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Spinning Top Candlestick:
Got a spinner, it could go either way.
More volume is right!
Other Boards Talking about Hurricane:
Here's what they have to say, to check it out, go to.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/msgsearch.asp?txt2find=sswm
Hurricane Stocks (HSTOCKS:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.asp?board_id=5745
Another Posting From BB's Penny Haven:
Posted by: hosey74
In reply to: None Date:8/21/2007 8:58:55 AM
Post #of 1072420
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=22233488
SSWM, accumulate at these prices in the low to mid .01's...SSWM is completely under the radar of most traders. SSWM will be a high flyer the next week or 2.
BB's Penny Haven
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.asp?board_id=2199&PrevStart=1072371
U S MICROBICS (BUGS):
More News
Posted by: hosey74
In reply to: None Date:8/21/2007 8:50:57 AM
Post #of 1072420
SSWM, huge DD from BUGS board:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=22233035
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Posted by: PRXT70000ft
In reply to: None Date:8/21/2007 8:42:22 AM
Post #of 1481
Remember this?!! Pemex was on Fox news this AM talking about how they are already making plans for post hurricane recovery!!!!
----------------------------------------------------------------
March 28, 2007 - 8:45 AM EST
Pemex Oil Requests SSWM Rapid Cleanup Technology ASAP
Bio-Raptor™ to be used on Oil Drilling and Pipeline Sites
Sub-Surface Waste Management of Delaware, Inc. (OTCBB:SSWM), announced that its Mexico subsidiary company, Environmental Tec International, S.A. de C.V. (ETI), recently completed its presentation to top Pemex Oil company officials who directed ETI to immediately schedule site visits and submit cost proposals to demonstrate the patented Bio-Raptor™ environmental cleanup technology at one or more oil drilling/pipeline sites in southeast Mexico as a prelude to its possible use throughout Pemex production and pipeline facilities in Mexico.
The Bio-Raptor™ patented technology is registered as an approved cleanup technology in Mexico with SEMARNAT, a Federal regulatory agency, and has been used previously on a $1.5MM project in Torreon. The ex situ, above-ground, technology treats up to 500 cubic yards/hour of soil contaminated with hydrocarbons such as oil and diesel found at drilling sites and pipeline spills.
Pemex, the Mexico Federal oil company, has experienced many pipeline spills after 15 years of reduced maintenance of Pemex facilities and pipelines, some of which are 40 years old, because high taxes don't allow the company to keep enough of its own profit for investment. The company recently spent $1.5 billion to maintain oil pipelines and has shut down or reduced the use of 7 pipelines considered to be at risk in the southern states of Tabasco and Veracruz. Mexico City-based Pemex plans to double annual spending on maintenance to $3 billion for the next three years using approved cleanup technology like the Bio-Raptor™.
Bruce Beattie, CEO of SSWM stated, “We are very excited to demonstrate our rapid cleanup technology to Pemex and are actively working with them to select one or more appropriate sites of concern. Their commitment to invest significantly in the remediation of existing facilities means we have many projects to choose from and a large backlog of potential future work. The Bio-Raptor™ technology has shown to be very successful in our Torreon project and is especially well suited for Pemex cleanup projects. Upon subsequent award of potential contracts to clean-up sites in the Mexican “oil patch”, ETI will have succeeded in securing work with both energy companies owned by the Federal government.
Excellent News Indeed!
WOW - Sounds like we're sitten on top of a blow-hole.
http://www.oldfaithfulgeyser.com/
http://www.hawaiiweb.com/maui/sites_to_see/NakaleleBlowhole.htm
Break Time:
We'll see next week what this was all about.
Time will tell all.
Have a good weekend!
Got It & Appreciate Your Viewpoint:
Looks like its found the bottom & has bounced.
I've learned one thing from trading OTCBB stocks, it won't go until the MMer's are ready.
Lets see if the shorter's have switched their position.
