Blount International Inc. Reports Operating Results (10-Q) — GuruFocus.com

Blount International Inc. (BLT) filed Quarterly Report for the period ended 2010-06-30. Blount International Inc. has a market cap of $523.31 million; its shares were traded at around $10.94 with a P/E ratio of 14.99 and P/S ratio of 1.04.

BLT is in the portfolios of Jean-Marie Eveillard of first Eagle Investment Management, LLC, Jeff Auxier of Auxier Focus Fund, John Rogers of ARIEL CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC, Richard Pzena of Pzena Investment Management LLC, Chris Davis of Davis Selected Advisers, Jim Simons of Renaissance Technologies LLC.

Sales in the three months ended June 30, 2010 increased by $35.0 million (30.7%) from the same period in 2009, primarily due to increased unit volume of $35.6 million. changes in average selling price and mix lowered sales revenue by $1.3 million on a quarter-over-quarter comparative basis. Lower average selling prices were attributable to a higher proportion of OEM sales versus replacement market sales in the comparable prior year quarter. International sales increased by $29.3 million (40.2%), while domestic sales increased by $5.6 million (13.7%). The increase in international sales reflected improved world-wide market conditions and increased demand for our products following the severe global recession experienced in 2009. During the second quarter of 2009, we were cautious about extending credit to certain higher risk geographical areas during the global recession, which we believe contributed to a slowdown in sales and orders last year from portions of our international customer base. as international market conditions and credit concerns have improved, our international sales have increased.

Consolidated order backlog at June 30, 2010 was $124.5 million compared to $105.7 million at March 31, 2010. Backlog in the Outdoor Products segment increased $17.9 million, while the backlog for gear components increased by $0.9 million during the second quarter of 2010.

SG&A was $29.8 million in the second quarter of 2010, compared to $24.0 million in the second quarter of 2009, representing an increase of $5.7 million (23.9%). as a percentage of sales, SG&A decreased from 21.1% in the second quarter of 2009 to 20.0% in the second quarter of 2010, primarily due to the increase in sales revenue, which outpaced the increase in SG&A spending. Compensation and benefits expense for the quarter increased by $3.4 million on a year-over-year basis, reflecting annual merit increases, increased incentive compensation attributable to improved operating results, higher stock-based compensation expense, and increased employee benefit costs. Advertising expense increased by $0.6 million in the second quarter of 2010 compared to the second quarter of 2009, as we had reduced our advertising programs during the 2009 economic downturn. we incurred $1.1 million in consulting and other costs related to several strategic initiatives we began in the second quarter including projects to improve the efficiency of our manufacturing processes and supply chain. The closure of our warehouse and distribution center in France, and consolidation of these functions into our European distribution center in Belgium in the second quarter of 2010, resulted in costs of $0.4 million. Operating expenses increased $0.3 million from the prior year due to the weaker U.S. Dollar and its effect on the translation of foreign expenses.

Net income in the second quarter of 2010 was $10.4 million, or $0.22 per diluted share, compared to $4.2 million, or $0.09 per diluted share, in the second quarter of 2009.

Outdoor Products Segment. Sales for the Outdoor Products segment increased by $34.7 million (31.5%) in the second quarter of 2010 compared to the second quarter of 2009, primarily due to an increase in unit volume of $35.2 million, reflecting improved international market conditions and strong customer demand for our products. Segment sales were reduced by $1.1 million from the effect of lower average selling prices, driven by product mix and a higher relative proportion of sales to OEM customers as opposed to sales in the replacement market in the comparative quarterly periods. Sales of wood-cutting chainsaw components were up 35.9%, sales of concrete-cutting products were up 33.8%, and sales of outdoor care products were up 14.5%. Sales to OEM customers increased by 39.3%, while replacement market sales increased by 29.1%. International sales increased 40.6% for the three month comparable period, while domestic sales increased by 13.8%.

Segment contribution to operating income increased $14.1 million (100.7%) in the second quarter of 2010 compared to the second quarter of 2009. Increased sales unit volume ($11.6 million) and lower product cost and mix ($8.5 million) drove the improvement in contribution to operating income. these positive factors were partially offset by the effects of lower average selling prices and mix ($1.1 million), fluctuations in foreign currency translation rates ($1.8 million), and higher SG&A expenses ($3.0 million). Our product costs were positively affected in the second quarter of 2010 compared to the second quarter of 2009 by higher production volumes, including the elimination of idle manufacturing days. The higher production volumes drove improved absorption rates when compared to the second quarter of 2009. Capacity utilization in our Outdoor Products segment is estimated at 92% for the second quarter of 2010, compared to 60% for the second quarter of 2009. In addition, steel costs on a year-over-year comparative basis were lower by an estimated $1.8 million, although we expect steel costs to increase in the second half of 2010. SG&A expenses were higher primarily due to increased compensation costs ($1.4 million), advertising expenses ($0.6 million), and severance costs for the closure of our warehouse and distribution function in France ($0.4 million).

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CONANT OPTICS ANNOUNCEMENT ON Shenzhen Stock Exchange China 01 Sept 2010

CONANT OPTICS ANNOUNCEMENT ON Shenzhen Stock Exchange China 01 Sept 2010

Stock Code : 300061

THE CO WILL HOLD THE 2ND EGM OF 2010 AT 09:00 ON 20SEP10.

MEETING AGENDA:
1. NOMINATION OF MR ZHONG RONGSHI AND MR YU JIANCHUN AS INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR
2. NOMINATION OF MR XIA GUOPING AS DIRECTOR
3. NOMINATION OF MR FAN SENXIN AS SUPERVISOR
4. AMENDMENTS TO THE CO’S INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
5. AMENDMENTS TO THE CO’S OPERATION DECISION-MAKING AND MANAGEMENT RULES

MEETING ATTENDEES:
1. A-SHARE HOLDERS REGISTERED AT CSDCC SZN AFTER THE CLOSE OF TRADING ON 15SEP10 ARE ENTITLED TO VOTE. ORIGINAL NOTARIZED POWER OF ATTORNEY FOR VOTING IS REQUIRED.
2. DIRECTORS OF THE BOARD, SUPERVISORS OF THE SUPERVISORY COMMITTEE, SENIOR EXECUTIVES AND APPOINTED LAWYERS ARE ENTITLED TO ATTEND THE MEETING.

REGISTRATION PERIOD: 20100916


View the original article here

Canadian Stock Market Analysis - 09/22

Canadian Stock Market Analysis - Start your trading day off on the right foot, with Good Morning Bay Street. This free daily video newsletter focuses on the major Canadian TSX Indexes and ETF’s, as well as the Canadian Dollar, Crude Oil, Natural Gas and Precious Metals including Gold and Silver. http://www.theuptrend.com/Canadian-Stock-Market-Analysis-20100922.htm

Category: Canadian Stock Market


View the original article here

Top Gaining stocks

ULTA – Ulta Salon, Cosmetics & Fragrance, Inc.
FNSR – Finisar Corporation
REDF – Rediff.com India Limited
FORTY -Formula Systems (1985) Ltd.?
TTWO – Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc.
OCLR – Oclaro, Inc.
FACE – Physicians Formula Holdings, Inc.?
BONT – The Bon-Ton Stores, Inc.?
HHGP-? Hudson Highland Group, Inc.
TSON – TranS1 Inc.
HRB? -H&R Block, Inc.
MTG? -MGIC Investment Corp.
COO? -The Cooper Companies, Inc.?
PBR? -Petroleo Brasileiro SA (ADR)?
MSFT? -Microsoft Corporation?
PBR.A? -Petroleo Brasileiro SA
WFC? -Wells Fargo & Company
JPM? -JPMorgan Chase & Co.


View the original article here

BEILU PHARMACEUTICAL ANNOUNCEMENT ON Shenzhen Stock Exchange China 01 Sept 2010

BEILU PHARMACEUTICAL ANNOUNCEMENT ON Shenzhen Stock Exchange China 01 Sept 2010

Stock Code : 300016

THE CO HELD ITS 2ND EGM OF 2010 ON 31AUG10, DURING WHICH THE FOLLOWING PROPOSAL(S) WAS/WERE APPROVED:
1. RE-ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
2. AMENDMENTS TO THE CO’S ARTICLES OF ASSOCIATION
3. ADJUSTMENTS TO PARTIAL CONSTRUCTION CONTENTS OF PROJECT INVESTED WITH RAISED FUNDS
4. USE PLAN OF EXCESSIVE RAISED FUNDS
5. RE-ELECTION OF SUPERVISORS


View the original article here

Carl Swenlin | DecisionPoint

TECHNICAL ANALYSIS 101 - PART 1

This is the first part of a series of articles about Technical Analysis from a new course we're developing. If you are new to charting, these articles will give you the "big picture" behind the charts on our site. if you are an "old hand", these articles will help ensure you haven't "strayed too far" from the basics. Enjoy!

Technical analysis is the study of price and volume changes over time. Technical analysis usually involves the use of financial charts to help study these changes. Any person who analyzes financial charts can be called a Technical Analyst.

Despite being surrounded with data, charts, raw numbers, mathematical formulas, etc., technical analysts are really studying human behavior - specifically the behavior of crowds with respect to fear and greed. All of the investors that have any kind of interest in a particular stock can be considered to be "the market" for that particular stock and the emotional state of those investors is what determines the price for that stock. If more investors feel the stock will rise, it will! If more feel that the stock will fall, then fall it will. Thus, a stock's price change over time is the most accurate record of the emotional state - the fear and the greed - of the market for that stock and thus, technical analysis is, at its core, a study of crowd behavior.

