company produce an FDA approved
product. The licensors are also to receive a 4% ownership interest in
the Company subject to certain anti-dilution provisions.
F-22
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
Notes
to Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
As of
July 31, 2009, the Company has failed to pay the technology access or quarterly
license fees and has failed to substantially perform under the License
Agreement. As a result, the licensors could declare a default under
the License Agreement to the Company at any time and if the Company fails to
perform its obligations under the agreement during any cure period, the Company
may lose its ability to secure the licensing rights for the ICA-1
process.
Prior to
the Share Exchange with HPI, the Company had been conducting biotechnology
research through a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (“CRADA”)
signed on September 30, 2004 with the Department of Veterans Affairs and James.
A. Haley Veterans Research Education Foundation, Inc.
("JAHVREF"). Through the CRADA and related agreements, the Company
was to provide funding totaling $900,000 through August 2007. As of
January 31, 2009, the Company owed $227,000 under the CRADA. On
September 30, 2009, the Company reached agreement with the JAHVREF that for
payments totaling $25,000 made during the nine months ended October 31, 2009,
the balance of $202,000 payable under the CRADA would be
forgiven. Accordingly, the Company recorded a gain on debt
extinguishment of $202,000 during the three and nine month periods ended October
31, 2009 that appears under "gain (loss) on debt extinguishment" in the
Company's statements of operations at October 31, 2009.
Note
11: Subsequent
Events
Through
December 15, 2009, the Company has sold an additional $65,000 of Debentures
receiving net proceeds after debt offering costs of $56,470.
F-23
Item 2. Management’s
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations
General:
The
following discussion and analysis of our financial condition and results of
operations should be read in conjunction with the Company’s consolidated
financial statements and notes thereto for the years ended January 31, 2009 and
2008 as well as HPI’s consolidated financial statements and notes thereto for
the years ended December 31, 2008 and 2007.
The
independent auditors’ report on our financial statements for the years ended
January 31, 2009 and 2008 includes a “going concern” explanatory paragraph that
describes substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going
concern. Management’s plans in regard to the factors prompting the
explanatory paragraph are discussed below and also in Note 1 to the audited
consolidated financial statements for the year ended January 31,
2009.
While our
independent auditor has presented our financial statements on the basis that we
are a going concern, which contemplates the realization of assets and the
satisfaction of liabilities in the normal course of business over a reasonable
length of time, they have raised a substantial doubt about our ability to
continue as a going concern.
AlumiFuel
Power Corporation was incorporated in the state of Nevada on January 19, 2000
under the name Organic Soils.Com, Inc. Pursuant to an Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization dated as of March 24, 2005 by and between the Company and
Inhibetex Therapeutics, Inc., a Colorado corporation (“Inhibetex”), Organic
Soils.com, Inc. and Inhibetex entered into a share exchange whereby all of the
issued and outstanding capital stock of Inhibetex, on a fully-diluted basis,
were exchanged for like securities of Organic Soils.com, Inc., and whereby
Inhibetex became a wholly owned subsidiary of Organic Soils.com,
Inc. The Share Exchange was effective as of May 19, 2005 at which
time the Company changed its name to Inhibiton Therapeutics, Inc.
Acquisition of HPI Partners
LLC and Subsidiary
Pursuant
to an Agreement Concerning the Exchange of Securities by and among the Company,
HPI and the Security Holders of HPI (the “HPI Members”) dated March 4, 2009,
(the “Share Exchange Agreement”), the parties entered into a share exchange
whereby all of the issued and outstanding membership interests of HPI were
exchanged for 171,123,297 shares of the Company’s $0.001 par value common stock
and 418,500 shares of the Company’s $0.001 par value Series A Preferred
Stock. Through this transaction HPI and its wholly-owned subsidiary
API became wholly owned subsidiaries of the Company (the “Share
Exchange”). The 418,500 shares of the Company’s Series A Preferred
Stock automatically converted to 34,397,261 shares of the Company’s $0.001 par
value common stock effective May 28, 2009 following approval by the Company’s
stockholders of an increase in the number of authorized common shares sufficient
to effect the conversion. In addition, in exchange for a like number
of HPI warrants the HPI Members received warrants to purchase up to 14,302,500
shares of the Company’s $0.001 par value common stock that are exercisable until
March 4, 2012 at an exercise price of $0.12 per share. The Share
Exchange was effective as of May 5, 2009, upon closing of the transaction among
the parties.