I'm thinking, this is the beginning of the run-up.
I like this chart because it shows which way the money is flowing.
Next week we'll be in the green.
Volume today = 1,417,000 shares traded.
Lotta Signaling Going On:
Looked to me like the MM'ers were busy today buying & selling back and forth to themselves.
Time & Sales
Price Size Exch Time
0.82 3000 OBB 15:30:19
0.82 3000 OBB 15:30:03
0.82 1500 OBB 15:26:47
0.82 180 OBB 15:24:48
0.82 1500 OBB 15:21:15
0.82 500 OBB 15:21:10
0.82 500 OBB 15:16:15
0.81 300 OBB 15:11:09
0.82 1000 OBB 15:02:47
0.82 5000 OBB 15:00:30
0.80 10993 OBB 14:59:31
0.80 500 OBB 14:59:20
0.80 500 OBB 14:59:18
0.82 1000 OBB 14:58:09
0.82 400 OBB 14:56:57
0.82 1000 OBB 14:56:42
0.82 2500 OBB 14:51:33
0.82 500 OBB 14:44:53
0.80 168 OBB 14:42:28
0.82 5500 OBB 14:40:42
0.82 200 OBB 14:39:02
0.82 500 OBB 14:36:58
0.82 500 OBB 14:32:18
0.82 500 OBB 14:31:53
0.81 2500 OBB 14:29:57
0.81 5000 OBB 14:29:47
0.82 900 OBB 14:29:20
0.82 1000 OBB 14:25:48
0.81 280 OBB 14:18:29
0.82 100 OBB 14:16:50
Note:
• I monitored the trades all day today. Even though it shows up as a red day. There were more people buying than selling.
• Check out the low figures, they appear to be signals between MM'ers so they know when to buy & sell.
• Anybody know the signal when they're gonna take it up again?
Good Daily Volumes:
The daily volumes have been good in anticipation of what's coming.
Next week should be better than this week.
Market at Close – Thurs. Aug. 23, 2007
SSWM — Sub Surface Waste Management of Delaware, Inc
Opening Price: 0.0091
Daily High: 0.0095
Daily Low: 0.009
Last Sale: 0.009
Prev. close: 0.009
Volume: 1,185,500
% Change: - 0.000004
Earnings/Share: -0.04
Annual High: 0.05
Annual Low: 0.007
Beta Coefficient: 0.44
Looks like we've bounced off the floor.
We'll Get There Sooner or Later.
Question about Outstanding Shares?
Land Agent, I wasn't around 2 years ago.
Do you remember how many shares were outstanding then?
Any ideas, if so, maybe we can guesstimate how high this baby will go?
I just checked subway & yahoo and there's no share count listed.
http://www.thesubway.com/companydata.asp?qm_page=51609
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=SSWM.OB
This is what I believe the authorized shares to be:
Shares Outstandstanding = 131.8560 M
If anyone has any ideas this might give us a target to shoot for.
Consolidation:
People buying on the cheap.
Its gonna take a while.
Daily Analysis Complete:
Look at those Green Solders marching up the hill.
Keep going baby!
Revised: Market at Close – Wed. Aug 22th, 2007:
Updated Post #347
SGCR
Opening Price: 0.80
Daily High: 0.85
Daily Low: 0.75
Last Sale: 0.83
Prev. close: 0.75
Volume: 1,054,729
% Change: +10.6667 (+0.08)
Earnings/Share: -0.01
Annual High: 1.17
Annual Low: 0.05
Beta Coefficient: 0.91
Total 1 Day Cumulative Change = (+10.6667%)
American Bull Report:
STRATEGIC RESOURCES LTD - Daily Commentary
• Closed today at 0.83
• Up 0.08
• Our system posted a HOLD today. The previous BUY recommendation was issued on 08.20.2007 (2) days ago, when the stock price was 0.7200. Since then SGCR has gained 15.28% .
• Our advice today is simple and clear. Hold your stocks and wait for a new signal.