When was the last time you saw a 100% accurate weather forecast for your area? Chances are that at least some of the weather predictions your local weather person tells you won't come to pass. In many cases, most of the predictions are wrong. So why do we keep listening to weather forecasts?

Weather forecasts are useful because they help us prepare for what is likely. If the forecast calls for rain, we bring our umbrellas with us when we go out. If sunshine is predicted, we bring our sunglasses. We know that we might not need these things, but more than likely we will and we like to be prepared.

Technical analysis is very similar to weather forecasting. Good technical analysts know that T/A can prepare you for what is likely to happen but, just like many weather forecasts, things can change in unpredictable ways. Here are some other ways that technical analysis is like weather forecasting:

Weather forecasters measure temperature and air pressure and then use that data to determine more about the factors that cause weather changes - i.e., fronts, high pressure, low pressure, etc. Technical analysts use price and volume to determine more about the factors that cause market changes - i.e. fear and greed, trends, reversals, support, etc.Despite huge quantities of weather data at their disposal, weather forecasters still use their experience and intuition when creating each forecast. Technical analysis also draws heavily from the experience and intuition of the person doing the analysis (you!).Accurate weather forecasting requires local knowledge and experience. A forecaster from Florida that moves to Alaska will need time to become familiar with Alaska's weather patterns. Similarly, technical analysis requires experience and knowledge about the kinds of markets being charted - stocks are different from commodities which are different from mutual funds, large stocks are different from small stocks, etc.In the early days of weather forecasting, charlatans tried to convince people that they could somehow control the weather or that their predictions where always accurate. Unfortunately, even today, you can find people making similar claims about technical analysis.Weather forecasts tend to be most accurate when things aren't changing. If it has been sunny for the past three days and no big weather systems are approaching, chances are it will be sunny again today. Technical analysis also works well when conditions aren't changing dramatically. Both disciplines have more trouble with predicting exactly when big changes will occur.Both weather forecasting and technical analysis work well for the "mid-sized view." While predicting the weather for a large city is possible, predicting things for a city block is very hard. Similarly, second-by-second technical analysis can be extremely tricky; daily and weekly analysis is more reliable. Conversely, predicting weather for the country as a whole (i.e., "It will be sunny in the US today") and predicting the market as a whole (i.e., "This year stocks will go up") are too broad to be useful.

It is easy to lose perspective on what technical analysis can and cannot do. Try to remember this comparison with weather forecasting to keep yourself aware of its benefits and limitations.

Next time, we'll look at the real goal of Technical Analysis, why it works, and how it can be misused.

OTHER BOND CATEGORIES ARE BOUNCING

I recently wrote about how investment grade corporate bonds were starting to gain some ground on Treasury bonds. Today, I'm adding two other bond categories to that list. The flat line in Chart 1 is the 20+Year Treasury Bond iShares (TLT) which has been the strongest part of the yield curve over the past few months. That's been partly due to a flight to safety and deflationary concerns. The three other lines in Chart 1 are relative strength ratios versus the TLT. All three bond ETFs have been gaining ground on Treasury Bonds since mid-December. The strongest has been the LQD (blue line) which I wrote about in the earlier article. The next strongest is National Muni Bond Fund (PZA) which is the green line. The next in line is the High Yield Corporate Bond Fund (HYG). Charts 2 through 4 show what those bond ETFs look like. The LQD in Chart 2 is trading well above its 200-day line. The Muni Bond ETF (Chart 3) is testing that resistance line and its early November peak. Chart 4 shows the High Yield Corporate Bond ETF trading at a three-month high and nearing its 200-day line. For those who think that the recent surge in Treasury bond prices is overdone (I certainly do), these other bond ETFs offer some alternatives.

ON HIATUSRichard Rhodes will be back in the next issue. RALLY FAILURE

In my January 2 article I pointed out that the stock market was overbought by bear market standards, but that the rally had plenty of internal room for prices to expand upward if bullish forces were to persist. There was a brief rally and a small breakout, but then the rally failed, breaking down from an ascending wedge formation. I wasn't really expecting a bullish resolution, but one must keep an open mind when appropriate conditions appear.

On the chart below you can see the short-term declining tops line through which the breakout occurred. Instead of a buying opportunity, it was a bull trap. At this point we must assume that the November low will be tested. Note also that the PMO has crossed down through its 10-EMA, generating a sell signal.

The weekly chart below gives a better perspective, I think. It shows how aggressive the current down move is compared to the price activity that precedes it. Also, the PMO has topped below its moving average, a bearish sign. Prices are once again approaching the long-term support drawn from the 2002 lows. A successful retest could set up a double bottom from which another intermediate-term rally could launch, but in a bear market we shouldn't bet on that outcome.

For many months I have been emphasizing that our analysis should be biased toward bearish outcomes because we are operating in the longer-term context of a bear market. The tide is going out and it is foolish to try to swim against it. In a much broader context, we are in the midst of a global debt collapse that is only in the beginning stages. I find it impossible to imagine economic circumstances in the immediate future that would be even remotely favorable to stocks.

Bottom Line: In a bull market overbought conditions most often result in small corrections, consolidations, or deceleration of the up trend. In a bear market overbought conditions are usually a sign that a price top is at hand. Because the most recent overbought event has resulted in a price top, I think we can safely assume that the bear has not retreated.

Visit Carl's website -- DecisionPoint.com -- for the most comprehensive collection of market indicator charts on the Web. Breadth charts, sentiment charts, and historical charts going back to the 1920s. Been looking for NYSE Common Stock Only indicators? He's got those too!

EURO FINDS SUPPORT AS DOLLAR HITS RESISTANCE

With a bounce on Friday, the Euro Trust ETF (FXE) found support from a confluence of indicators and chart features. First, broken resistance turns into support in 130-132 area. Second, there is support in this area from the 50-day moving average. Third, the decline over the last few weeks retraced around 62% of the prior advance. The ETF was also oversold after a rather sharp decline from 145 to 130. This combination of conditions and chart features made FXE ripe for a bounce.

With the Euro bouncing, the US Dollar Index Bullish ETF (UUP) came under pressure on Friday. Notice that these two charts are mirror images of each other. After a surge over the last few weeks, UUP met resistance near broken support and the 50-day moving average. The advance in UUP looks like a rising flag, which is potentially bearish. For now, the flag is clearly rising as the trend has yet to actually reverse. A move below the early January low would break flag support and call for a continuation of the December decline.

There is also a video version of the this analysis available at TDTrader.com - Click Here.

For more of Arthur's insights, check out his Web site: TDTrader.com

IS THE DOLLAR TOPPING?

An interesting result of the government bailout of the financials and automakers, along with the huge economic stimulus package will be the long-term impact on the U.S. dollar. Can the dollar maintain its relative value as interest rates fall and deficits mount? Let's take a look at a few charts regarding the dollar and how we can profit if the dollar does plunge. First, let's take a look at the long-term picture of the dollar:

As you can see, the long-term trend in the dollar is down. Unless the dollar can pierce through the 92-93 area, the intermediate-term trend is down as well. Only the near-term chart shows any positive action on the dollar. And that rally is suspect technically as shown below:

A bearish head and shoulders pattern formed from October through December and broke down below the neckline with force. Should the dollar fail to navigate the near-term resistance (retest of neckline) and the longer-term trend resumes to the downside, gold is likely to be a primary beneficiary. Gold is one commodity whose long-term uptrend remains intact because of the long-term downtrend in the dollar. Take a glimpse at the long-term chart on gold:

The dollar and gold have an inverse relationship that's quite evident when you compare the two charts. During periods of dollar strength, gold weakens. However, dollar weakness leads to gold strength. So the question remains: What happens to the dollar as a result of the massive government bailout and the economic stimulus package? Answer that question correctly and you profit. It's as simple as that.

Happy trading!

Join Tom and the Invested Central team at http://www.investedcentral.com/. Invested Central provides daily market guidance, intraday stock alerts, annotated stock setups, LIVE member chat sessions, and much, much more.

Advertisement:
InvestedCentral Free 2-Week Trial, Click Here!

View the original article here

Arthur Hill | TD Trader

TECHNICAL ANALYSIS 101 - PART 1

This is the first part of a series of articles about Technical Analysis from a new course we're developing. If you are new to charting, these articles will give you the "big picture" behind the charts on our site. if you are an "old hand", these articles will help ensure you haven't "strayed too far" from the basics. Enjoy!

Technical analysis is the study of price and volume changes over time. Technical analysis usually involves the use of financial charts to help study these changes. Any person who analyzes financial charts can be called a Technical Analyst.

Despite being surrounded with data, charts, raw numbers, mathematical formulas, etc., technical analysts are really studying human behavior - specifically the behavior of crowds with respect to fear and greed. All of the investors that have any kind of interest in a particular stock can be considered to be "the market" for that particular stock and the emotional state of those investors is what determines the price for that stock. If more investors feel the stock will rise, it will! If more feel that the stock will fall, then fall it will. Thus, a stock's price change over time is the most accurate record of the emotional state - the fear and the greed - of the market for that stock and thus, technical analysis is, at its core, a study of crowd behavior.

When was the last time you saw a 100% accurate weather forecast for your area? Chances are that at least some of the weather predictions your local weather person tells you won't come to pass. In many cases, most of the predictions are wrong. So why do we keep listening to weather forecasts?

