If You Invested in Voip Palcom (VPLM)
Looking for the live price? See the VPLM quote & overviewWhat $1,000 or $10,000 in VPLM Would Be Worth Today
Real historical value by amount invested and how long ago| If you invested | 1 year ago | 5 years ago | 10 years ago | Since Jul 8, 2015 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1,000 | $1,364 +36% | $529 -47% | $145 -86% | $102 -90% |
| $10,000 | $13,636 +36% | $5,294 -47% | $1,449 -86% | $1,023 -90% |
Based on real historical closing prices through the latest market close. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
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Choose your own date and amount for VPLM$1,000 Investment Over Time
VPLM vs S&P 500Year-by-Year Returns
VPLM annual performance| Year | Start Price | End Price | Annual Return | Cumulative |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | $0.05 | $0.25 | +421.9% | +421.9% |
| 2018 | $0.23 | $0.08 | -65.2% | +67.0% |
| 2019 | $0.09 | $0.02 | -78.2% | -61.4% |
| 2020 | $0.02 | $0.01 | -43.5% | -79.1% |
| 2021 | $0.01 | $0.01 | +10.6% | -76.0% |
| 2022 | $0.01 | $0.01 | +24.3% | -70.1% |
| 2023 | $0.01 | $0.02 | +44.3% | -57.8% |
| 2024 | $0.02 | $0.01 | -64.1% | -85.4% |
| 2025 | $0.01 | $0.01 | +19.0% | -80.4% |
| 2026 | $0.01 | $0.01 | -15.9% | -81.2% |
About Voip Palcom
Communication Services · OTC Link
VoIP-Pal.com Inc. (VPLM) is a publicly traded intellectual property company in the Voice-over-Internet Protocol (VoIP) field. Classified under the wired telecommunications carriers industry within the information sector, the company focuses on owning and monetizing a portfolio of patented technologies related to VoIP and Wi-Fi-based calling. VoIP-Pal is headquartered in Waco, Texas and its common stock trades on the OTCQB market under the symbol VPLM.
According to company disclosures, VoIP-Pal has secured more than 40 patented technologies in the VoIP space since beginning its efforts in 2005. These patents relate to areas such as routing and Wi-Fi Calling infrastructure, and form the foundation of its business as an intellectual property holder. The company describes itself as actively pursuing monetization of this portfolio, and its public communications emphasize efforts to protect and enforce its rights in connection with these technologies.
Business focus and intellectual property strategy
VoIP-Pal’s core business model centers on its status as an intellectual property company. Rather than presenting itself as a traditional telecommunications carrier, the company highlights its ownership of VoIP-related patents and its intention to monetize those assets. Public statements describe a long-standing role in developing patented routing and Wi-Fi Calling infrastructure intended to support affordable, independent voice services over Wi-Fi.
The company has also emphasized that it seeks to "responsibly monetize" its innovations while protecting shareholder interests and advocating for consumer choice in voice communications. Its portfolio and related legal positions focus on how calls are routed over internet and mobile infrastructure and how Wi-Fi Calling can be integrated into consumer devices and networks.
Legal and regulatory context
VoIP-Pal’s recent activity, as described in its news releases, reflects a significant focus on litigation. The company has pursued both patent-related claims and broader statutory actions, including antitrust and civil RICO claims, in U.S. federal courts. These actions are directed at large telecommunications and technology companies and center on alleged exclusionary practices and market conduct in mobile voice-routing and Wi-Fi Calling.
In its public communications, VoIP-Pal states that it has shifted emphasis from purely patent enforcement to a broader legal strategy that includes the Sherman Act, Clayton Act, Telecommunications Act of 1996, and civil RICO statutes. The company describes these claims as addressing what it alleges to be structural exclusion, denial of access, and suppression of lawful competition in standalone Wi-Fi Calling and related mobile voice infrastructure.
Standalone Wi-Fi Calling and alleged market exclusion
A recurring theme in VoIP-Pal’s public statements is the concept of standalone Wi-Fi Calling. The company contends that its technologies were developed to enable consumers to access independent, Wi-Fi-based voice services without being tied to bundled cellular voice plans. In its complaints and shareholder communications, VoIP-Pal alleges that dominant carriers and device/platform providers have used control over SIM/eSIM entitlements, network profiles, operating systems, and firmware rules to limit or exclude standalone Wi-Fi Calling alternatives.
