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Some are selling it over here ... no position
http://siliconinvestor.advfn.com/subject.aspx?subjectid=24638
What spurred on SVU today ;o)
Been away since Monday (the 10th) AM.. HOD for oil... Closed my HGD gold short on Monday before leaving... phew! Held the smaller HOD position so I'm down on that a bit but above my stop.. looking to add tomorrow Monday maybe...
Seems that you can deposit 5K... Trade like Red, double it in a week :O) Take out 10K... take a cruise, buy a 50 inch plasma... win 10K @ Proline and deposit that 10K back tax free to replenish the 10K you took out, 5K of which was winnings...
Thanks to Mr. T http://www.budget.gc.ca/2008/pamphlet-depliant/pamphlet-depliant2-eng.asp
i>• Amounts can be withdrawn at any time and any amounts withdrawn can be subsequently re-contributed.
I'm wondering if they mean original principal contributed or if that includes gains..
Another worthwhile post from the Farming thread..
http://siliconinvestor.advfn.com/readmsgs.aspx?subjectid=24638&msgnum=520&batchsize=100&batchtype=Next
Thought I'd post this from the Viterra thread (Sask Wheat Pool) on Investors Village. Most of my long term investing themes stem from listening to Donald Coxe from BMO Capital. Thanks to him, I am retired at 62 (that and getting laid off in January) <G>
MoneyPenny
Why China and India will Continue to Grow
In 2003 and 2004, when Donald Coxe first started describing what was occurring in China, he explained that the process that was occuring could be explained by the theories of Jane Jacobs. In particular, in the September 2004 issue of Basic Points he wrote:
China’s macro strategy of encouraging Foreign Direct Investment in building factories based on foreign technology, brand names and global distribution, meant that it became the workshop to the world. Because the Chinese are so skilled at imitating (or just plain stealing) foreign manufacturing techniques and designs, China has been able to continuously diversify its product lines – not just for export, but for import substitution. This latter fact, according to Jane Jacobs, is the crucial component in national economic development. Her seminal book, Cities and the Wealth of Nations, showed that emerging economies driven overwhelmingly by export growth usually failed, whereas economies that combined export growth with successful import replacement succeeded. Argentina is a perfect example of an inefficient, export reliant economy that sank lower and lower in the global rankings each decade; Korea, a splendid import replacer, progressed from having per capita GDP that was roughly one-fifth of Argentina in 1960 to comparability with Canada today.
Before and since, Donald Coxe has referred to Jane Jacobs in his conference calls and Basic Points as being fundamental to understanding what is happening in China and India. As Coxe has explained, in The Economy of Cities, and Cities and the Wealth of Nations, Jacobs lays out the process by which cities develop. It is this process that is now being played out on a grander scale then it ever has before in history.
I have read Jacobs books to the point where their covers have worn off; I am now on my second copy of the Economy of Cities. In my latest blog post, I try to explain her basic theories, and why those theories help me sleep well at night even as the stock market tumbles and turns.
As it looks like we are falling into the ‘third wave’ of the credit crunch, it is good to remember that there is a rationale behind the global growth we are seeing, and that it is not all based on the smoke and mirrors of Jurassic-park avenue finance.
This is not an easy time to be invested in the stock market. Even if you are invested in sectors that are experiencing higher highs and higher lows, it can feel like the process of getting there is akin to pushing a string up the hill.
My agriculture, gold and base metal holdings have held up well over the past 6 months. I am better off for having been invested then I would have been if I had not been invested at all. But it has still not been an easy time.
For me, the most helpful thing in a period like this is to have a thesis to fall back on. So when PotashCorp gets hit back to $120, just as when Aur Resources got hit back to $6 or $12 or $20, I have always run straight for the books.
I would highly recommend two books written by Jane Jacobs: The Economy of Cities and Cities and the Wealth of Nations. While there are many books that contribute to my thesis of what is occurring in China, India and elsewhere in the developing world, these books describes the dynamic that is taking place better then any others.
These are the theories that I force myself to review when fear is waffling my convictions, and tempting me to sell stocks that must go higher.
It is difficult to do justice to these books in the nutshell of a blog post. But if I were put on the spot, I do so by stating the basic principles of economic growth put forth in these books:
1. One of the great mistakes of economic theory has been its assumption that the nation is the salient entity for describing how an economy works. Jacobs argues that this is not the case. She argues that it is the city, not the nation, which is the essential building block of an economy. To understand the dynamic by which economic growth occurs, you have to look to the individual cities that it takes place in.