Weather forecasts are useful because they help us prepare for what is likely. If the forecast calls for rain, we bring our umbrellas with us when we go out. If sunshine is predicted, we bring our sunglasses. We know that we might not need these things, but more than likely we will and we like to be prepared.

Technical analysis is very similar to weather forecasting. Good technical analysts know that T/A can prepare you for what is likely to happen but, just like many weather forecasts, things can change in unpredictable ways. Here are some other ways that technical analysis is like weather forecasting:

Weather forecasters measure temperature and air pressure and then use that data to determine more about the factors that cause weather changes - i.e., fronts, high pressure, low pressure, etc. Technical analysts use price and volume to determine more about the factors that cause market changes - i.e. fear and greed, trends, reversals, support, etc.Despite huge quantities of weather data at their disposal, weather forecasters still use their experience and intuition when creating each forecast. Technical analysis also draws heavily from the experience and intuition of the person doing the analysis (you!).Accurate weather forecasting requires local knowledge and experience. A forecaster from Florida that moves to Alaska will need time to become familiar with Alaska's weather patterns. Similarly, technical analysis requires experience and knowledge about the kinds of markets being charted - stocks are different from commodities which are different from mutual funds, large stocks are different from small stocks, etc.In the early days of weather forecasting, charlatans tried to convince people that they could somehow control the weather or that their predictions where always accurate. Unfortunately, even today, you can find people making similar claims about technical analysis.Weather forecasts tend to be most accurate when things aren't changing. If it has been sunny for the past three days and no big weather systems are approaching, chances are it will be sunny again today. Technical analysis also works well when conditions aren't changing dramatically. Both disciplines have more trouble with predicting exactly when big changes will occur.Both weather forecasting and technical analysis work well for the "mid-sized view." While predicting the weather for a large city is possible, predicting things for a city block is very hard. Similarly, second-by-second technical analysis can be extremely tricky; daily and weekly analysis is more reliable. Conversely, predicting weather for the country as a whole (i.e., "It will be sunny in the US today") and predicting the market as a whole (i.e., "This year stocks will go up") are too broad to be useful.

It is easy to lose perspective on what technical analysis can and cannot do. Try to remember this comparison with weather forecasting to keep yourself aware of its benefits and limitations.

Next time, we'll look at the real goal of Technical Analysis, why it works, and how it can be misused.

OTHER BOND CATEGORIES ARE BOUNCING

I recently wrote about how investment grade corporate bonds were starting to gain some ground on Treasury bonds. Today, I'm adding two other bond categories to that list. The flat line in Chart 1 is the 20+Year Treasury Bond iShares (TLT) which has been the strongest part of the yield curve over the past few months. That's been partly due to a flight to safety and deflationary concerns. The three other lines in Chart 1 are relative strength ratios versus the TLT. All three bond ETFs have been gaining ground on Treasury Bonds since mid-December. The strongest has been the LQD (blue line) which I wrote about in the earlier article. The next strongest is National Muni Bond Fund (PZA) which is the green line. The next in line is the High Yield Corporate Bond Fund (HYG). Charts 2 through 4 show what those bond ETFs look like. The LQD in Chart 2 is trading well above its 200-day line. The Muni Bond ETF (Chart 3) is testing that resistance line and its early November peak. Chart 4 shows the High Yield Corporate Bond ETF trading at a three-month high and nearing its 200-day line. For those who think that the recent surge in Treasury bond prices is overdone (I certainly do), these other bond ETFs offer some alternatives.

ON HIATUSRichard Rhodes will be back in the next issue. RALLY FAILURE

In my January 2 article I pointed out that the stock market was overbought by bear market standards, but that the rally had plenty of internal room for prices to expand upward if bullish forces were to persist. There was a brief rally and a small breakout, but then the rally failed, breaking down from an ascending wedge formation. I wasn't really expecting a bullish resolution, but one must keep an open mind when appropriate conditions appear.

On the chart below you can see the short-term declining tops line through which the breakout occurred. Instead of a buying opportunity, it was a bull trap. At this point we must assume that the November low will be tested. Note also that the PMO has crossed down through its 10-EMA, generating a sell signal.

The weekly chart below gives a better perspective, I think. It shows how aggressive the current down move is compared to the price activity that precedes it. Also, the PMO has topped below its moving average, a bearish sign. Prices are once again approaching the long-term support drawn from the 2002 lows. A successful retest could set up a double bottom from which another intermediate-term rally could launch, but in a bear market we shouldn't bet on that outcome.

For many months I have been emphasizing that our analysis should be biased toward bearish outcomes because we are operating in the longer-term context of a bear market. The tide is going out and it is foolish to try to swim against it. In a much broader context, we are in the midst of a global debt collapse that is only in the beginning stages. I find it impossible to imagine economic circumstances in the immediate future that would be even remotely favorable to stocks.

Bottom Line: In a bull market overbought conditions most often result in small corrections, consolidations, or deceleration of the up trend. In a bear market overbought conditions are usually a sign that a price top is at hand. Because the most recent overbought event has resulted in a price top, I think we can safely assume that the bear has not retreated.

Visit Carl's website -- DecisionPoint.com -- for the most comprehensive collection of market indicator charts on the Web. Breadth charts, sentiment charts, and historical charts going back to the 1920s. Been looking for NYSE Common Stock Only indicators? He's got those too!

EURO FINDS SUPPORT AS DOLLAR HITS RESISTANCE

With a bounce on Friday, the Euro Trust ETF (FXE) found support from a confluence of indicators and chart features. First, broken resistance turns into support in 130-132 area. Second, there is support in this area from the 50-day moving average. Third, the decline over the last few weeks retraced around 62% of the prior advance. The ETF was also oversold after a rather sharp decline from 145 to 130. This combination of conditions and chart features made FXE ripe for a bounce.

With the Euro bouncing, the US Dollar Index Bullish ETF (UUP) came under pressure on Friday. Notice that these two charts are mirror images of each other. After a surge over the last few weeks, UUP met resistance near broken support and the 50-day moving average. The advance in UUP looks like a rising flag, which is potentially bearish. For now, the flag is clearly rising as the trend has yet to actually reverse. A move below the early January low would break flag support and call for a continuation of the December decline.

There is also a video version of the this analysis available at TDTrader.com - Click Here.

For more of Arthur's insights, check out his Web site: TDTrader.com

IS THE DOLLAR TOPPING?

An interesting result of the government bailout of the financials and automakers, along with the huge economic stimulus package will be the long-term impact on the U.S. dollar. Can the dollar maintain its relative value as interest rates fall and deficits mount? Let's take a look at a few charts regarding the dollar and how we can profit if the dollar does plunge. First, let's take a look at the long-term picture of the dollar:

As you can see, the long-term trend in the dollar is down. Unless the dollar can pierce through the 92-93 area, the intermediate-term trend is down as well. Only the near-term chart shows any positive action on the dollar. And that rally is suspect technically as shown below:

A bearish head and shoulders pattern formed from October through December and broke down below the neckline with force. Should the dollar fail to navigate the near-term resistance (retest of neckline) and the longer-term trend resumes to the downside, gold is likely to be a primary beneficiary. Gold is one commodity whose long-term uptrend remains intact because of the long-term downtrend in the dollar. Take a glimpse at the long-term chart on gold:

The dollar and gold have an inverse relationship that's quite evident when you compare the two charts. During periods of dollar strength, gold weakens. However, dollar weakness leads to gold strength. So the question remains: What happens to the dollar as a result of the massive government bailout and the economic stimulus package? Answer that question correctly and you profit. It's as simple as that.

Happy trading!

Join Tom and the Invested Central team at http://www.investedcentral.com/. Invested Central provides daily market guidance, intraday stock alerts, annotated stock setups, LIVE member chat sessions, and much, much more.

Advertisement:
InvestedCentral Free 2-Week Trial, Click Here!

View the original article here

Canadian Stock Market Analysis - 09/16

Canadian Stock Market Analysis - Start your trading day off on the right foot, with Good Morning Bay Street. This free daily video newsletter focuses on the major Canadian TSX Indexes and ETF’s, as well as the Canadian Dollar, Crude Oil, Natural Gas and Precious Metals including Gold and Silver. http://www.theuptrend.com/Canadian-Stock-Market-Analysis-20100916.htm

Category: Canadian Stock Market


View the original article here

companies listed on the Iceland Stock Exchange Complete List

companies listed on the Iceland Stock Exchange Complete List

* 365
* Alfesca
* Atlantic Airways
* Atlantic Petroleum
* Atorka Group
* Bakkav?r
* Century Aluminum Company
* Eik Banki
* Eimskipafélag íslands
* Exista
* FL Group
* Flaga
* F?roya Banki
* Glitnir banki
* HB Grandi
* Icelandair Group
* Kaupthing Bank
* Landsbanki
* Marel Food Systems
* Nyherji
* OMX
* SPRON
* Straumur-Burearás Fjárf.banki
* Teymi
* Vinnslust?ein
* ?ssur


View the original article here

QQQQ Trends - 20100916

QQQQ Trends Newsletter - Each week Stephen Whiteside helps investors make money trading the NASDAQ 100 using not only the Q’s, but the leveraged ETF’s and options. http://www.theuptrend.com/QQQ-Trends-20100916.htm

Category: Trade The Q's


View the original article here

Most active premarket stocks today

ZGEN -ZymoGenetics Inc????
TUNE -Microtune Inc????
JASO -JA Solar Holdings Co Ltd????
INTC -Intel Corporation????
SLAB -Silicon Laboratories Inc????
AAPL -Apple Inc????
ARNA -Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc????
BRCD -Brocade Communications Systems Inc???
AVII -AVI BioPharma Inc


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IN BRIEF: Family paw park celebrates opening

Melody Odell, an employee of Hotel Indigo in Sarasota, has won a Celebrate Service Award from InterContinental Hotels Group for using her skills as a nurse to help an injured guest. IHG celebrated employees at its 4,400 hotels, offices and reservation centers as part of Celebrate Service Week July 26-30. at Hotel Indigo, a guest returned to the hotel limping after a long jog around Bayfront Park. Odell, who is a part-time nurse in addition to working at the hotel’s front desk, got an ice pack and wrapped the woman’s ankle with an ace bandage. The next week, the guest sent the hotel a letter thanking Odell for her actions.

