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1, 571,556 shares ( t trade)
im counting lol
finally back in the .70's
looking good for the rest of the week
good stock heading towrds nov.13
cash will be made
the question how much lol!!
see u monday daddy
no prob my friend lol!!!
ty bio
respect returned back at ya
take my friend
just found out from shelly burgess too,
drug is approved
thx invest2win for the heads up
congrats everyone
another 9500 shares
big buys r coming in
someone just bought 10 000 shares at 10.60
someone has alot of faith!!
signs do look good for sure!!
finally, r u gone for good now lol!!!!!
mm is trying to bring it down it aint happening
300 000 share buy niceee
we will hit it for sure eom :)
alot of buys coming in
looks like its going to run to .13 eom :)
thanks pump
bumpy ride for sure but all for the better me think thanks!!!!
where do u see it going in the next couple weeks pump??
thanks!!
thanks barefootrunner
Re: barefootrunner Post# 45243
JPM Report
http://jmp.na.bdvision.ipreo.com/NSightWeb_v2.00/Handlers/Document.ashx?i=2b4280d7ded547c5a3c113df5893bc0b
Conference call with lymphatic mapping leaders may enhance conviction in Lymphoseek approvability and share value; reiterating Market Outperform rating and $8 price target for shares of Neoprobe.
J.P. Morgan Risk Officer: Capital Rules At 'Limits Of Utility'
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM) plans to tell a congressional hearing Thursday that new capital rules already in place would allow the top nine U.S. banks to absorb $203 billion in losses and still hold the amount of capital that pre-crisis regulations demanded.
That $203 billion sum is twice the banks' average annual losses during the financial crisis, Barry Zubrow, the bank's chief risk officer plans to say in prepared remarks. And that math is why his bank thinks further regulations being planned for the biggest banks would go too far.
International rules, known as Basel III, are requiring the banks put aside 7% of their tier 1 common equity, an increase from before the crisis.
What concerns J.P. Morgan are discussions about giving so-called systemically important institutions even higher capital requirements. J.P. Morgan, the nation's second-biggest bank by assets, would fall into the systemically important category.
Zubrow's prepared testimony says that J.P. Morgan was "able to weather the financial crisis, and to acquire both Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual." He also noted a study on the crisis, by the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, said the bank would have survived without assistance.
"So, if the question is, 'How much capital is necessary to weather the worst financial crisis in U.S. history?' the answer should be 'about what J.P. Morgan Chase held,'" Zubrow plans to say. "With this in mind, note that the Basel III rules effectively would require J.P. Morgan Chase to hold approximately 45% more capital than it did during the crisis."
Zubrow's testimony comes a week after his boss, Chief Executive Jamie Dimon, publicly asked Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke about the growth of regulation reform. Dimon has said often that he fears that if banks are forced to hold too much capital, there will be negative consequences. One consequence that has been cited by the industry is that higher capital levels would reduce banks' ability to lend.
Zubrow's testimony does say that new requirements will "substantially increase the safety and soundness of large U.S. financial institutions and decrease the risk of their causing systemic risk or economic harm," but said no regulation will ever guarantee complete safety.
"Thus, at some point regulatory changes reach the limits of their utility," Zubrow's planned testimony says. "We have reached that point in U.S. regulatory reform."
-By David Benoit, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2458;
david.benoit@dowjones.com
Lol u r hiliarius cash eom!!
0.05 will not come keep waitin!!!
He provided sealed documents in chambers!!
I wonder what they are!!!
IT allegations/or something else that kinda put rosen in his tracks!!
We will see soon enuf and the story will unfold!!
Waiting like everybody else!!
ask back to .16
who told u that, was it Brian Rosen ???? lol
ohh i have always thought it was the other way around
my left for money your right for money we cant go
wrong lol!!! 100% that way
isn't it supposed to be the left lol!!!
A very nice article on Micheal Willingham, a guy that we can depend on and take away some doubts good post on Y!
http://thepittsburggazette.com/stand-up-be-counted-p6785-99.htm
ya i know looked like it wasnt going to stop
who in the heck is dumping??????
DDSS is just making a move now whats up with that nice!!!!!
last time i checked 0% was not 'in the money'
i was just thinking the same thing been over 1 or 2 years maybe
it is interesting to say the least
that was rramirez i believe
what news
whats going on
I did a little research on a bankruptcy judge and found two things:
1) A. BANKRUPTCY JUDGE'S RESPONSIBILITIES/QUALIFICATIONS
Please note that the qualifications for appointment do not require bankruptcy law experience or residence in the district in which one wishes to serve.
2) i don't like this too much but they only make $160,000 ouch not saying or implying anything but u know what i mean
CRTC unloading the H's
Stark doesn't want them any more!!!HMM!!!
wow 1.8 million share traded in dimeq HMMMM
Do u ask or did Sen. sanders ask that question,
here is Sanders tearing apart Ben Bernanke
TricaDia reached some sort of an agreement with the debtors