2. The assertion that cities are the cells of economic growth has consequences. The first consequence is that the formal meaning of exports and imports is lost. To a city, international trade is no different then inter-city national trade. While balance of trade between nations still matters because it effects the value of currency and is still a part of the overall trade to and from a city, what really matters for a city are its overall imports and exports, regardless of whether they are coming from within the national boundaries or not.
3. Once your attention is focused on the city, you can begin to investigate how cities grow. Cities are settlements where new work is continuously added to old work. It sounds like a simple proposition, but it is often overlooked. It is describing a process by which new activities are created from those that already exist. There is no such thing as the spontaneous generation of work. And this process has an important consequence. It is a positive feedback loop where a greater diversity of existing work leads to a greater potential for new work that can be added. Jacobs explained that “new work multiplies and diversifies a city’s divisions of labour. And this greater diversity of labour (and by labour we mean all of worker skills, productive capacities, and capital available) sets a foundation for more new work to be added and for more innovations to be incubated.” The process feeds on itself.
4. The great engine of growth in cities is import replacement. This is not the government mandated import replacement of the 1970’s. What Jacobs is describing is a capitalist process that naturally evolves because it is the most economical thing to do. The replacement of imports is simply the process by which a good that has been previously purchased outside of a city is now developed within the city. This simple process has a number of effects.
a. It enlarges the economy of the city by creating new divisions of labour to produce the good or service that was previously imported
b. It increases the diversity of the city. There are now more industries available for new innovations and newly replaced imports to draw upon.
c. It frees up the capital that was previously used for importing the good so that other new goods and services can be imported in its place. Because the capital is now being used for new imports, while the market abroad for that particular good has decreased, the overall market for goods (in other words the economic activity), has not
d. As Donald Coxe has pointed out, the validity of this theory is illustrated by the successes of Japan, Taiwan and Korea.
5. Imports fill a few essential roles in this process. They are the inputs into the value-adding process that takes place in the city. And they present new sources of good and services that eventually can be replaced by industries existing within the city. Thus they are the raw energy for the next round of growth. So imports themselves create this positive feedback process. When cities use the funds from exports productively to buy imports that they can replace then the cities continue to grow. If imports are not replaced, they do not. This is why all of the export oriented developed plans (like those used in South America) have failed so miserably.
These principles help explain why China did not collapse when the United States went into recession in 2002. They also help explain why copper prices can stay at $3.85 while the developed world housing market is in a funk. And they help explain why my investments are sound in this turbulent period.
The growth of Chinese cities, and all cities, is an internal process of replacing goods that they previously imported. This process is taking place on a grand scale. What’s more, because we in the developed world are so far down the road of development, there are a huge number of goods that can potentially be replaced by Chinese, Indian and the cities of other developing nations.
Just go and drive around your own cities industrial regions. You will see makers of fasteners, of ball bearings, of door handles, windows, doors, paper products, home electronics, digital circuitry, financial services, health products, convenience stores, flower shops, dry-cleaning… the list is endless. All of these items, which at one time were either imported by developing nations or were luxury goods not considered at all, are now either being replaced or will be replaced by local industries in Chinese and Indian cities.
As a metaphor, I think of it as a huge ocean of products and services out there just waiting to be fished out by these cities. This ocean will feed the growth of these cities for decades.
It has to be understood that this process is timeless. It has happened again and again. That is why I am not overly worried that the credit crisis will derail the Chinese and Indian economies. These economies are already well down the road of positive feedback. And this is the same road by which cities have always grown.
What is really the only thing unique about the story today is the scale. The number of cities popping up, and the number of potential imports that will be replaced as these cities grow and become diverse, is something we have not seen in history. And that has to put equally historic pressure on the commodities that feed it.
Let me end this with a quote from Donald Coxe, taken from the December 22nd, 2003 issue of Basic Points.
What is happening in China, and what will happen soon in India is, quite simply, the most widely-disseminated significant increase in personal wealth and freedom in human history.
Still true, 4 years later.
http://www.investorvillage.com/smbd.asp?mb=10677&mn=3235&pt=msg&mid=4290298
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ROTF... The Prisoner.. now that was a bubble ;o)
More like
From my King Crimson stoner years.. "21st Century Schizoid Man" is a song by progressive rock band King Crimson from their debut album In the Court of the Crimson King. To date it is one of their best-known songs. I won't post the lyrics... too depressing LOL..