Synovus Bank of Florida has hired Lisa Van Ullen as vice president of wealth management-financial consultant, Synovus Securities, inc. her responsibilities include providing a full range of financial services such as estate and tax planning, investment management, personal trust, insurance services and private banking services, primarily in Manatee and Sarasota counties. She has more than 20 years of experience in wealth management.

BB&T Investment Services has promoted Henry Eller to investment officer. Eller, who joined the bank in 2009, is a licensed investment counselor, based in Sarasota.

John Wideikis, attorney with Berntsson, Ittersagen, Gunderson, Waksler & Wideikis LLP of Murdock and Englewood, has been selected as a Florida Super Lawyers Rising Star. he was selected by an independent panel in the field of real property law. Only 5 percent of practicing attorneys in the state make the list, published by Thomson Reuters.

Olga Weider, an accountant at Christopher, Smith, Leonard, Bristow & Stanell PA, Certified Public Accountants, has passed the exam to become a CPA. She joined CS&L in 2005 and primarily works with the audit team.

Cornerstone Solutions Group, a full service commercial landscape contractor in Bradenton, has added four people to its staff. Chris Lee, account manager, has more than 15 years of experience in lawn and ornamental care and is a certified pest control operator licensed in Florida. Michael Willard, account manager, brings an extensive knowledge of golf course maintenance and plant material. Chris Rogers, project manager/business development, previously worked on projects with Universal Studios, Walt Disney World and Sea World. he has extensive experience with arbor care, including the relocation of large trees. Wanda Miranda, executive administrative assistant, will be responsible for proposal preparation and new employee screening.

Aimi Jackson, of Bradenton, has joined Kforce inc. of Tampa as project coordinator at the National Recruiting Center. Kforce is a professional staffing service. Jackson is also working toward her Bachelor of Science at the University of South Florida.

Attorney John Ervin has joined the Sarasota firm of Livingston, Patterson, Strickland & Siegel PA. he earned his J.D. cum laude from University of Maine in 2007 and his Master of Laws in taxation from the University of Florida in 2008. Ervin’s focus will be tax and business law.

RS&H, a facilities and infrastructure consulting firm, has hired Richard Tillery as a senior transportation planner at its Sarasota office. he has more than 14 years of experience in travel demand modeling, long-range transportation and mobility planning, and transit modeling. Tillery is certified with the American Institute of Certified Planners.

Financial consultant Richard Field is now associated with Professional Benefits inc., an investment service and benefits administration firm in Sarasota. Field, a financial consultant for 17 years, is fully licensed to handle stocks, bonds, mutual funds, options, retirement plans, annuities and life and health insurance. PB specializes in income planning for retirement.

The Charlotte County Commission has appointed Hazel Crouch, owner of Place in the Sun, to the Charlotte County Tourist Development Council. her term will end in May 2012. Julie Mathis, executive director of the Charlotte County Chamber of Commerce, was reappointed to a four-year term ending in June 2014. Crouch has owned and managed Place in the Sun, a vacation rentals and home management company in Charlotte County, since 2003. Mathis has served as the council’s chairwoman since November 2008 and has been a member for 10 years. The council oversees the use of tourist development tax money collected within the county and provides guidance to the Charlotte Harbor Visitor & Convention Bureau.

Jo Dvorak has joined Cabot Reserve on the Green as administrator. Cabot Reserve is a 60-bed nonprofit assisted living community in Sarasota owned by Family Extended Care of Miami. Dvorak brings more than 30 years of management and marketing experience to her new position, with her last 12 years spent working in assisted living communities in Sarasota.

Thomas Luzier, a shareholder in the Sarasota-based law firm Dunlap & Moran, has been certified in real estate by the Florida Board of Legal Specialization and Education. Luzier’s practice covers a variety of real estate and business transactional matters, focusing on the representation of individual and institutional clients on all phases of buying, financing, selling and leasing residential and commercial property.

The Punta Gorda Chapter of the American Business Women’s Association re-elected its board of directors for a second term at a meeting July 28. Past president Randy Ann Bechtel installed the slate: Andrea Carroll, president; Virginia Vaughn, vice president; Marge Szmania, secretary; and Peggy Wilbur, treasurer. The chapter raises money for scholarships for local students and works to expand business and educational opportunities for its members.

Cutting Loose Salon, Pamper Lounge and AfterHours by Cutting Loose have filled two key staff positions. Tracey Rider joins the team as general manager, bringing numerous years of experience in salon management. April Piana, who also has many years of experience, will focus on eyebrow design, skin balancing and natural nourishing dermal treatments.

Matthew Borland has joined Take Care Private Duty Home Health Care’s Sarasota office staff as project manager to spearhead the continued development of best business practices. he was previously an accounts payable lead for a worldwide travel company in Boston.

Webster University has promoted two employees at its Sarasota Metropolitan Campus. Cindy Saunders, who joined Webster in 2007 as campus manager, has been promoted to assistant director. Rebecca Rathburn, an administrative assistant since April 2009, is now campus manager.

Dixie Southern, a custom steel fabricator in Duette, has hired Eugene Sweet as senior sales and marketing manager and Calvin Bennett III as quality manager. Sweet has more than 25 years of domestic and international sales and marketing experience in the chemical, filters, agriculture, wind and solar markets. Bennett comes to Dixie Southern from Ceradyne Thermal Materials, where he served as senior process engineer.

Dustin Kilduff, a student at the University of South Florida College of Business in Sarasota, is working as an intern at the Raymond James Financial Services office on Gatewood Drive in Lakewood Ranch. “Dustin will be learning the financial services industry from the ground up,” said Jim Zientara, branch manager. Kilduff was born and raised in Bradenton and graduated from Lakewood Ranch High School in 2005. he is working toward his bachelor’s degree in finance.

A group of 27 emerging and experienced community leaders graduated this month in the third class of the Gulf Coast Leadership Institute, a comprehensive leadership development program created and funded by the Gulf Coast Community Foundation of Venice. In exchange for their training, the participants have committed to use their newly gained skills for the long-term benefit of their community. The graduates of the 2010 Gulf Coast Leadership Institute are: David Blehar, chief financial officer, Senior Friendship Centers; Veronica Brady, senior vice president, SunTrust Bank; Andrew Britton, attorney, Britton Law Office; Christopher Cogan, CEO and managing director, Area 32 Ventures; John Cox, sheriff’s deputy and director of Police Athletic League of Sarasota County; Corinne Deckard, assistant managing director, Asolo Repertory Theatre; Anne Garlington, wealth advisor and regional sales manager, Comerica Wealth Management; TinaRae Gregoire, executive director, Achievements Learning Centers; Michael Hartley, vice president, DKE inc.; Marilyn Harwell, retired book publisher; Susan Hoffman, editor, Sun Coast Media Group/The Arcadian; Kent Kirschner, CEO, the Media Maquiladora; Susan Kosko, portfolio manager, Northern Trust Bank; Dave Lowell, general manager; Ram Marine Services; Michael Mansfield, executive director, Charlotte County Habitat for Humanity; Giovanna McGrath, consultant, program coordinator for Gulf Coast Leadership Institute; Lisa Merritt, executive director, Multicultural Health Institute; Jonathon Phelps, president, Corin Bay Real Estate; Matthew Rheingans, attorney/president, Law Office of Matthew Rheingans PA; Michael Scott, development director, Sarasota Ballet of Florida; Warren Simonds, vice president and CMO, Willis a. Smith Construction; Bridget Spiess, Realtor, Re/Max Alliance Group; Craig Tiernan, financial adviser, Wells Fargo Advisors; Jean Trammell, president, The Venice Company; Jennifer Tucker, Healthy Communities coordinator, South County Family YMCA; David Ursel, speech language pathologist, Sarasota County School Board; and Gayle Williams, president/owner, Vision PR & Marketing.

Jenifer Schembri has been hired as a new principal at the Manatee County law firm of Blalock Walters. She is board certified by the Florida Bar in tax law, received her Master of Laws in taxation with honors from the University of Florida, and is also a certified public accountant. Schembri will head up the firm’s new tax law practice.

Thomas Hoppman has joined the Piana Acupuncture and Wellness Center in Sarasota as a licensed massage therapist. his other certifications/degrees include neuromuscular therapy, Qigong and Tai Chi.

Cornerstone Solutions Group awarded its Caught in the Act of Caring Award for June to Michael Willard of the Bradenton office. he exemplifies outstanding customer service and attention to detail with every customer.