• Do not bother yourself with further buying and selling as long as the HOLD tag stays.
• Today a White Candlestick was formed. This represents normal buying pressure.
Explanation:
• White Candlestick shows buying pressure. It shows that prices advanced from open to close during the day and buyers were in control.
Important Factors:
• The White Candlestick is not a reliable pattern like most other single candlestick patterns. Only one day’s trading is reflected in a White Candlestick. Hence it has potential to be interpreted as a continuation pattern as well as a reversal pattern. The neighboring candlesticks must be taken into account to have a healthier decision if the trend is continuing or not.
Red Day's Volume = 669,400:
Hopefully the sell off is over after today.
Will the shorties let it go?
BBC News - Investors Set for Fresh Jitters:
Investors are expecting a jittery start to the week when markets in Asia open, in the wake of recent turmoil.
Shares slumped worldwide after a rise in US mortgage defaults triggered fears of a wider financial crisis.
Last Updated: Sunday, 12 August 2007, 16:27 GMT 17:27 UK
Analysts say they do not yet know the scale of the problem.
Several central banks injected billions of dollars into the banking sector last week to keep money flowing, and some analysts expect further intervention.
The move came after several banks froze or closed high-risk funds recently causing fears over a credit crunch.
According to the Sunday Times, US analysts estimate that some $300bn (£148bn) in loans could be "at risk".
Specifically it is sub-prime loans that have been the worry. Sub-prime loans are those made to high-risk individuals and were promoted during a US housing boom.
But since then the housing market has slowed, and successive US interest rate rises have pushed up the cost of mortgage repayments, thereby increasing the number of defaults.
Uncertainty:
If there is one thing that the markets hate, it is uncertainty
Gilles Moec, senior economist at Bank of America
Q&A: Sub-prime lending
One of the biggest worries for investors has been not knowing the scale of the problem.
"The big question is what is the overall amount and this is bad for the markets because if there is one thing that the markets hate, it is uncertainty," said Gilles Moec, senior economist at Bank of America.
Over the weekend several banks started to put a figure on the amount of bad debt they own, including German state bank WestLB which said it had 1.25bn euros in total exposure to the US sub-prime sector.
Intervention:
Before the recent volatility, several banks had suspended or closed funds that had invested heavily in the sub-prime sector.
It was a move by BNP Paribas on Thursday that was the start of the latest share slump.
The French bank closed three funds, because it said uncertainty in the sub-prime sector meant it could not assess the value of the funds accurately.
With fears over liquidity increasing, several central banks then intervened by injecting money into the banking sector.
The European Central Bank (ECB) was the first to make the move - injecting 95bn euros on Thursday, before injecting another 61bn euros a day later.
Japan's central bank injected one trillion yen ($8.5bn; £4.2bn) into the financial system while the US Federal Reserve intervened twice on Friday, pumping $38bn into the banking system.
But while some said it made sense, other feared it only aggravated fears.
"The ECB was correct to shore up banks balance sheets by providing more liquidity," said Peter Morici, professor at the University of Maryland School of Business.
"But its high-profile tender offer did more to scare markets than calm them."
Outlook:
The prospect of further deterioration in US housing have altered the outlook for monetary policy in the US Citigroup briefing.
The recent turmoil has prompted analysts to ask whether it could have a wider impact on US economic growth, and therefore whether the Federal Reserve might think about cutting interest rates.
"The broadening storm in financial markets and the prospect of further deterioration in US housing have altered the outlook for monetary policy in the US, and possibly elsewhere," Citigroup wrote in a briefing note to clients.
Late on Friday, the International Monetary Fund made moves to allay fears over a wider melt-down.
"The fundamentals supporting strong global growth remain in place," it said.
By Friday's close the FTSE100 had seen its most dramatic loss in more than four years, shedding 3.7%.
The Paris-based Cac 40 was down 3.13% while the Dax in Frankfurt ended the week 1.48% lower.