Funny I was doing the the Jeremiah Johnson thing tonight... two hour hike through the woods with the doggies.. We don't get many of these beautiful snowy nights in TO.. so I took them down to Danforth park and walked down to the lake along the creek off leash... Quiet, crisp, and snowy white.. That song is on my current mp3 playlist ;O)
Aaron... They are Blue Heelers
Tackler.. That means doggies like the one in Mad Max..
EDIT: I could never handle living in the tropics year round... I need my seasons..
EDIT: Oh yeah the park is closed for the winter... so it's the next best thing to the real thing..
OTOH...
http://siliconinvestor.advfn.com/readmsg.aspx?msgid=24382506
The New York Times
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March 9, 2008
The Food Chain
A Global Need for Grain That Farms Can’t Fill
By DAVID STREITFELD
LAWTON, N.D. — Whatever Dennis Miller decides to plant this year on his 2,760-acre farm, the world needs. Wheat prices have doubled in the last six months. Corn is on a tear. Barley, sunflower seeds, canola and soybeans are all up sharply.
“For once, there’s great reason to be optimistic,” Mr. Miller said.
But the prices that have renewed Mr. Miller’s faith in farming are causing pain far and wide. A tailor in Lagos, Nigeria, named Abel Ojuku said recently that he had been forced to cut back on the bread he and his family love.
“If you wanted to buy three loaves, now you buy one,” Mr. Ojuku said.
Everywhere, the cost of food is rising sharply. Whether the world is in for a long period of continued increases has become one of the most urgent issues in economics.
Many factors are contributing to the rise, but the biggest is runaway demand. In recent years, the world’s developing countries have been growing at about 7 percent a year, an unusually rapid rate by historical standards.
The high growth rate means hundreds of millions of people are, for the first time, getting access to the basics of life, including a better diet. That jump in demand is helping to drive up the prices of agricultural commodities.
Farmers the world over are producing flat-out. American agricultural exports are expected to increase 23 percent this year to $101 billion, a record. The world’s grain stockpiles have fallen to the lowest levels in decades.
“Everyone wants to eat like an American on this globe,” said Daniel W. Basse of the AgResource Company, a Chicago consultancy. “But if they do, we’re going to need another two or three globes to grow it all.”
In contrast to a run-up in the 1990s, investors this time are betting — as they buy and sell contracts for future delivery of food commodities — that scarcity and high prices will last for years.
If that comes to pass, it is likely to present big problems in managing the American economy. Rising food prices in the United States are already helping to fuel inflation reminiscent of the 1970s.
And the increases could become an even bigger problem overseas. The increases that have already occurred are depriving poor people of food, setting off social unrest and even spurring riots in some countries.
In the long run, the food supply could grow. More land may be pulled into production, and outdated farming methods in some countries may be upgraded. Moreover, rising prices could force more people to cut back. The big question is whether such changes will be enough to bring supply and demand into better balance.
“People are trying to figure out, is this a new era?” said Joseph Glauber, chief economist for the United States Department of Agriculture. “Are prices going to be high forever?”
Competition for Acres
At a moment when much of the country is contemplating recession, farmers are flourishing. The Agriculture Department forecasts that farm income this year will be 50 percent greater than the average of the last 10 years. The flood of money into American agriculture is leading to rising land values and a renewed sense of optimism in rural America.
“All of a sudden farmers are more in control, which is a weird position for them,” said Brian Sorenson of the Northern Crops Institute in Fargo, N.D. “Everyone’s knocking at their door, saying, ‘Grow this, grow that.’ ”
Mr. Miller’s family has worked the Great Plains for more than a century. One afternoon early last month, he turned on the computer in his combination office and laundry room to see what commodity prices were up to.
“Oh, my goodness, look at that,” Mr. Miller said. Barley was $6.40 a bushel, approaching a price that would tempt him to plant more. Soybeans were $12.79 a bushel, up from $8.50 in August.
The frozen earth outside was only a few weeks from coming to life, but Mr. Miller was happily uncertain about what to plant. Last year, the decision was easy for Mr. Miller and everyone else: prices of corn were high because of new government mandates for production of ethanol, a motor fuel. This year, so many crops look like good bets, and there is so little land on which to plant them.