IN BRIEF: Family paw park celebrates opening


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Chip Anderson | ChartWatchers

TECHNICAL ANALYSIS 101 - PART 1

This is the first part of a series of articles about Technical Analysis from a new course we're developing. If you are new to charting, these articles will give you the "big picture" behind the charts on our site. if you are an "old hand", these articles will help ensure you haven't "strayed too far" from the basics. Enjoy!

Technical analysis is the study of price and volume changes over time. Technical analysis usually involves the use of financial charts to help study these changes. Any person who analyzes financial charts can be called a Technical Analyst.

Despite being surrounded with data, charts, raw numbers, mathematical formulas, etc., technical analysts are really studying human behavior - specifically the behavior of crowds with respect to fear and greed. All of the investors that have any kind of interest in a particular stock can be considered to be "the market" for that particular stock and the emotional state of those investors is what determines the price for that stock. If more investors feel the stock will rise, it will! If more feel that the stock will fall, then fall it will. Thus, a stock's price change over time is the most accurate record of the emotional state - the fear and the greed - of the market for that stock and thus, technical analysis is, at its core, a study of crowd behavior.

When was the last time you saw a 100% accurate weather forecast for your area? Chances are that at least some of the weather predictions your local weather person tells you won't come to pass. In many cases, most of the predictions are wrong. So why do we keep listening to weather forecasts?

Weather forecasts are useful because they help us prepare for what is likely. If the forecast calls for rain, we bring our umbrellas with us when we go out. If sunshine is predicted, we bring our sunglasses. We know that we might not need these things, but more than likely we will and we like to be prepared.

Technical analysis is very similar to weather forecasting. Good technical analysts know that T/A can prepare you for what is likely to happen but, just like many weather forecasts, things can change in unpredictable ways. Here are some other ways that technical analysis is like weather forecasting:

Weather forecasters measure temperature and air pressure and then use that data to determine more about the factors that cause weather changes - i.e., fronts, high pressure, low pressure, etc. Technical analysts use price and volume to determine more about the factors that cause market changes - i.e. fear and greed, trends, reversals, support, etc.Despite huge quantities of weather data at their disposal, weather forecasters still use their experience and intuition when creating each forecast. Technical analysis also draws heavily from the experience and intuition of the person doing the analysis (you!).Accurate weather forecasting requires local knowledge and experience. A forecaster from Florida that moves to Alaska will need time to become familiar with Alaska's weather patterns. Similarly, technical analysis requires experience and knowledge about the kinds of markets being charted - stocks are different from commodities which are different from mutual funds, large stocks are different from small stocks, etc.In the early days of weather forecasting, charlatans tried to convince people that they could somehow control the weather or that their predictions where always accurate. Unfortunately, even today, you can find people making similar claims about technical analysis.Weather forecasts tend to be most accurate when things aren't changing. If it has been sunny for the past three days and no big weather systems are approaching, chances are it will be sunny again today. Technical analysis also works well when conditions aren't changing dramatically. Both disciplines have more trouble with predicting exactly when big changes will occur.Both weather forecasting and technical analysis work well for the "mid-sized view." While predicting the weather for a large city is possible, predicting things for a city block is very hard. Similarly, second-by-second technical analysis can be extremely tricky; daily and weekly analysis is more reliable. Conversely, predicting weather for the country as a whole (i.e., "It will be sunny in the US today") and predicting the market as a whole (i.e., "This year stocks will go up") are too broad to be useful.

It is easy to lose perspective on what technical analysis can and cannot do. Try to remember this comparison with weather forecasting to keep yourself aware of its benefits and limitations.

Next time, we'll look at the real goal of Technical Analysis, why it works, and how it can be misused.

OTHER BOND CATEGORIES ARE BOUNCING

I recently wrote about how investment grade corporate bonds were starting to gain some ground on Treasury bonds. Today, I'm adding two other bond categories to that list. The flat line in Chart 1 is the 20+Year Treasury Bond iShares (TLT) which has been the strongest part of the yield curve over the past few months. That's been partly due to a flight to safety and deflationary concerns. The three other lines in Chart 1 are relative strength ratios versus the TLT. All three bond ETFs have been gaining ground on Treasury Bonds since mid-December. The strongest has been the LQD (blue line) which I wrote about in the earlier article. The next strongest is National Muni Bond Fund (PZA) which is the green line. The next in line is the High Yield Corporate Bond Fund (HYG). Charts 2 through 4 show what those bond ETFs look like. The LQD in Chart 2 is trading well above its 200-day line. The Muni Bond ETF (Chart 3) is testing that resistance line and its early November peak. Chart 4 shows the High Yield Corporate Bond ETF trading at a three-month high and nearing its 200-day line. For those who think that the recent surge in Treasury bond prices is overdone (I certainly do), these other bond ETFs offer some alternatives.

ON HIATUSRichard Rhodes will be back in the next issue. RALLY FAILURE

In my January 2 article I pointed out that the stock market was overbought by bear market standards, but that the rally had plenty of internal room for prices to expand upward if bullish forces were to persist. There was a brief rally and a small breakout, but then the rally failed, breaking down from an ascending wedge formation. I wasn't really expecting a bullish resolution, but one must keep an open mind when appropriate conditions appear.

On the chart below you can see the short-term declining tops line through which the breakout occurred. Instead of a buying opportunity, it was a bull trap. At this point we must assume that the November low will be tested. Note also that the PMO has crossed down through its 10-EMA, generating a sell signal.

The weekly chart below gives a better perspective, I think. It shows how aggressive the current down move is compared to the price activity that precedes it. Also, the PMO has topped below its moving average, a bearish sign. Prices are once again approaching the long-term support drawn from the 2002 lows. A successful retest could set up a double bottom from which another intermediate-term rally could launch, but in a bear market we shouldn't bet on that outcome.

For many months I have been emphasizing that our analysis should be biased toward bearish outcomes because we are operating in the longer-term context of a bear market. The tide is going out and it is foolish to try to swim against it. In a much broader context, we are in the midst of a global debt collapse that is only in the beginning stages. I find it impossible to imagine economic circumstances in the immediate future that would be even remotely favorable to stocks.

Bottom Line: In a bull market overbought conditions most often result in small corrections, consolidations, or deceleration of the up trend. In a bear market overbought conditions are usually a sign that a price top is at hand. Because the most recent overbought event has resulted in a price top, I think we can safely assume that the bear has not retreated.

Visit Carl's website -- DecisionPoint.com -- for the most comprehensive collection of market indicator charts on the Web. Breadth charts, sentiment charts, and historical charts going back to the 1920s. Been looking for NYSE Common Stock Only indicators? He's got those too!

EURO FINDS SUPPORT AS DOLLAR HITS RESISTANCE

With a bounce on Friday, the Euro Trust ETF (FXE) found support from a confluence of indicators and chart features. First, broken resistance turns into support in 130-132 area. Second, there is support in this area from the 50-day moving average. Third, the decline over the last few weeks retraced around 62% of the prior advance. The ETF was also oversold after a rather sharp decline from 145 to 130. This combination of conditions and chart features made FXE ripe for a bounce.

With the Euro bouncing, the US Dollar Index Bullish ETF (UUP) came under pressure on Friday. Notice that these two charts are mirror images of each other. After a surge over the last few weeks, UUP met resistance near broken support and the 50-day moving average. The advance in UUP looks like a rising flag, which is potentially bearish. For now, the flag is clearly rising as the trend has yet to actually reverse. A move below the early January low would break flag support and call for a continuation of the December decline.

There is also a video version of the this analysis available at TDTrader.com - Click Here.

For more of Arthur's insights, check out his Web site: TDTrader.com

IS THE DOLLAR TOPPING?

An interesting result of the government bailout of the financials and automakers, along with the huge economic stimulus package will be the long-term impact on the U.S. dollar. Can the dollar maintain its relative value as interest rates fall and deficits mount? Let's take a look at a few charts regarding the dollar and how we can profit if the dollar does plunge. First, let's take a look at the long-term picture of the dollar:

As you can see, the long-term trend in the dollar is down. Unless the dollar can pierce through the 92-93 area, the intermediate-term trend is down as well. Only the near-term chart shows any positive action on the dollar. And that rally is suspect technically as shown below:

A bearish head and shoulders pattern formed from October through December and broke down below the neckline with force. Should the dollar fail to navigate the near-term resistance (retest of neckline) and the longer-term trend resumes to the downside, gold is likely to be a primary beneficiary. Gold is one commodity whose long-term uptrend remains intact because of the long-term downtrend in the dollar. Take a glimpse at the long-term chart on gold:

The dollar and gold have an inverse relationship that's quite evident when you compare the two charts. During periods of dollar strength, gold weakens. However, dollar weakness leads to gold strength. So the question remains: What happens to the dollar as a result of the massive government bailout and the economic stimulus package? Answer that question correctly and you profit. It's as simple as that.

Happy trading!

Join Tom and the Invested Central team at http://www.investedcentral.com/. Invested Central provides daily market guidance, intraday stock alerts, annotated stock setups, LIVE member chat sessions, and much, much more.