Credit Crisis has Main Street Watching Wall Street:
The financial credit crisis could affect US consumers.
By: Mark Trumbull | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
From the August 13, 2007 edition
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0813/p01s01-usec.html?page=1
Page 1:
The current upheaval in financial markets is hitting some highly specialized lenders and investors the hardest, but it hasn't stopped there: It has big implications for the whole economy.
The stock market has become much more volatile in the past few weeks. Borrowing has become tougher for home buyers and some businesses.
These effects come as ordinary Americans have greater financial wealth but also more debt than ever before. It also coincides with financial industries becoming increasingly complicated and global in scope.
Behind all this lies a big question: If the turmoil on Wall Street gets worse, how large an effect will it have on Main Street – in communities where consumers are already burdened by high gas prices and falling home values?
It is that concern – not a desire to bail out tottering mortgage firms – that prompted the Federal Reserve to step in last week as a provider of cash and confidence. That helped the Dow index post a small gain for a roller-coaster week. "We have a financial sector which is in many ways different than it used to be," says Saul Hymans, a University of Michigan economist in Ann Arbor. "It's not a matter of whether it's going to ripple into the rest of the economy, but the degree."
Most forecasters say a recession is not on the immediate horizon, especially now that the Fed has sent a "We're here to help" signal to stressed markets. But the consensus view is for a 26 percent chance of recession in the next 12 months, says the August release of the widely watched Blue Chip Economic Indicators survey. That's up from 23 percent in July.
A summary of economists' opinions added: "Should credit markets remain stressed, further weakness on Wall Street could migrate to Main Street, resulting in a softer economy than now anticipated."
Financial conditions have always been intertwined with the production of goods and services in the broader economy. When one side lands in some trouble, the other feels it, too.
The financial sector is on much sounder footing now than it was in the 1930s, when the lack of federal deposit insurance prompted a wave of bank failures as customers rushed to pull their money out. But dramatic changes over the past 20 years created new uncertainties as well as resilience:
Page 2:
• Derivatives – contracts whose value derives from assets like currency or stock – have become a dramatically larger presence in the investment universe. The popularity of mortgage derivatives helped fuel the recent housing boom in the US. The current credit turbulence arose as investors were forced to make huge markdowns on the value of derivatives linked to subprime mortgages (home loans to high-risk borrowers).
• Financial firms are more global. Markets worldwide were shaken last week, and central banks stepped in after a French bank revealed large losses related to subprime US lending. German banks, among others, got caught up in the storm.
• Leverage has grown as investors such as hedge funds and private buyout firms borrow to make their deals. Among the implications: Investors may need to sell even high-quality holdings to cover bets in other areas.
• Ordinary households are touched by financial trends in larger ways. The rise of 401(k) retirement plans has expanded the realm of stock ownership. If employers promise a fixed pension, the funds are likely to be players in hedge fund investing. Borrowing has also increased, with 18 percent of American homeowners' disposable income spent on housing and auto payments, up from 15 percent two decades ago.
Meanwhile, with investors less eager to buy up mortgage loans, lenders have tightened on borrowers. This is typical of any credit squeeze after a boom, but the recent boom was so big that the squeeze could put an unusual amount of downward pressure on home prices over the next year or more.
For most homeowners, their house is their most important financial asset. "This time, they will feel it more" than in past eras of financial-sector tightness, says Rajeev Dhawan, who heads Georgia State University's economic forecasting center in Atlanta.
Just as financial ease fed the housing boom, the end of the housing rush has blown back at financial markets, causing home prices to fall. But unlike in the past, the housing boom faded without the onset of a recession or a significant rise in mortgage rates; the surge in home buying and easy lending simply reached a point where too few buyers remained to sustain the momentum.
Now, as mortgage rates have edged upward, consumers face another financial head wind. More home buyers have been drawn to adjustable-rate loans, rather than loans with fixed rates, in recent years. As those loans reset, the pinch of higher mortgage payments is likely to push foreclosure rates higher, economists say.