HPI
Partners, LLC is a Colorado Limited Liability Company formed on November 8,
2007. The Company was formed to acquire two secured promissory notes
and certain collateralized assets of Hydrogen Power, Inc. underlying those notes
out of receivership in King County Washington. In order to acquire
the collateralized assets, on April 4, 2008, the Company purchased two
promissory notes secured by the assets of Hydrogen Power (the “Secured Notes”)
owned by two institutional investors for a total of $815,564. In
September 2008, HPI was awarded all of Hydrogen Powers assets excluding cash and
computer data, laboratory notebooks, and patents and patent applications that
are subject to arbitration proceedings in which the Company is a
party.
On May
16, 2008, HPI formed AlumiFuel Power, Inc., a Colorado corporation, which is a
wholly-owned operating subsidiary of the Company. API of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is a an early production stage alternative energy
company that generates hydrogen gas and steam for multiple niche applications
requiring on-site, on-demand fuel sources. API’s hydrogen drives fuel
cells for back-up, remote, and portable power, fills inflatable devices such as
weather balloons, and can replace costly, hard-to-handle and high pressure
K-Cylinders. Its steam/hydrogen output is also being designed to drive
turbine-based underwater propulsion systems and auxiliary power
systems. API has significant differentiators in performance,
adaptability, safety and cost-effectiveness in its target market applications,
with no external power required and no toxic chemicals or
by-products.
24
API’s
technology is based on the exothermic reaction of aluminum powder and water,
combined with proprietary additives which act as catalysts, initiators and
reactants. Novel packaging of the aluminum powder and additives into cartridges
enables them to be inserted into a generator/reactor, where an infusion of water
results in the rapid generation of highly pure hydrogen and superheated
steam.
API’s lab
and offices are located in the Philadelphia Science Center in downtown
Philadelphia, where it has access to world class testing instruments and
technical talent. API has a seasoned management team and an
experienced and dedicated technical team; and has close working relationships
with major industry players as path-to-market partners, including major defense
contractors and commercial fabricators of the company’s reactors and cartridge
products on an outsourcing basis.
API has
completed the design and engineering modifications necessary to begin initial
production of its Portable Balloon Inflation System (PBIS-1000). The
third generation prototype of the PBIS-1000 was successfully demonstrated to an
unspecified military customer in late April, 2009.
As a
result of the successful demonstration, API has finalized the design and
selection of components of the new modified
system. Incorporating feedback from the customer, the fourth
generation PBIS-1000 unit represents a significant upgrade over the third
generation prototype unit. The new system has a simpler design with
fewer components, and is lighter, more compact, more ruggedized for military
applications, more user-friendly, and more cost effective. Using a
higher grade stainless steel construction with better corrosion properties and
durable fluorocarbon rubber for all seals, the upgraded unit can better
withstand required pressures and temperatures over its long expected
lifetime. The reactor and water tanks, as well as all plumbing lines
and connectors, have been optimized for weight, simplicity, and cost, and are
stamped and certified with the ASME code – a standard requirement for commercial
pressure vessels. The unit meets Mil Spec requirements for vibration,
environmental and drop tests, and is housed in a molded polyethylene carrying
case used regularly by the military.
In
addition, a more effective packaging configuration of the company’s proprietary
AlumiFuel cartridges increases the speed of the reaction and the hydrogen yield,
while reducing cartridge cost. The versatile PBIS-1000 unit can
produce 1,000 liters of hydrogen in 20 minutes at ambient temperature and
atmospheric pressure using only two 32oz AlumiFuel cartridges.
The
PBIS-1000 man-portable reactor and launching unit uses API’s proprietary
AlumiFuel technology to produce hydrogen through the powerful chemical reaction
of powdered aluminum, water and proprietary additives. The device requires only
a simple water hand pump and two small AlumiFuel cartridges to propagate the
reaction and generate sufficient lift gas to launch a 5-foot diameter weather
balloon.
This API
innovation, which enables on the spot generation of hydrogen without any
external energy or toxic chemicals, is easier to use and is cheaper than current
lift gas solutions. Traditionally, helium has been used as the
primary lift gas, but with the increasing scarcity and cost of helium, users are
rapidly switching to hydrogen. The API portable launching unit is far
more mobile and cost effective than other on-site hydrogen generation
systems. The global market for lift gas fuel is approximately $70
million and growing, with more than 1,000,000 weather balloons and special
purpose balloons launched annually for telecom relay, cloud height measurement
and national security applications each year.