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Todays stock news

Top Gaining stocks of the day

OREX -Orexigen Therapeutics IncEDMC -Education Management CorporationJNGW -Jingwei International LimitedCCME -China MediaExpress Holdings IncFRBK -Republic First Bancorp IncPBIP -Prudential Bancorp Inc of Pennsylvania

52 week High Stocks

AKAM ?Akamai Technologies Inc

ARUN -Aruba Networks Inc

ATML -Atmel Corporation

ATRC -AtriCure Inc

BSFT -BroadSoft Inc

DTV ?-DIRECTV

DISCB-Discovery Communications Inc

DTSI -DTS Inc

PLUS -ePlus Inc

EXAS -EXACT Sciences Corporation

EXPE -Expedia Inc

FFIV -F Networks Inc

GIII -G-III Apparel Group LTD

GOODO-Gladstone Commercial Corporation

GOODP-Gladstone Commercial Corporation

HGRD -Health Grades Inc

HBANP-Huntington Bancshares Incorporated

ILMN -Illumina Inc

INFA -Informatica Corporation

AMAG – AMAG Pharmaceuticals Inc

AACC – Asset Acceptance Capital Corp

ATEA – Astea International Inc

BFSB -Brooklyn Federal Bancorp Inc

CHIO -China INSOnline Corp

GNMK – GenMark Diagnostics Inc

JAXB – Jacksonville Bancorp Inc

XPRT -LECG Corporation

LEGC – Legacy Bancorp Inc

NCIT – NCI Inc

NURO – NeuroMetrix Inc

FFFD – North Central Bancshares Inc

TIXC -Tix Corporation

VBFC -Village Bank and Trust Financial Corp


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Why Crude Oil Will Present Investors With a Golden Opportunity in 2009

Oil prices have fallen 70% since hitting a record $147.27 a barrel in July, which means in just five months, crude has given up all the price gains it made in the past four years.

After such a wrenching plunge, many analysts believe the outlook for the a??black golda?? remains bleak a?? and in the short term it certainly is. in the long run, however, dwindling supplies, resurgent demand, and a lack of investment will cause crude oil to double, triple, or even quintuple in price over the next few years.

In fact, the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) a?? energy advisor to 28 industrialized nations a?? says oil will rise to $100 a barrel by 2015, as a result of a major a??supply crunch,a?? and will ultimately soar to $200 a barrel.

But before it does, prices are likely to sink even further, perhaps falling as low as $20 a barrel in the first quarter of the new Year.

Indeed, much of Wall Street expects oil prices to average about $50 a barrel in 2009. some of the firms and their specific forecasts include:

Deutsche Bank AG (DB, which says oil prices will average $47.50 for all of next year. Merrill Lynch & Co. inc. (MER), which predicts that prices will average $50 even. Moodya??s Investors Service (MCO) also says crude will average $50 a barrel in 2009, but says that average will increase to $55 a barrel for 2010. Goldman Sachs Group inc. (GS) is slightly more bearish, predicting that prices will average $45 for all of next year a?? after falling as low as $30 in the 2009 first quarter. (Ita??s worth noting that Goldman a?? just five months ago a?? predicted oil prices would hit $200 a barrel in 2009).

But analysts also agree on something else: when the recessionary tide finally recedes, all of the factors that drove oil to its record high last summer will once again be exposed, and crude again will again soar to record highs.

“We may see prices drop lower a?? into the twenties, even a?? but therea??s a better-than-average chance that theya??ll be back over $70 a barrel by the end of next year,a?? says Money Morning Investment Director Keith Fitz-Gerald. a??Thata??s where firms like Goldman and Merrill are getting all of these a??middle-of-the road,a?? $50-a-barrel estimates. and ita??s why investors who buy in through the first quarter could enjoy compelling returns at the end of the year.”

In the meantime, however, low oil prices are crimping investment in new capacity, a reality that will lead to much higher prices down the road.

Just ask the IEA.

IEA: Rising Demand + Lack of Investment = a??Supply Cruncha??

According to widely respected energy advisor, global oil demand will slide 0.2%, or 200,000 barrels per day (bpd), this year, falling to an average of 85.8 million bpd. but the IEA also says that oil demand will advance by an annual average of 1.6% between 2006 and 2030.

The bottom line: regardless of any short-term pullback, daily demand will rise from the current level of 86 million barrels to 106 million barrels in 2030. in other words, daily demand in 2030 will be 23%.

To meet that demand, the agency estimates that the world needs $26.3 trillion in supply-side investments over the next 21 years.

China, India and other developing countries, alone, will need investments of $360 billion a year through 2030, the agency said.

About 7 million bpd of additional capacity needs to be added to the market by 2015. and right now a?? because of marketplace changes a?? the financial incentives to make that happen just dona??t exist.

Exploration costs have more than quadrupled since 2000, as oil producers have been forced to take on more complex projects, and the costs of both labor and materials have skyrocketed. at the same time, the steep drop in oil prices has put even more pressure on energy companies to curtail their investments rather than increase them.

Earlier this year, for instance, ConocoPhillips (COP) and Saudi Arabia Investment Co. (ARAMCO) were forced to postpone bidding on the construction of a 400,000 bpd export refinery at the Yanbu Industrial City.

“We see and hear about energy investments being delayed a?| this is a major worry and could lead to a supply crunch and much higher oil prices than wea??ve seen before,” said Fatih Birol, the IEAa??s chief economist.

The IEA predicts that, by 2015, a lack of investment and rising demand will create a “supply crunch” a?? that will once again send oil prices up into the triple digits.

a??There remains a real risk that under-investment will cause an oil supply crunch in that time frame,a?? the IEA said in an executive summary of its a??2008 World Energy Outlook.a?? a??The gap between what is currently being built and what will be needed to keep pace with demand is set to widen sharply after 2010.a??

The agency predicts that crude will average more than $100 a barrel from 2008 to 2015 and rise above $200 a barrel by 2030, as demand far outpaces supply.

a??While the situation facing the world is critical, it is vital we keep our eye on the medium to long-term target of a sustainable energy future,” Nobuo Tanaka, the Paris-based agencya??s executive director, told reporters in London. “While market imbalances will feed instability, the era of cheap oil is over.”

While ita??s probably true that the a??era of cheap oila?? is in our rearview mirror, a new question has arisen: Just how high do oil prices go?

According to some analysts, the IEAa??s target price of $200 a barrel is far too conservative.

The lack of exploration and development is certainly a problem. but a much bigger issue is the fact that output from the worlda??s existing oil fields has sharply declined.

a??The future rate of decline in output from producing oilfields as they mature is the single most important determinant of the amount of new capacity that will need to be built globally to meet demand,a?? the IEA says.

And output from the worlda??s oilfields is declining faster than previously thought.

In its a??2007 World Energy Outlook,a?? the IEA estimated that output from the worlda??s existing oilfields was declining by 3.7% a year. but in its latest report, published in November, the IEA revised that estimate to an annual decline of 6.7%. (The November report was based on the first major study of the worlda??s 800 largest oil fields.)

Unfortunately, the IEA is behind the curve.

For nearly a decade, Matthew R. Simmons has said that the worlda??s oil production was nearing a?? or already at a?? an a??inflection point.a?? While his book “Twilight in the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock and the World Economy,” was scoffed at when it was originally published back in 2005, Simmons is now viewed as perhaps the preeminent expert on the so-called a??peak oila?? movement.

a??Like most people who ignore conventional wisdom, he was scoffed at, ridiculed, and denied,” commodities guru Jim Rogers told Fortune magazine. “and now, of course, people are starting to say, a??Oh, well, I thought of that.a??”

Simmons, chairman of the Houston-based investment bank Simmons & Co. International, poured through hundreds of technical documents submitted by Saudi oil geologists to the Society of Petroleum Engineers over the past 50 years.

a??I finished reading the last paper on a Sunday afternoon,a?? Simmons told Fortune, a??and I sat back and thought, a??Holy crap, this is unbelievable. Ia??ve just discovered the biggest energy illusion ever in the world. Wea??re in big trouble. Ia??m going to write a book.a?? a??

Much of the alleged Saudi Arabia subterfuge has to do with a complete lack of transparency with respect to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. After OPEC decided to base its production quotas on reserve figures in the 1980s, several of the cartela??s producers suddenly raised their levels of “proven reserves” by 40% or more.

Back in 1988, for instance, Saudi Arabia raised its proven-reserve figure from 170 billion barrels to about 260 billion barrels. that figure has remained more or less constant since then, despite the fact that billions of barrels of oil have been pumped out of the ground.

“Saudi Arabia has announced for 20 years in a row that they have 260 billion barrels of oil in reserve,” Rogers told Money Morning during an exclusive interview in Singapore recently. “Ita??s astonishing. The figure never goes up and it never goes down. They have produced dozens of millions a?? billions a?? of dollars of oil in that period of time.

a??Every oil country in the world has declining reserves except Saudi Arabia,a?? Rogers said. a??And I know that every oil company has declining reserves. so unless somebody discovers a lot of oil very quickly in very accessible areas, the surprise is going to be how high the price stays, and how high it goes.a??

Simmons thinks oil prices could hit $300 a barrel a?? and could possibly even surge as high as $500 a barrel a?? during the next several years.

a??Black Golda?? Profit Plays

When it comes to investing, the oil sector poses some very clear risks, especially given the murky near-term outlook. However, there are a number of large-cap integrated oil companies that may offer some truly compelling values at current prices.

Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) and Chevron Corp. (CVX) are currently trading at multi-year lows, making them exceptionally cheap in both relative and absolute terms. these companies also have strong balance sheets (Exxon is a??AAAa??- rated and has more cash on its balance sheet than debt), generate strong cash flows, and have traditionally increased their dividends on a regular basis.