According to the company’s descriptions of its lawsuits, it alleges that native Wi-Fi Calling on smartphones only functions when validated by carrier-controlled keys, which it claims prevents subscribers from using independent providers on their own devices on equal footing with carrier services. VoIP-Pal asserts that rivals are denied parity in areas such as triggering the default dialer, appearing in call logs, and accessing emergency and quality-of-service functions, which it characterizes as leaving consumers with degraded "app-mode" alternatives.
Class actions and consumer focus
VoIP-Pal has also positioned itself as a plaintiff in putative nationwide consumer class actions. In its public releases, the company states that these actions seek relief on behalf of hundreds of millions of U.S. mobile subscribers who, it alleges, have been affected by exclusionary practices and bundled pricing structures. The company has described proposed frameworks for subscriber restitution and structural reforms in the mobile voice market, while noting that such proposals are subject to legal review and court approval.
In its messaging to shareholders and the public, VoIP-Pal links its intellectual property portfolio to a broader consumer narrative about choice, fairness, and access to alternative Wi-Fi-based calling options. The company’s communications emphasize that its legal efforts are intended both to protect its own patented technologies and to address what it characterizes as systemic barriers to competition and affordable voice services.
Corporate governance and capital structure developments
From a corporate perspective, VoIP-Pal has disclosed amendments to its capital structure through SEC filings. In a Form 8-K, the company reported that its board of directors approved an increase in the number of shares of Series A preferred stock designated under its certificate of designation. The filing notes that the designation for Series A preferred stock was originally established in 2022 and has been amended multiple times, with the most recent amendment filed with the Nevada Secretary of State to reflect the increased number of designated shares.
The Form 8-K states that the Series A preferred stock retains the voting powers, designations, preferences, limitations, restrictions, and relative rights set forth in the original certificate of designation previously filed with the SEC. This illustrates that VoIP-Pal uses preferred stock as part of its capital structure and periodically adjusts the number of designated shares through board action and state-level corporate filings.
Regulatory filings and transparency
As a U.S. public company incorporated in Nevada, VoIP-Pal files reports and current event disclosures with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These filings include current reports on Form 8-K, such as the report describing amendments to its preferred stock designation. Through these filings and its public news releases, the company provides information about material corporate actions, litigation developments, and strategic direction.
The company’s communications frequently reference the availability of its complaints and related legal documents through public court dockets and its own information channels. It also notes that allegations in its complaints have not been adjudicated and that defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven liable, underscoring the preliminary nature of its legal assertions.
Position within the telecommunications and information sector
Within the broader information sector and wired telecommunications carriers industry classification, VoIP-Pal distinguishes itself by focusing on VoIP-related intellectual property rather than operating as a traditional network carrier. Its public narrative centers on patented routing and Wi-Fi Calling infrastructure, legal enforcement of those rights, and advocacy related to competition and consumer access in mobile voice services.
Investors and observers considering VoIP-Pal typically review its patent portfolio, ongoing litigation, and regulatory filings to understand how the company seeks to derive value from its intellectual property and how legal outcomes could affect its strategic objectives. Because the company’s activities are closely tied to legal proceedings, its disclosures emphasize procedural milestones, amendments to complaints, and shifts in legal strategy as key elements of its business story.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Voip Palcom investment returns
How much would $1,000 invested in Voip Palcom be worth today?
If you invested $1,000 in Voip Palcom (VPLM) 10 years ago on 2016-07-07, your investment would be worth $145 today, representing a -85.5% total return, growing at a compounded rate of -17.6% per year (CAGR).
Has Voip Palcom outperformed the S&P 500?
Over the past 10 years, VPLM returned -85.5% compared to +258.6% for the S&P 500, underperforming the benchmark by 344.1 percentage points.
What is Voip Palcom's average annual return?
The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of VPLM over the past 10 years is -17.6%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — VPLM's best recent year was 2017 (+421.9%) and worst was 2019 (-78.2%).
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