“I’m debating between spring wheat, durum wheat, canola, malting barley, confection sunflowers, oil sunflowers, soybeans, flax and corn,” Mr. Miller said.
The biggest blemish on this winter of joy is that farmers’ own costs are rising rapidly. Expenses for the diesel fuel used to run tractors and combines and for the fertilizer essential to modern agriculture have soared. Mr. Miller does not just want high prices; he needs them to pay his bills.
Until recently, he could expect around $3 a bushel for his wheat — far less than his parents and grandparents received, when inflation is taken into account. Consumption in the United States was dropping as Americans shunned carbohydrates. The export market, while healthy, faced competition.
Now prices have more than tripled, partly because of a drought in Australia and bad harvests elsewhere and also because of unslaked global demand for crackers, bread and noodles. In seven of the last eight years, world wheat consumption has outpaced production. Stockpiles are at their lowest point in decades.
Around the world, wheat is becoming a precious commodity. In Pakistan, thousands of paramilitary troops have been deployed since January to guard trucks carrying wheat and flour. Malaysia, trying to keep its commodities at home, has made it a crime to export flour and other products without a license. Consumer groups in Italy staged a widely publicized (if also widely disregarded) one-day pasta strike last fall.
In the United States, the price of dry pasta has risen 20 percent since October, according to government data. Flour is up 19 percent since last summer. Over all, food and beverage prices are rising 4 percent a year, the fastest pace in nearly two decades.
The American Bakers Association last month took the radical step of suggesting that American exports be curtailed to keep wheat at home, though the group later backed off.
If all this suggests a golden age for American growers, it could well be brief, said Bruce Babcock, an economist at Iowa State University. He predicted that farmers would do their best to ramp up production, possibly to the point of pulling land out of conservation programs so they could plant more. “Give farmers a price incentive, and they’ll produce,” he said.
The Agriculture Department forecasts that world wheat production will increase 8 percent this year. In the United States, spring and durum wheat plantings are expected to rise by two million acres, helping to drive prices down to $7 a bushel, the government said.
Yet the competition among crops for acreage has become so intense that some farmers think the government and analysts like Mr. Babcock are being overly optimistic.
Read Smith, a farmer in St. John, Wash., thinks a new era is at hand for all sorts of crops. “Price spikes have usually been short-lived,” he said. “I think this one is different.”
His example is plain old mustard. Two years ago, Mr. Smith would have been paid less than 15 cents a pound for mustard seeds. As more lucrative crops began supplanting mustard, dealers raised their offering price to 20 cents, then 30 cents, then 48 cents early this year. Mr. Smith gave in, agreeing to convert up to 100 acres of wheat fields to mustard.
Mr. Smith said it was inevitable that supermarket mustard, just like flour, bread and pasta, would become more expensive.
“We’ve lulled the public with cheap food,” he said. “It’s not going to be a steal anymore.”
Bread to Be Had, for a Price
As the newly urbanized and newly affluent seek more protein and more calories, a phenomenon called “diet globalization” is playing out around the world. Demand is growing for pork in Russia, beef in Indonesia and dairy products in Mexico. Rice is giving way to noodles, home-cooked food to fast food.
Though wracked with upheaval for years and with many millions still rooted in poverty, Nigeria has a growing middle class. Median income per person doubled in the first half of this decade, to $560 in 2005. Much of this increase is being spent on food.
Nigeria grows little wheat, but its people have developed a taste for bread, in part because of marketing by American exporters. Between 1995 and 2005, per capita wheat consumption in Nigeria more than tripled, to 44 pounds a year. Bread has been displacing traditional foods like eba, dumplings made from cassava root.
Nigeria’s wheat imports in 2007 were forecast to rise 10 percent more. But demand was also rising in many other places, from Tunisia to Venezuela to India. At the same time, drought and competition from other crops limited supply.
So wheat prices soared, and over the last year, bread prices in Nigeria have jumped about 50 percent.
Amid a public outcry, bakers started making smaller loaves, hoping customers who could not afford to pay more would pay about the same to eat less. Sales have dropped for street hawkers selling loaves. With imports shrinking, mills are running at half capacity.
At Honeywell Flour Mills, one of the largest in Nigeria, executives were glued one recent day to commodity screens. The price of wheat ticked ever upward. “Even when you see a little downturn, you wait for some few hours or a day, and before you know it, it’s gone way up again,” said the production director, Nino Albert Ozara.