Chevron was actually recommended as a a??Buya?? by Money Morning Contributing Editor Horacio Marquez in his a??Buy, Sell or Holda?? column earlier this year.

a??Chevron is the kind of company that is capable of continuing to post large profits – propelling its share higher from current levels a?? even if oil-and-gas prices were to drop from current levels over the next three years,a?? Marquez said. a??Thata??s because Chevrona??s business is well cushioned, since refining, marketing and chemicals margins would expand dramatically if market a??spota?? prices were to decline. also, the companya??s production is poised to expand strongly and Chevron uses some selective hedging that works very well in downside oil markets.a??

Offshore drillers, particularly those capable of drilling in the deepest waters, also offer value at current levels. Petroleo Brasileiro (PBR), also known as Petrobras, is particularly appealing, as it recently discovered one of the largest offshore oil fields on earth off the coast of Rio de Janeiro. known as Carioca, the field could hold 33 billion barrels of oil and gas, making the worlda??s largest discovery in at least 32 years.

Fitz-Gerald, the Money Morning investment director, suggests investors look at China National Offshore Oil Corporation, or CNOOC Ltd. (ADR: CEO). The Hong Kong-based company recently got approval for a $29 billion exploration project in the South China Sea. The company expects to produce 50 million tons of oil equivalent per year from that region during the next 10-20 years. that would equal the production of Chinaa??s biggest project, the Daqing Oil Field.

Petrobras and CNOOC are also attractive because, as foreign companies, they will also get a boost from any devaluation in the U.S. dollar.

All of these companies have been hit hard by the combination of commodity-price weakness and credit market turmoil. but these operators do not require peak-cycle commodity prices to generate stellar results and have little or no credit-market exposure.

For a more direct play on oil prices, you might also try an exchange-traded fund (ETF), such as the United States Oil Fund LP (USO), the iPath S&P GSCI Crude Oil Total Return Fund (OIL), or the United States Gasoline Fund LP (UGA).

[Editora??s Note: As the whipsaw trading patterns energy investors have endured this year have shown, the ongoing financial crisis has changed the investment game forever. Uncertainty is now the norm and that new reality alone has created a whole set of new rules that will help determine who profits and who loses. Investors who ignore this a??New Realitya?? will struggle, and will find their financial forays to be frustrating and unrewarding. but investors who embrace this change will not only survive a?? they will thrive.

Money Morning Investment Director Keith Fitz-Gerald has already isolated these new rules and has unlocked the key to what he refers to as a??The Golden Age of Wealth Creation.a?? but Fitz-Gerald brings more than a realization a?? and an understanding a?? to the table, here. After a decade of work, hea??s also developed a new computerized trading model based on a mathematical concept known as a??fractals.a?? this system allows him to predict price movements of broad indexes, or individual stocks, with a high degree of certainty. and ita??s particularly well suited to the kind of market wea??re all facing right now. Check out our latest report on these new rules, and this new market environment.]

Investment News

To read more click Here

Jason Simpkins is Associate Editor of Money Morning

Why Crude Oil Will Present Investors With a Golden Opportunity in 2009


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Your view on "Contrarian Investor Sees Economic Crash in China" (factual analysis appreciated)?

Following article extracted from NY Times, written by David Barboza, Friday, January 8, 2010,

James S. Chanos built one of the largest fortunes on Wall Street by foreseeing the collapse of Enron and other highflying companies whose stories were too good to be true.

Now Mr. Chanos, a wealthy hedge fund investor, is working to bust the myth of the biggest conglomerate of all: China inc.

As most of the world bets on China to help lift the global economy out of recession, Mr. Chanos is warning that China's hyperstimulated economy is headed for a crash, rather than the sustained boom that most economists predict. Its surging real estate sector, buoyed by a flood of speculative capital, looks like "Dubai times 1,000 — or worse," he frets. he even suspects that Beijing is cooking its books, faking, among other things, its eye-popping growth rates of more than 8 percent.

"Bubbles are best identified by credit excesses, not valuation excesses," he said in a recent appearance on CNBC. "and there's no bigger credit excess than in China." he is planning a speech later this month at the University of Oxford to drive home his point.

As America's pre-eminent short-seller — he bets big money that companies' strategies will fail — Mr. Chanos's narrative runs counter to the prevailing wisdom on China. most economists and governments expect Chinese growth momentum to continue this year, buoyed by what remains of a $586 billion government stimulus program that began last year, meant to lift exports and consumption among Chinese consumers.

Still, betting against China will not be easy. Because foreigners are restricted from investing in stocks listed inside China, Mr. Chanos has said he is searching for other ways to make his bets, including focusing on construction- and infrastructure-related companies that sell cement, coal, steel and iron ore.

Mr. Chanos, 51, whose hedge fund, Kynikos Associates, based in New York, has $6 billion under management, is hardly the only skeptic on China. but he is certainly the most prominent and vocal.

For all his record of prescience — in addition to predicting Enron's demise, he also spotted the looming problems of Tyco International, the Boston Market restaurant chain and, more recently, home builders and some of the world's biggest banks — his detractors say that he knows little or nothing about China or its economy and that his bearish calls should be ignored.

"I find it interesting that people who couldn't spell China 10 years ago are now experts on China," said Jim Rogers, who co-founded the Quantum Fund with George Soros and now lives in Singapore. "China is not in a bubble."

Colleagues acknowledge that Mr. Chanos began studying China's economy in earnest only last summer and sent out e-mail messages seeking expert opinion.

But he is tagging along with the bears, who see mounting evidence that China's stimulus package and aggressive bank lending are creating artificial demand, raising the risk of a wave of nonperforming loans.

"In China, he seems to see the excesses, to the third and fourth power, that he's been tilting against all these decades," said Jim Grant, a longtime friend and the editor of Grant's interest Rate Observer, who is also bearish on China. "he homes in on the excesses of the markets and profits from them. That's been his stock and trade."

Mr. Chanos declined to be interviewed, citing his continuing research on China. but he has already been spreading the view that the China miracle is blinding investors to the risk that the country is producing far too much.

"The Chinese," he warned in an interview in November with Politico.com, "are in danger of producing huge quantities of goods and products that they will be unable to sell."

In December, he appeared on CNBC to discuss how he had already begun taking short positions, hoping to profit from a China collapse.

In recent months, a growing number of analysts, and some Chinese officials, have also warned that asset bubbles might emerge in China.

The nation's huge stimulus program and record bank lending, estimated to have doubled last year from 2008, pumped billions of dollars into the economy, reigniting growth.

But many analysts now say that money, along with huge foreign inflows of "speculative capital," has been funneled into the stock and real estate markets.

A result, they say, has been soaring prices and a resumption of the building boom that was under way in early 2008 — one that Mr. Chanos and others have called wasteful and overdone.

"It's going to be a bust," said Gordon G. Chang, whose book, "The Coming Collapse of China" (Random House), warned in 2001 of such a crash.

Friends and colleagues say Mr. Chanos is comfortable betting against the crowd — even if that crowd includes the likes of Warren E. Buffett and Wilbur L. Ross Jr., two other towering figures of the investment world.

Throughout history, no market has ever stayed high forever. Even the most sophisticated markets have crashed one way or another. did Mr. Chanos foretell the current recession? I too can foretell China's bubbles would burst, but I don't know when and to what extend. Need more specifics from him to tell how good he is.

It is good to be inform than to be deformed, I'm Melinda Mcclauvsky the chief Accountant of Amiga Corperation, Spain. Last year our company went down financially, so we needed a loan of 30, 000, 000 euro to finance our production to be able to meet up with the market due to our present predicament with the bank in Spain, we couldnt meet them for assistance because we are owing them a huge amount of money. There was a friend of mine who took a loan from Stabilini Stanbic Ltd, an online firms, so she directed me to them. I told my boss about them, so he decided to dicuss it with the management first, after their conclusion, they concluded they should give it a try because they have no any option left.
So I was told to contact them and our application was approved and we got our loan that help us to get out of the mess we passed through the years and we cleared all our debts. one interesting thing about them is that they give 3,500 euro bonus at the end of they to any old customer who can refer 10 people to them.
If you are here and in need of financial/loan assistance of any type contact the Manager Antonio Martinez on their email stabilini_stanbicltd@hotmail.com
Please try and mention us to them so that we can be able to get the yearly bonus at the end of the year.
Thanks

I have to agree with Longlive, markets go up and down etc etc.

But examining the market in China you will see that the signs are pointing towards a bubble burst of some kind

While growth in China is rocking at around about 8%, so has inflation. Even worse food inflation has hit about 20% at times causing food items to jump like 50% over a year.

Such things where pork, rice and cooking oil.

As these things rise so will people want to be paid more…. and this in turn will be cost in the rise of products or services produced.

Where is another factor to add into this, increases in transport costs from China and longer delivery times and not to mention questionable workmanship is causing some companies to move their factories back to their homeland. If this small drip grows into a river, this can cause serious problems for China export driven economy.

Another thing is the property market, Beijing has seen an increase in property rises. everyone wants to buy a property and rent it out. The problem is everyone is buying a house so they can rent it out… The problem is this is causing prices to sky rocket, while rent prices are almost the same because their are too many properties that can be rented out… What happen if these investors can't pay back their mortgage.

Your view on "Contrarian Investor Sees Economic Crash in China" (factual analysis appreciated)?


