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We could use some.
Great news.
Lets hope there's no tie in that game.
Go Oilers go !
You bet. Lets get this sucker back to $5.00 eh.
RAY looking for a dollar on the next run.
Drilling next ?
Thats right out of the Darwin awards.
I don't think so.
What happened to .99 ?
What do you think this is, the Dollar Store ?
The last time you got this way we had a really good rally.
Great buying opportunity.
It sucks to be wrong.
Not for long.
Today should be the bottom.
Its time for another bear market rally.
Nice. Had a bid in at .46 but I was about 30 minutes late to catch the bottom. Bought some the other day though.
Why would it close higher for that reason ?
Ferts rebounded today. Onward and upward.
Two major potash investments ? I wonder which ones ?
Well I hope it makes his bank account grow.
I am the Man. lol
Old farts.
Thats just part of the game in the biggest casino.
POT won't get you a 10 bagger
I certainly hope so.
And the other half.
Bought one half back.
Further slump in shares in Asia
Asian investors are worried about the state of the US economy
Growing concerns about the state of the US economy have taken their toll on share prices in Asia.
Tokyo's Nikkei index closed down 250.7 points or 1.96% at 12,532.1, which was its lowest close since September 2005.
The falls were sparked by US jobs figures on Friday, which showed the biggest monthly fall in employment for five years, and other gloomy US data.
European shares have not followed the Asian falls having already reacted to the US data on Friday.
Taiwan's benchmark Taiex index fell 2.7%, which was its biggest fall for six weeks.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell had fallen 1.5% by the end of the morning session but eventually closed up 0.9%.
'Recession-like state'
Monday's falls added to hefty losses from Friday, when Japan's benchmark Nikkei-225 index closed 3.3% lower.
"Japan's economy lacks a domestic driving force," said Tomoko Fujii at Bank of America.
"So a US recession-like state is boding ill for Japan's business cycle."
The US dollar hit an eight-year low against the Japanese yen on Friday of 101.40 yen on expectations of further cuts in US interest rates.
Malaysian shares were suspended for an hour on Monday because the benchmark Kuala Lumpur Composite Index had fallen 10%.
The falls came after the ruling coalition lost its two-thirds parliamentary majority in its worst election performance for 50 years.
Trading resumed later, and the stock market recovered slightly.
Or under $4.00
How to grow your own wheat
Global stocks of wheat are plummeting and people are starting to worry about the price of staples like bread. But can you beat the commodity market by growing your own?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7284011.stm
How was Big White anyway ?
Jobs Data Suggest U.S. Is in Recession
Largest Payroll Fall In Five Years Spurs New Stimulus Talk
By SUDEEP REDDY
March 8, 2008; Page A1
U.S. employers shed 63,000 jobs last month, the most in five years, reinforcing a widening view that the U.S. is falling into recession. Among economists and politicians, the debate is shifting to how deep the downturn will be and how to ease it.
Couple of more down days might do it.
EDIT: POST 500 Woohoo
I've always bought back to early. Trying to be more patient this time.
Nice reversal yesterday.
Zzzzzzzzzzzzz
NP says Africa offers El Nino, others virgin ground
2008-03-03 05:14 MT - In the News
Also In the News (C-FM) First Quantum Minerals Ltd
The National Post reports in its Saturday, March 1, edition that in Africa, a company like First Quantum Minerals can get its Lonshi mine operational in less than a year after a discovery is made. The Post's Peter Koven writes that First Quantum president Clive Newall says, "We wouldn't want to be in the U.S., for example, because the permitting requirements are so severe." Mr. Newall says: "It takes 10 to 20 years to take a mine into production. We just don't operate like that." Another simple truth is that it is much easier to find resources in Africa. In Canada, the easy stuff has been found. Canadian companies now develop low-grade projects with marginal economics. The most notorious is Teck Cominco's Galore Creek. That British Columbia debacle was halted late last year after costs spiralled out of control. In Africa, there are highly prospective regions that have had no serious exploration for decades, or ever. "You're looking at virgin ground that's almost untouched. It's finally being explored properly," says El Nino Ventures chief Jean Luc Roy. For investors, it comes down to picking your poison. Either go for the geological risk of Canada or the political risk of Africa.