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Re: Rainer post# 16346

Thursday, 08/25/2011 5:22:16 PM

Thursday, August 25, 2011 5:22:16 PM

Post# of 16584
Have you played Hurricane stocks before ?

http://tradingtipsnow.com/have-you-played-hurricane-stocks-before/

Have you played Hurricane stocks before ?
by Zagros on April 20, 2010

Watch out for BUGS and NSMG, they can gap because of the this

Louisiana Declares a State of Emergency as Storm Builds in Gulf of Mexico
Read the Full Article http://bit.ly/aiWt96
A month ago, while I was doing my usual, end of the day search to find out what stock did some abnormal movements. I came a cross NSMG which had made upward move on a very low volume. I was wondering what made this stock to move up on no news and no volume. After farther research I found out that NSMG is a Hurricane stock which means companies that are directly associated with hurricane clean up damage assessment, stuff like that. I have done extensive DD on these stocks and I like to share them with you
Hurricane stocks such as BUGS and NSMG, are seasonal stock which during Hurricane season they move up extremely in some cases they could go as high as 5 to 10 folds. On March 15th, I went on and posted NSMG and BUGS on my watch list. Read it here http://bit.ly/aM4lJo
Then NSMG was at.007 and BUGS at .0010 , I hope some of you had bought them then.
Ever Since they have began making some good move, on increasing Volume. Before I go any farther I would like to respond to those whom think its kind of wrong to invest money in a stock in hops a huge Hurricane happens and makes you money. My respond is, thats not the case, and here is why
A-Hurricanes are going to happen whether anyone hopes for them or not.
B- Your investment is not tied to Hurricane it self. because you buy them cheap NOW and sell them BEFORE the Hurricane hits in, and then pray that no one gets hurt. you are buying these like any other stocks, buying them low and sell them high. For now these stocks have made their move but still affordable. This is strong accumulation period, people buying in bits and holding. Any news about formation of tropical storm within 100s of miles away from the land, can bring in thousands of investors to buy these stocks.and when everybody jumps in, eventually the price spikes. You’ll have too many chances to flip these stocks several time Starting from Jan till the end of October. There is almost no chance that one Hurrican won’t happen again this year. Unfortunately, on December 9th 2009Tropical Meteorology Project at Colorado State University forecasting this (“We foresee an above-average Atlantic basin tropical cyclone season in 2010 and anticipate an above-average probability of U.S. and Caribbean major hurricane landfall.”). Looking at past years, April is usually the month that the hurricane stocks really spike with the anticipation of the storm season. Most are still a great investment with and easy triple from the current levels with the threat of a hurricane. If you look at the charts you will find a lot of buying and not too many sells. I believe Hurricane stocks will move up from here on.
Hurricane Preparedness Week during 2010 will be held May 23rd through May 29th.
Atlantic hurricane season is from 1 June to 30 November. These event will bring more attention to these stocks and the PPS will go higher even before any Hurricane shows up.

companies that are directly associated with hurricane clean-up, damage assessment
NSMG – The pure hurricane play.
BUGS (otcbb) – Environmental waste clean up
WEGI – The pure hurricane play.
ECCI (otcbb) – Portable water decontamination systems, based in Texas
DPDW (otcbb) – Deep Water Oil Services (Offshore Rigs in the Gulf & Worldwide)
ADDL (otcbb) – Roofing for post hurricane repair. ADDL is actually a hurricane stock that has tens of millions in contracts and has close ties to the army corp of engineers and gov.
BCON (nasdaq) – Electrical Power Management
CPST (nasdaq) – Electrical Power Generation
ABIX (nasdaq) – Industrial supplies and protection gear for clean up

Atlantic hurricane
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An Atlantic hurricane refers to a tropical cyclone that forms in the Atlantic Ocean usually in the Northern Hemisphere during the summer or autumn, with one-minute maximum sustained winds of at least 74 mph (64 knots, 33 m/s, 119 km/h).[1] When applied to hurricanes, “Atlantic” generally refers to the entire “Atlantic basin”, which includes the North Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.

Most Atlantic tropical storms and hurricanes form between June 1 and November 30. The United States National Hurricane Center monitors the basin and gives out reports, watches and warnings about tropical weather systems for the Atlantic Basin as one of the Regional Specialized Meteorological Centers for tropical cyclones as defined by the World Meteorological Organization.

Tropical disturbances that reach tropical storm intensity are named from a pre-determined list. On average, 10.1 named storms form each season, with an average of 5.9 becoming hurricanes and 2.5 becoming major hurricanes (Category 3 or greater). The climatological peak of activity is around September 10 every season


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