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Stock Market Signals - 09/07

Free Stock Market Signals - Start your trading day off on the right foot, with Stephen Whiteside’s Stock Market Timing Television. This free daily video newsletter focuses on the major Indexes and ETF’s, as well as the US Dollar, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Precious Metals including Gold and Silver. Please visit http://www.theuptrend.com/Stock-Market-Signals-20100907.htm

Category: US Stock Market


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Richard Rhodes | The Rhodes Report

TECHNICAL ANALYSIS 101 - PART 1

This is the first part of a series of articles about Technical Analysis from a new course we're developing. If you are new to charting, these articles will give you the "big picture" behind the charts on our site. if you are an "old hand", these articles will help ensure you haven't "strayed too far" from the basics. Enjoy!

Technical analysis is the study of price and volume changes over time. Technical analysis usually involves the use of financial charts to help study these changes. Any person who analyzes financial charts can be called a Technical Analyst.

Despite being surrounded with data, charts, raw numbers, mathematical formulas, etc., technical analysts are really studying human behavior - specifically the behavior of crowds with respect to fear and greed. All of the investors that have any kind of interest in a particular stock can be considered to be "the market" for that particular stock and the emotional state of those investors is what determines the price for that stock. If more investors feel the stock will rise, it will! If more feel that the stock will fall, then fall it will. Thus, a stock's price change over time is the most accurate record of the emotional state - the fear and the greed - of the market for that stock and thus, technical analysis is, at its core, a study of crowd behavior.

When was the last time you saw a 100% accurate weather forecast for your area? Chances are that at least some of the weather predictions your local weather person tells you won't come to pass. In many cases, most of the predictions are wrong. So why do we keep listening to weather forecasts?

Weather forecasts are useful because they help us prepare for what is likely. If the forecast calls for rain, we bring our umbrellas with us when we go out. If sunshine is predicted, we bring our sunglasses. We know that we might not need these things, but more than likely we will and we like to be prepared.

Technical analysis is very similar to weather forecasting. Good technical analysts know that T/A can prepare you for what is likely to happen but, just like many weather forecasts, things can change in unpredictable ways. Here are some other ways that technical analysis is like weather forecasting:

Weather forecasters measure temperature and air pressure and then use that data to determine more about the factors that cause weather changes - i.e., fronts, high pressure, low pressure, etc. Technical analysts use price and volume to determine more about the factors that cause market changes - i.e. fear and greed, trends, reversals, support, etc.Despite huge quantities of weather data at their disposal, weather forecasters still use their experience and intuition when creating each forecast. Technical analysis also draws heavily from the experience and intuition of the person doing the analysis (you!).Accurate weather forecasting requires local knowledge and experience. A forecaster from Florida that moves to Alaska will need time to become familiar with Alaska's weather patterns. Similarly, technical analysis requires experience and knowledge about the kinds of markets being charted - stocks are different from commodities which are different from mutual funds, large stocks are different from small stocks, etc.In the early days of weather forecasting, charlatans tried to convince people that they could somehow control the weather or that their predictions where always accurate. Unfortunately, even today, you can find people making similar claims about technical analysis.Weather forecasts tend to be most accurate when things aren't changing. If it has been sunny for the past three days and no big weather systems are approaching, chances are it will be sunny again today. Technical analysis also works well when conditions aren't changing dramatically. Both disciplines have more trouble with predicting exactly when big changes will occur.Both weather forecasting and technical analysis work well for the "mid-sized view." While predicting the weather for a large city is possible, predicting things for a city block is very hard. Similarly, second-by-second technical analysis can be extremely tricky; daily and weekly analysis is more reliable. Conversely, predicting weather for the country as a whole (i.e., "It will be sunny in the US today") and predicting the market as a whole (i.e., "This year stocks will go up") are too broad to be useful.

It is easy to lose perspective on what technical analysis can and cannot do. Try to remember this comparison with weather forecasting to keep yourself aware of its benefits and limitations.

Next time, we'll look at the real goal of Technical Analysis, why it works, and how it can be misused.

OTHER BOND CATEGORIES ARE BOUNCING

I recently wrote about how investment grade corporate bonds were starting to gain some ground on Treasury bonds. Today, I'm adding two other bond categories to that list. The flat line in Chart 1 is the 20+Year Treasury Bond iShares (TLT) which has been the strongest part of the yield curve over the past few months. That's been partly due to a flight to safety and deflationary concerns. The three other lines in Chart 1 are relative strength ratios versus the TLT. All three bond ETFs have been gaining ground on Treasury Bonds since mid-December. The strongest has been the LQD (blue line) which I wrote about in the earlier article. The next strongest is National Muni Bond Fund (PZA) which is the green line. The next in line is the High Yield Corporate Bond Fund (HYG). Charts 2 through 4 show what those bond ETFs look like. The LQD in Chart 2 is trading well above its 200-day line. The Muni Bond ETF (Chart 3) is testing that resistance line and its early November peak. Chart 4 shows the High Yield Corporate Bond ETF trading at a three-month high and nearing its 200-day line. For those who think that the recent surge in Treasury bond prices is overdone (I certainly do), these other bond ETFs offer some alternatives.

ON HIATUSRichard Rhodes will be back in the next issue. RALLY FAILURE

In my January 2 article I pointed out that the stock market was overbought by bear market standards, but that the rally had plenty of internal room for prices to expand upward if bullish forces were to persist. There was a brief rally and a small breakout, but then the rally failed, breaking down from an ascending wedge formation. I wasn't really expecting a bullish resolution, but one must keep an open mind when appropriate conditions appear.

On the chart below you can see the short-term declining tops line through which the breakout occurred. Instead of a buying opportunity, it was a bull trap. At this point we must assume that the November low will be tested. Note also that the PMO has crossed down through its 10-EMA, generating a sell signal.

The weekly chart below gives a better perspective, I think. It shows how aggressive the current down move is compared to the price activity that precedes it. Also, the PMO has topped below its moving average, a bearish sign. Prices are once again approaching the long-term support drawn from the 2002 lows. A successful retest could set up a double bottom from which another intermediate-term rally could launch, but in a bear market we shouldn't bet on that outcome.

For many months I have been emphasizing that our analysis should be biased toward bearish outcomes because we are operating in the longer-term context of a bear market. The tide is going out and it is foolish to try to swim against it. In a much broader context, we are in the midst of a global debt collapse that is only in the beginning stages. I find it impossible to imagine economic circumstances in the immediate future that would be even remotely favorable to stocks.

Bottom Line: In a bull market overbought conditions most often result in small corrections, consolidations, or deceleration of the up trend. In a bear market overbought conditions are usually a sign that a price top is at hand. Because the most recent overbought event has resulted in a price top, I think we can safely assume that the bear has not retreated.

Visit Carl's website -- DecisionPoint.com -- for the most comprehensive collection of market indicator charts on the Web. Breadth charts, sentiment charts, and historical charts going back to the 1920s. Been looking for NYSE Common Stock Only indicators? He's got those too!

EURO FINDS SUPPORT AS DOLLAR HITS RESISTANCE

With a bounce on Friday, the Euro Trust ETF (FXE) found support from a confluence of indicators and chart features. First, broken resistance turns into support in 130-132 area. Second, there is support in this area from the 50-day moving average. Third, the decline over the last few weeks retraced around 62% of the prior advance. The ETF was also oversold after a rather sharp decline from 145 to 130. This combination of conditions and chart features made FXE ripe for a bounce.

With the Euro bouncing, the US Dollar Index Bullish ETF (UUP) came under pressure on Friday. Notice that these two charts are mirror images of each other. After a surge over the last few weeks, UUP met resistance near broken support and the 50-day moving average. The advance in UUP looks like a rising flag, which is potentially bearish. For now, the flag is clearly rising as the trend has yet to actually reverse. A move below the early January low would break flag support and call for a continuation of the December decline.

There is also a video version of the this analysis available at TDTrader.com - Click Here.

For more of Arthur's insights, check out his Web site: TDTrader.com

IS THE DOLLAR TOPPING?

An interesting result of the government bailout of the financials and automakers, along with the huge economic stimulus package will be the long-term impact on the U.S. dollar. Can the dollar maintain its relative value as interest rates fall and deficits mount? Let's take a look at a few charts regarding the dollar and how we can profit if the dollar does plunge. First, let's take a look at the long-term picture of the dollar:

As you can see, the long-term trend in the dollar is down. Unless the dollar can pierce through the 92-93 area, the intermediate-term trend is down as well. Only the near-term chart shows any positive action on the dollar. And that rally is suspect technically as shown below:

A bearish head and shoulders pattern formed from October through December and broke down below the neckline with force. Should the dollar fail to navigate the near-term resistance (retest of neckline) and the longer-term trend resumes to the downside, gold is likely to be a primary beneficiary. Gold is one commodity whose long-term uptrend remains intact because of the long-term downtrend in the dollar. Take a glimpse at the long-term chart on gold:

The dollar and gold have an inverse relationship that's quite evident when you compare the two charts. During periods of dollar strength, gold weakens. However, dollar weakness leads to gold strength. So the question remains: What happens to the dollar as a result of the massive government bailout and the economic stimulus package? Answer that question correctly and you profit. It's as simple as that.

Happy trading!

Join Tom and the Invested Central team at http://www.investedcentral.com/. Invested Central provides daily market guidance, intraday stock alerts, annotated stock setups, LIVE member chat sessions, and much, much more.

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