Originally posted by riverbabe
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Rob's Lobs
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Hide not your talents.
They for use were made.
What's a sundial in the shade?
- Benjamin Franklin
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Originally posted by peanuts View PostI wonder what will help to open the eyes of the public to the extent of the power and generally stabile growth of the US economy over the past 100 years? I mean.... why are people burying their heads in the sand? BUY BUY BUY!!!!!!
None of this stuff was true in theUSA the last one hundred years. Britian's power was busted by the welfare system; how shall our economic power be any different?
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New-born,
The return on money set aside for social security if we are to believe that it was set aside has got to be lousy. If you were to take the totals from the 1940's say until 1990 and compound it at 6% wouldn't there theoretically be enough $$ to last indefinitely? Take out a few trillion here and there for a couple useless wars and what is left?
-----------billyjoe
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Originally posted by billyjoe View PostNew-born,
The return on money set aside for social security if we are to believe that it was set aside has got to be lousy. If you were to take the totals from the 1940's say until 1990 and compound it at 6% wouldn't there theoretically be enough $$ to last indefinitely? Take out a few trillion here and there for a couple useless wars and what is left?
-----------billyjoe
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Rob, I must admit I don't usually read your thread. I'm just stopping by because of my position in RGEN, which got my attention by setting a new high recently. As it turns out, a very nice time to buy this would have been about the time of IMCL's last report. When the settlement was announced, RGEN took a dive because some folks had been expecting a much better result for RGEN. After IMCL's report, there seemed to be renewed interest in RGEN. Since I know you've been following IMCL, do you have any comments on the case and settlement with RGEN?
Thanks ... stenz
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Originally posted by stenzrob View Post. . . do you have any comments on the case and settlement with RGEN?
I believe Erbitux is a better drug than it has as yet been recognized to be.—Rob
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2008 holiday schedule for the NYSE, NASDAQ and AMEX
2008 holiday schedule for the NYSE, NASDAQ and AMEX:
Tuesday, January 1 ...... New Year's Day
Monday, January 21 ...... Martin Luther King Jr.'s Birthday (Observed)
Monday, February 18 ..... Presidents' Day
Friday, March 21 ........ Good Friday
Monday, May 26 .......... Memorial Day
Friday, July 4 .......... Independence Day*
Monday, September 1 ..... Labor Day
Thursday, November 27 ... Thanksgiving Day*
Thursday, December 25 ... Christmas Day*
*The markets will close at 1:00 p.m. on Thursday, July 3, 2008; Friday, November 28, 2008; and Wednesday, December 24, 2008.
—Rob
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Update on the 11/22/07 Screen
Originally posted by Rob View PostWill watch for a while and see what these do.
TSCM .......... 12.80 ........ 16.05 ...... 25.39
RIG .......... 121.78 ....... 146.02 ...... 19.90
PXP ........... 49.22 ........ 55.10 ...... 11.95
GKK ........... 21.76 ........ 23.64 ....... 8.64
MIR ........... 36.57 ........ 38.96 ....... 6.54
IMMR .......... 12.31 ........ 12.90 ....... 4.79
DST ........... 80.66 ........ 83.06 ....... 2.98
HLTH .......... 13.24 ........ 13.63 ....... 2.95
VCP ........... 29.31 ........ 29.97 ....... 2.25
VR ............ 25.14 ........ 25.63 ....... 1.95
SPIL ........... 8.92 ......... 9.03 ....... 1.23
GEOY .......... 32.82 ........ 33.02 ....... 0.61
MRH ........... 17.00 ........ 16.99 ...... -0.06
RLI ........... 57.14 ........ 55.83 ...... -2.29
TWLL .......... 12.24 ........ 10.58 ..... -13.56
FMD ........... 29.54 ........ 15.32 ..... -48.14
Average .................................... 1.57
So what's the deal with First Marblehead (FMD)? Here are two paragraphs from a Dec. 27 Motley Fool article:First Marblehead sells student loans into the market for asset-backed securities (ABS), which has been rocked by loan defaults. The two largest sectors of the ABS market are home equity loans and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) -- the very same types of assets causing severe damage to buyers like E*Trade (Nasdaq: ETFC), whose toxic ABS portfolio was the proximate cause of one of the most shareholder-value-destroying refinancings of a major company in recent memory.
Besides mortgages and CDOs, there are indications that defaults are also creeping up in credit cards, auto loans, and -- most germane to FMD shareholders -- student loans. Confidence in the bond ratings agencies is in tatters, and bond insurers' very solvency is being called into question. Amid these conditions, the ABS market has practically shut down.—Rob
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IMCL - Gap Filled
For those of you TA enthusiasts out there who insist that gaps must be filled, I thought I'd inform you that IMCL's gap from Sep. 10-11 has now officially filled.
In my opinion, this puppy is cheeeeeeeap! If you don't want to hold it for the long term, fine. Buy it now at <38 and sell it at 44. Probably won't take all that long. It's selling cheaply now most likely due to foreseen weak earnings report .... but it will only be low because of costly legal settlements last quarter. Erbitux is threatening to take some of Avastin's market share in 1st-line metastatic colorectal cancer treatment (Do you even understand how HUGE that is?), and they will present positive lung data this Summer at ASCO in San Fran. Don't be fooled by the recent price weakness. Don't be a schmuck. Trade at your own risk, however.—Rob
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