Despite the crisis, there is little sense of a permanent retreat from wheat in Nigeria. The mills are increasing their capacity, hoping for a day when supply is sufficient to stabilize prices. “The moment you develop a taste, you are hooked,” said a confident Muyiwa Talabi, director of an American wheat-marketing office in Lagos.
Mr. Ojuku, the man who buys fewer loaves, and one of his fellow tailors in Lagos, Mukala Sule, 39, are trying to adjust to the new era.
“I must eat bread and tea in the morning. Otherwise, I can’t be happy,” Mr. Sule said as he sat on a bench at a roadside cafe a few weeks ago. For a breakfast that includes a small loaf, he pays about $1 a day, twice what the traditional eba would have cost him.
To save a few pennies, he decided to skip butter. The bread was the important thing.
“Even if the price goes up,” Mr. Sule said, “if I have the money, I’ll still buy it.”
Will Connors contributed reporting from Lagos, Nigeria, and Salman Masood from Pakistan.
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Economist to Grain Farmers: ‘The Party May Be Over’ Soon
Submitted by Editor on Thu, 03/06/2008 - 5:00pm.
Charlene M. Shupp
Espenshade
Special Sections Editor
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The boom in the grain markets, according to Dewey Strickler of Ag Watch Market Associates, has been “looking at the biggest, dynamic rally.” However, he warns the boom’s bubble could be preparing to burst.
Dewey, who was the Tuesday keynote speaker here at the Professional Crop Producer’s Conference, said while much credit has been given to the ethanol boom for the soaring corn prices, the main driver has been the high degree of speculation in the commodity markets. He predicts that by the end of March, the commodity markets could see a major correction.
Dewey said this rally’s start was planted about six to seven years ago starting with the devaluing of the dollar on the global marketplace. It peaked in 1991 when government and consumer spending was strong. However, because of the government’s high-deficit budget spending, many countries have shifted away from the dollar and into the euro citing they have lost confidence in the dollar. This has been compounded by recent consumer confidence loss. By July, the dollar could devalue as much as 50 percent from its 1991 high, Strickler said.
“This excessive government spending has got to stop and we must take more fiscal responsibility. That’s why investors leave,” he said.
The second part of the “perfect storm” leading to the rally was the CRB Index, a commodity price index that takes in oil and metal prices, which bottomed out in 1999. In 2001, inflation began and these prices began to rise.
The final leg leading to this rally was when the Commodity Federal Trade Commission increased the speculative position rates on commodities in October 2005. Suddenly, Strickler said, “it was like an 8 or 10-year old learning to find the code on the TV remote control.” With increased limits more than doubling, financial funds and stocks — flush from profits in oil, metal and other markets — suddenly moved their profits into commodities. Coupled with the excitement in renewable energy, the rallies for grains began in 2006.
However, while many grain farmers have been successful in the past two years, he warns the markets should top out soon and “then the party may be over.”
He said corn should hit $5.90 or go to $6 per bushel, but will top out this month, as he also predicted with soybeans. Wheat could hold out better because of global shortages, but will also make a fall this year.
An outside factor that is going to start to play on commodity prices is the bursting of the bubble with paper assets and excessive credit. Today, the U.S. has 26 percent of the Gross Domestic Product coming from paper assets.
People have borrowed against their homes for credit and with the recent demise of the housing market, the paper assets are beginning to devalue.
Where Is
Agriculture Heading?
When the economic bubble does burst, Strickler looks to history to make his predictions. Historically, after times of high prices, markets reverted to about 50 percent of the peak prices. Most times, the market will bottom back to where the rally began.
Farmers looking to invest need to look at options instead of buying into futures, according to Strickler. He stressed farmers need to look at how they are going to survive a potential market downdraft.
Looking at the future of the U.S. dollar, he expressed concern about decisions being made by the Federal Reserve, which continues to decrease interest rates. The government is also considering a buyout of the real estate fiasco.
But Strickler said the government needs to just let the real estate markets fall to where they fall. He believes the country is at risk of spreading the real estate problem to all sectors of the economy because the dollar will become so cheap.
http://www.lancasterfarming.com/node/1131
http://siliconinvestor.advfn.com/readmsg.aspx?msgid=24382245
I gotta wonder though that so many now have 10$ or less trades is there enough volume to make the difference ? My trading bill has had a huge drop... Was easy to have a 400-500$ in/out commission on the small caps, especially the 2-4 buckers say... now I can scalp them for a couple hundred buck gain... no slippage to speak of...
