MEEC a hunch back to .80....Recall run from .36 back in March on announcement of EPA mandate April 15th...
From: Greenbackers Sent: Friday, May 1, 2015 7:35 AM Subject: Tesla reads.....MEEC a hunch back to .80
Focus:
Linked In getting crushed on earnings
Re-examining MEEC on pullback, given recent runups....Recall in play following April 15 EPA mandate they stand to benefit significantly on....Debate for channeling back to .80
TRCH not letting up......
MCWEF remains in consolidation phase, but a little jumpy/looks to hold .60.....Recall ability to produce oil at 28bucks a barrel/going into production...
Recall mentioning NEWT steady runup from 13 to 19 in 2015...Maintaining focus on this high yielding (12%) dividend play......Little end of day bleep as it continues to base around 17... Newtek Business Services Corp. (NEWT)
NEWT Newtek Business Services Corp. to Present at the 16th Annual B. Riley & Co. Investment Conference at PR Newswire Fri 9:00am
Other:
OTCJ : SPYR (SPYR): Mobile Mania Fueling This Rocket
Syngenta +13.7% premarket after Bloomberg reported it had been approached by Monsanto (NYSE:MON) about a possible takeover. Reports last year had said the companies held preliminary talks with advisers about a combination before Syngenta (NYSE:SYT) management decided against negotiations. MON +4% premarket.
Biotech Stock Mailbag: Biotech Bull So Insanely Good It Will Make You Forget Week's Pain
More than seven years after the global financial collapse, regulators and investors are still working through a mile-high pile of lawsuits and other civil actions, and it seems like the fines keep on coming. Since the crisis, banks and other institutions have paid more than $150B in fines, settlements and other penalties, according to a tally by FT. That compares with the roughly $700B in profits generated by U.S. banks between 2007 and 2014. So where have all the payments gone? The biggest have landed in the Justice Department, which has amassed some $50B. Other heavy collectors include the FHFA, Fannie Mae (OTCQB:FNMA), HUD and the SEC. Among the banks paying the biggest amounts, BofA (NYSE:BAC) tops the list - with nearly $58B, followed by JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) ($31.3B), Citigroup (NYSE:C) ($12.8B) and Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) ($9.7B).
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.