LIQUIDITY
AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
To
address the going concern situation addressed in our financial statements at
January 31, 2009 and October 31, 2009, we anticipate we will require over the
next twelve months approximately $900,000 of additional capital to fund the
Company’s operations including both its newly acquired operating subsidiaries
HPI and API, as well as our legacy biotechnology operations. This
amount does not include any amounts that may be necessary to pay off existing
debt or accrued expenses. We presently believe the source of funds
will primarily consist of several components that include: debt financing, which
may include further loans from our officers or directors as detailed more fully
in the accompanying financial statements; the sale of our equity securities in
private placements or other equity offerings or instruments; as well as cash
flows from operations through the anticipated production of its PBIS-1000
reactor and the resultant sales of AlumiFuel cartridges.
25
During
the nine months ended October 31, 2009, we received a net of approximately
$1,202,000 from our financing activities, primarily from the sale of shares of
our common stock and the issuance of convertible notes payable. This
compared to cash provided by financing activities of $1,534,000 in the nine
months ended October 31, 2008 derived primarily from proceeds from the issuance
of equity.
In the
nine month period ended October 31, 2009, net cash used in operating activities
was $1,027,531. This compared to net cash used in operating
activities of $640,300 for same period in 2008. The 2009 amount
included a $5,606,252 net loss that included approximately $4,610,000 in
non-cash charges and credits to operating assets and liabilities primarily from
non-cash stock-based compensation expense on the issuance of
warrants. This compares to a net loss of $1,296,152 in the nine
months ended October 31, 2008 that included a non-cash charge of approximately
$605,000 for unrealized loss on the FastFunds common stock.
We can
make no assurance that we will be successful in raising the funds necessary for
our working capital requirements as suitable financing may not be available and
we may not have the ability to sell either equity or debt securities under
acceptable terms or in amounts sufficient to fund our needs. Our inability to
access various capital markets or acceptable financing could have a material
effect on our commercialization efforts, results of operations and deployment of
our business strategies and severely threaten our ability to operate as a going
concern.
During
the remainder of our fiscal year and for the foreseeable future, we will be
concentrating on raising the necessary working capital through acceptable debt
facilities and equity financing to insure our ability to continue our research
and implement other business strategies including funding our newly acquired
alternative energy business. To the extent that additional capital is
raised through the sale of equity or equity related securities, the issuance of
such securities could result in significant dilution to our current
shareholders.
(b) Results
of Operations
Nine Month Period ended
October 31, 2009
The
Company’s results of operations for the 2009 periods reported include the
consolidated operations of the Company and its pre-reverse merger Inhibiton
operations as well as those of HPI and API while operations for the 2008 period
include only those of HPI and API.
For the
nine month period ended October 31, 2009, our total operating costs and expenses
were $1,173,596 versus $668,306 for the same period in 2008. Those
amounts included $321,675 and $129,500 in 2009 and 2008, respectively, comprised
of related party expense that included officer and key employee management fees
as well as rent paid to related parties. This amount increased
significantly in the 2009 period versus the 2008 period and the Company ramped
up its product development and public company operating
activities. Product development expense was $20,148 for the nine
months ended October 31, 2009 versus $16,905 in 2008. The 2009
expense also includes $212,285 for the full allowance of promissory notes and
interest receivable from FFFC, an affiliate of the Company, which was offset by
$169,880 in gains on extinguishment of amounts owed on the CRADA
agreement.
26
The
balance of $800,679 and $521,901 for “other” SG&A expenses was comprised of
the following:
Nine
months ended
October
31, 2009
|
Nine
months ended
October
31, 2008
|
|||||||
General
and administrative
|
$ | 129,060 | $ | 92,148 | ||||
Salaries
and employee benefits
|
272,913 | 205,317 | ||||||
Legal
and accounting
|
117,490 | 48,387 | ||||||
Professional
services
|
281,216 | 179,549 | ||||||
$ | 800,679 | $ | 521,901 |
The
“other” SG&A expense during the six months ended July 31, 2009 included a
significant increase in salaries and employee benefits as the Company had fewer
employees during the nine three months of 2008. The company also saw
a significant increase in legal and accounting costs as well as professional
services costs as it worked to acquire the Hydrogen Power, Inc. as well as
complete the reverse-merger transaction.