Has made a big difference to me.. Many thousands of dollars I no longer need to make just to break even..
None of my 5.25 sells got hit today :o(
LOL
I usually wait too long <ng>
Someone is scared 20K for sale @ 4.17
I added also.
God have mercy on our souls LOL
Ed... Getting ready :O)
That was the plan... but kids too late got in the way... long story.. Maybe when we go to Oz :O)
GOOD LUCK... I'm in for trade too.. Have a decent whack.
I'm interested in that also as it avoids the 'input' cost problems other levels have... mines etc costs go up... currency appreciates so taxes and labour inherently go up
Saw that news... congrats..
Some relevant ETFs..
http://siliconinvestor.advfn.com/readmsg.aspx?msgid=24373243
Oh and enjoy your vacation... You'll need a clear mind to count your agri profits I hope :o)
Myself I'll be skiing next week... Winter's last fling...
Aaron,
We are on are same page. Now I'm looking for ways to move further down the food chain and futures looks to be one way. I'm limited though as most of my funds are in registered accounts for retirement or education savings. The downside is that they carry restrictions as to what is available for investment..
I took a position recently in COW recently for that reason. It invests in Hog and Cattle futures but I can hold it like a stock.
I started accumulating uranium producers / near producers a while back.
Kastel
A software programmer that would rather be a farmer :O)
EDIT: starting to look @ geothermal energy also...
evidently I picked the wrong day :O(
I started a small position in COW (US listing), cattle and hog futures.
Actually I didn't even look them up.. I was pressed for time for what I wanted to see and didn't think I'd get anything new considering the last time it seemed to be all about the Ring of Fire (Noront proximity).. Ferts don't really seem to be a 'happening' topic.. Oh POT is thrown in as an ag example in the macro discussions but beyond that... methinks we'll just have to be satisfied with quietly making money :o(
It's all about gold and silver you see..
LOL HGD 20.43... I wish ... Yes HXD... sorry.. in HGD 8.33
Only found CAJ and RAY and Baltic (again)... Didn't stop @ RAY and CAJ came across a little 'better get in FASTish'..
Surprisingly I got quite a bit of .. Potash ? didn't know it was hot... from folks in the biz.. Also got a bit of \.. It's got no more legs... :o)
I didn't have much time and spent a lot of it watching the Geothermal energy spiel... oh and Roulston and Adrian Day who thinks like Coxe basically..
http://www.citigroupgeo.com/pdf/SNA14455.pdf
Citi Group likes Big Cap food processors... I have my doubts..
too early...
out HGD 20.43
Aaron the Australian All Ordinaries is taking a whacking tonight.. how does it stack up for commodities ? i.e. Heavily weighted like the TSX in Canada ?
Thanks
B
I've lived here for 21 years... and yes the way Toronto looks at and handles snow you would think we were in Cuba... I'm a Montreal boy... they can still handle their snow there...
Yeah I'm not happy about that... Incidentally Toronto may be getting the biggest snow of the winter this Tuesday.. but the weather reports are usually exaggerated greatly... this year they have been strangely accurate until the last few weeks..
What happened to Harper's ice breaker initiative and protecting our northern sovereignty ? geez... Yeah I've voted alliance / conservative for a while, say 3 elections.. except for the 5K investment account I have not been thrilled... but I won't get into a bunch of politics... It's taken me a year of abstinence to calm down from the Canadian Free for All hread on SI :O)
Yes it was a good deal for the US also.. They had a good negotiating team..
Do the Dems would like to tear up energy security..
The new interstate in Minnesota ... pulled over for speeding LOL
Too me that is yet another tacit indicator that the Saudis are peak oil believers... diversify or die..
buying strong is good :O) but I agree it is too soon to tell.. I didn't play this runup.. to my chagrin such is life..
I traded PBG too much... I'm looking to try a little less trading on this one... although I'm stupid silly overweight and I should lighten on the next run..
Added another COW.. basis 44.93 how low can I go :O)
On the bid for more DML
API killing me here...
Bought HXD.TO 19.93 for a trade
Started COW (US) 45.08 avg
EDIT evidently the COWS came down after I bumped my bid... after weeks... geez..
26 new posts... sign of a top ?
http://siliconinvestor.advfn.com/subject.aspx?subjectid=24638