The problem: many of the recent adjustable loans came with low "teaser" rates, but payments will reset much higher.
Page3:
Meanwhile, lenders have grown pickier about whom they lend to, because it's no longer easy to resell the loans as mortgage-based derivatives. Countrywide Financial Corp., a large mortgage provider, summed up its own situation in a statement last Thursday: "[The] situation is rapidly evolving and the potential impact on the company is unknown." Those words might be echoed by many hedge funds and Wall Street brokerage houses.
Wall Street could remain a volatile place in coming weeks as investors try to sort out the scope of the problem.
The irony is that derivatives have been viewed by many as a tool for reducing risk, in part by spreading it around. But they did not eliminate risk. And, in a way, the risk was just repackaged.
"Things designed to reduce risk, at certain special times, have a way of not always going perfectly," says Peter Kretzmer, an economist at Bank of America in New York.
Despite the credit-market challenges, most economists expect that the fallout on Main Street won't be bad enough to send the economy into recession.
"I doubt it's going to ripple very much," says Mr. Hymans.
Mr. Kretzmer adds that, "Only really large changes in the valuation of securities and wealth matter" in terms of consumer spending. Most consumption, he says, hinges on two factors, "Do I have a job, and what is my income growth like?"
Unemployment remains low in the US. Most economies worldwide have been growing solidly. Perhaps most significant is that central banks have shown in recent days that they stand ready to calm credit markets if they appear to be freezing up. The Federal Reserve funneled $38 billion into the system Friday. In addition, some economists believe the Fed will cut short-term interest rates soon.
"They're clearly vigilant," but not panicked, says James Sarni, a managing principal at Payden & Rygel, a fixed-income mutual-fund company in Los Angeles. "I think they're doing the right thing."
Exchange-Traded Funds (ETF's) Has a New Spin:
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) combine with alternate ways to index stocks to create a diversification tool.
Snippet:
Page 1 of 3
You thought indexes were a no-brainer, right? You buy a stock-index fund that mimics, say, the S&P 500 and you know you've got a fund with low costs that often beats the gains of many money managers. But indexing has gotten quite a bit more involved.
Not only have new ways of indexing been devised, but almost daily new exchange-traded funds (ETFs) based on these indexes are made available to investors. ETFs, which are like mutual funds in concept but trade on exchanges like stocks, offer alternatives and enhancements to traditional index funds. Some index-fund investors are hoping that because of the way their funds are constituted, they won't tumble as easily as traditional index funds have in this rocky market.
The Standard & Poor's 500 index is based on market capitalization. It takes its largest positions in the largest valued companies, and as the stocks of those companies rise and fall, so does the index. The value of the stocks in the S&P index is calculated by multiplying their quoted price by the number of shares outstanding. This method favors large cap and growth stocks.
Instead of market capitalization, nontraditional indexing uses alternative strategies to weight holdings. These newer indexes tend to lean toward small caps and value stocks. For the past seven or eight years, the market has favored that particular mix, so none of these newer indexes (the oldest of which began in 2003) have really been tested in changing markets – until now ...
Full Article:
By: Janice Fioravante | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
From the August 20, 2007 edition
A new spin on stock-index funds
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0820/p13s02-wmgn.html
Weimar Germany, Economics & Inflation:
The German Hyperinflation of 1923.
Google - Weimar Hyperinflation.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/shared/minitext/ess_germanhyperinflation.html
Strong Buy Day in Progress:
782,836 Shares Traded so far today.
Look at ADX(14)
The 50 Day Moving Average is Moving North.
Agreed, like you said, Need Contracts:
All comparison water stocks I reported on yesterday are in the same boat.
Here's a list of the water stocks I've found to date:
• BUGS
• GWTR
• HYRF
• IPUR
• MGOA
• NWGPF
• SSWM
• SWWE
• WTER
• WWAT
They're all pretty much unchanged thus far.