The
company recorded $(4,432,656) in “other income (expense)” during the nine months
ended October 31, 2009 as compared to $(627,846) in the same period of
2008. This increase is primarily attributed to one-time stock-based
compensation costs during the 2009 period including $1,513,683 for warrants
issued as part of the HPI Partners acquisition as well as $2,064,635 for
warrants issued to key management of API. Interest expense increased
significantly for the nine months ended October 31, 2009 versus 2008 with the
consolidation of three entities in 2009 versus only two in
2008. Additional expense from convertible notes in 2009 including
$63,000 for non-cash beneficial conversion features of the September
Note.
Also
affecting other income (expense) was the value of the common stock of FastFunds
financial Corporation owned by the Company. For the three and nine
months ended October 31, 2009, the Company recorded an increase of $455,000 in
the value of these shares that are marked to market each quarter.
Three Month Period ended
October 31, 2009
For the
three month period ended October 31, 2009 total operating expenses were $215,096
in 2009 versus $276,240 in 2008. Those amounts include $120,775 in
related party expense for the 2009 period and $50,400 during the 2008 period for
management fees, bonus and rent expense paid to affiliates. This
amount increased in 2009 versus 2008 primarily from the addition of management
consultants at API and bonus amounts paid to the Company's
officers. The 2009 expense also includes a gain of $169,880 due to
the forgiveness of $202,000 of accrued research and development fees on the
Company's CRADA agreement. This was partially offset by the continued
allowance for promissory notes and interest receivable from FFFC, an affiliate
of the Company. Product development increased from $4,403 in 2009
from $2,611 in 2008 as the Company works to commercialize its PBIS-1000
unit.
The
balance of $259,798 and $223,229 for “other” SG&A expenses was comprised of
the following:
Three
months ended
October
31, 2009
|
Three
months ended
October
31, 2008
|
|||||||
General
and administrative
|
$ | 43,818 | $ | 40,145 | ||||
Salaries
and employee benefits
|
89,423 | 109,591 | ||||||
Legal
and accounting
|
27,870 | 10,344 | ||||||
Professional
services
|
98,688 | 63,149 | ||||||
$ | 259,798 | $ | 223,229 |
The
“other” SG&A expense during the three months ended October 31, 2009 included
a significant increase in legal and accounting as well as professional services
in the 2009 period versus the 2008 period as the Company incurred additional
expenses related to product development and merger activities as well as the
Company's Debenture offering. Salaries and employee benefits were
down slightly due to costs involved in shutting down the Company's Seattle,
Washington offices on 2008.
27
Other
income (expense) was $(1,101,898) for the three month period ended October 31
2009 versus $(615,409) for the three month period ended October 31,
2008. This increase is primarily attributed to one-time stock-based
compensation costs during the 2009 period including a non-cash charge of
$1,040,000 for stock options issued to management as well as $344,994 for
warrants issued to key management of API. Interest expense increased
with the addition of convertible notes including the one-time non-cash charge of
$63,000 on the September Note. This was partially offset by fair
value adjustment of the FastFunds Financial Corp common stock of 420,000 in the
2009 period.
Changes
in loss per common share resulted from the restatement of HPI’s equity resulting
from the reverse-merger transaction.
Off-Balance Sheet
Arrangements. During the three month period ended April 30,
2009, the Company did not engage in any off-balance sheet arrangements as
defined in Item 303(a)(4) of the SEC’s Regulation S-B.
Item 3. Quantitative and
Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
Not
applicable
Item 4T. Controls and
Procedures
Evaluation of Disclosure
Controls and Procedures
A review
and evaluation was performed by the Company's management, including the
Company's Chief Executive Officer (the "CEO") who is also the Chief Financial
Officer (the “CFO”), of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the
Company's disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered
by this quarterly report. Based on that review and evaluation, the CEO concluded
that as of October 31, 2009 disclosure controls and procedures, were effective
at ensuring that the material information required to be disclosed in our
Exchange Act reports is recorded, processed, summarized and reported as required
in the application of SEC rules and forms.
Management’s Report on
Internal Controls over Financial Reporting
Our
management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal
control over financial reporting. Internal control over financial reporting is a
set of processes designed by, or under the supervision of, a company’s principal
executive and principal financial officers, to provide reasonable assurance
regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of
financial statements for external purposes in accordance with GAAP and includes
those policies and procedures that:
•
|
Pertain
to the maintenance of records that in reasonable detail accurately and
fairly reflect our transactions and dispositions of our
assets;
|
•
|
Provide
reasonable assurance our transactions are recorded as necessary to permit
preparation of our financial statements in accordance with GAAP, and that
receipts and expenditures are being made only in accordance with
authorizations of our management and directors;
and
|
•
|
Provide
reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of
unauthorized acquisition, use or disposition of our assets that could have
a material effect on the financial
statement.
|
Because
of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not
prevent or detect misstatements. It should be noted that any system of internal
control, however well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable, and
not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the system will be met. Also,
projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to
the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions,
or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may
deteriorate.