2nd Red Day in Row:
Hammer candlestick formation still active.
Not much to report today.
Cheers!
Interesting Times Ahead:
The MMer's are using a very interesting strategy.
But, our move is next.
The money's at the zero line.
Hey Wait, We've got a Competitor:
MGOA seems to have already bounced back.
Its always a good idea to keep an eye on the competition.
Just lost the 30% Gain from Yesterday:
We lost our gain of 30% from yesterday. Tomorrow we start all over again.
Look at this comparison to show SSWM's not the only one selling today.
WTER took a nose dive with selling.
Looks like its gonna be a sell day and there’s nothing we can do about it.
The shorties have to make their money before the MM'ers take it back up again.
Big Hammer Forming:
Someone's still selling but check out this long handled hammer (candlestick) forming.
Jumpers & Gappers:
Lets see if she turns out to be a jumper?
They're the most fun to watch.
Gaining Interest:
Boardmarks up to 21 now.
More people getting interested in the outcome.
Watching & Waiting:
Rhino, thanks for your input.
Someone's selling this morning.
MM'ers covering their short positions I suspect.
Lets see how long it takes to get outta the red.
Nobody likes the waiting
Boardmarks Rising
2nd Time's a Charm:
You must like the stock if this is your second time around.
May it be good to all of us!
WTER hasn't started to move yet.
From the looks of it someone has bought a lotta shares and is betten big on SSWM.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.asp?board_id=3696
Market at Close:
SSWM — Sub Surface Waste Management of Delaware, Inc.
Best Bid... Best Ask... Time of Last Sale
0.011 (10000 shares) 0.013 (5000 shares) 3:47 PM
Trade Data / Last Trade 3:42 PM
Last Sale 0.013 Change +0.003
% Change +30.00 Tick Up
Daily High 0.017 Daily Low 0.009
Opening Price 0.01 Volume 6,281,850
Annual High 0.05 Annual Low 0.007
Prev Close 0.01
Beta Coefficient 0.44
Time Will Tell - The Clocks Ticking:
If it happens, it gonna happen quick.
I'm not in any position to venture a guess.
I'm not much good with predictions.
But, if its gonna rally we should know by the end of the week.
Maybe Hosey, Ita, Rhino or one of the other board members would like to venture a guess?
While your at it, I'd like to know how high she's going?
Any more questions?
Maybe Nostradamus (1555) has an answer for us.
Waiting on News:
We only got one shot at it.
If its gonna happen, its gonna happen this week or next.
Volumes still growing, over 5.2 million for today.
Another big green day.
IMO, the company's gonna take advantage of this opportunity.
Its now or never.
Still Watching & Waiting:
What's it gonna take to move this mule?
Write Admin [Matt]:
PM Admin [Matt] & ask him if you can become the moderator.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/profile.asp?user=2744
Give him the message board link so he can check the current status.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=22213667
He will pm you back with an answer within 24 hours.
Sometimes he will set it up without sending a pm notifying you.
Wake Up:
Its time to wake everybody Up - There’s a Storm Brewing on the charts today!
Go to the I-Box, there's plenty more charts to back up what I'm saying.
Up 50% so far Today:
Volume so far today is 3.6 million and climbing.
Looks like a Green light to Me, we're headen back up!
CMF(20) Getten Ready For Breakout:
CMF(20) is getten ready to break above the zero line.
This is a good sign.
We've been in a consolidation period, once we break out of the negative zone we could experience a strong positive growth trend.
This baby could fly at any moment?
Large Volume Buy Days Are Here:
On August 14th, over 13+ million shares were traded.
It was a heavily traded green day.
Someone out there's looking for a big slice of the pie.
I like high volume green days and believe we're gonna have some more before the week's out.
Rhino, I believe your right, lets see how this week shapes UP.
Go Baby Go!