28
Our
CEO/CFO has evaluated the effectiveness of our internal control over financial
reporting as described in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) as of the
end of the period covered by this report based upon criteria established in
“Internal Control-Integrated Framework” issued by the Committee of Sponsoring
Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO) to the extent possible given the
limited personnel resources and technological infrastructure in place to perform
the evaluation. Based upon our management’s discussions with our
auditors and other advisors, our CEO/CFO believe that, during the period covered
by this report, such internal controls and procedures were not effective as
described below.
Due to
the small size and limited financial resources, our administrative assistant,
corporate secretary and chief executive officer are the only individuals
involved in the accounting and financial reporting. As a result,
there is limited segregation of duties in the accounting function, leaving all
aspects of financial reporting and physical control of cash primarily in the
hands of two individuals. This limited segregation of duties represents a
material weakness. We will continue to periodically review our
disclosure controls and procedures and internal control over financial reporting
and make modifications from time to time considered necessary or
desirable.
This
Quarterly Report does not include an attestation report of our independent
registered public accounting firm regarding internal control over financial
reporting. Management’s report was not subject to attestation by our
independent registered public accounting firm pursuant to temporary rules of the
SEC that permit us to provide only management’s report in this annual
report.
Changes in Internal Control
over Financial Reporting
There
have been no changes in the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting
that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect,
the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting.
PART
II – OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1. Legal
Proceedings
None.
Item 2. Unregistered Sales
of Equity Securities
During
the period three month period ended October 31, 2009, the Company sold
15,362,500 shares of its common stock to accredited investors for total proceeds
of $308,448 or the equivalent of $0.02 per share.
In
September 2009, $55,000 in principal and accrued interest totaling $7,426 from
the May Notes was converted to 607,996 shares of our $0.001 par value common
stock at a conversion price of $0.103 per share.
In
September 2009, we issued 900,000 shares valued at $117,000 to the placement
agent conducting our Debenture offering. These shares were valued at
$0.13 per share, the market price for our common stock on the date of
issuance.
In
October 2009, we issued 195,500 shares upon the exercise of warrants by officers
of our operating subsidiary, API. These warrants were exercised using
$25,414 in management fees and accrued expenses payable to those
officers. The warrants were exercised at $0.13 per
share.
We
offered and sold the securities in reliance on an exemption from federal
registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Rule 506
promulgated thereunder. We relied on this exemption and rule based on the fact
that there were a limited number of investors, all of whom were accredited
investors and (i) either alone or through a purchaser representative, had
knowledge and experience in financial and business matters such that each was
capable of evaluating the risks of the investment, and (ii) we had obtained
subscription agreements from such investors indicating that they were purchasing
for investment purposes only. The securities were not registered under the
Securities Act and may not be offered or sold in the United States absent
registration or an applicable exemption from registration requirements. The
disclosure contained herein does not constitute an offer to sell or a
solicitation of an offer to buy any securities of the Company, and is made only
as permitted by Rule 135c under the Securities Act.
29
Item 3. Defaults upon Senior
Securities
None.
Item 4. Submission of
Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
None.
Item 5. Other
Information
None.
Item 6.
Exhibits
Exhibits:
|
|
4.1
|
Form
of Securities Purchase Agreement by and among AlumiFuel Power Corporation
and the Buyers of up to $700,000 of Convertible debentures dated September
15, 2009. Incorporated by reference to
the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended July 31,
2009 as filed with the SEC on September 21,
2009.
|
31.1
|
Certification
pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002. Filed
herewith.
|
32.1
|
Certification
pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002. Filed
herewith.
|
30
SIGNATURES
In
accordance with the requirements of the Exchange Act, the Registrant caused this
report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly
authorized.
ALUMIFUEL
POWER CORPORATION
|
|
(Registrant)
|
Date:
December 21, 2009
|
By:
/s/ Henry
Fong
|
Henry
Fong
|
|
Principal
Executive Officer and
Principal
Financial Officer
|
|
31