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CVAT, POT, MOS, DrStockPick.com Stock Report! Cavitation Technologies Inc., Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan, Inc. and Mosaic Co.

Dr. Stock Pick (September 25th, 2009) Writes:

Dr Stock Pick HOT News & Alerts!

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FREE Daily Stock Alerts From DrStockPick.com

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Friday September 25, 2009

DrStockPick.com Stock Report!

CVAT, POT, MOS

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CVAT, Cavitation Technologies Inc, CVAT.OB

CVAT is a “Green-Tech” company, established in 2006 to become a world leader in the development of new cutting edge technologies for the, vegetable oil refining, renewable fuel, petroleum, water treatment, wastewater sanitation, petroleum, food and beverage, chemical industries.

CVAT announced that Biocombustibles y Energias Alternativas (ALS) has entered into a long-term agreement with CTI (Cavitation Technologies Inc) to develop projects in Argentina and throughout Latin America. ALS (www.alsbio.com), partnering with DOW Chemical (www.dow.com), has identified several projects where CTI technology can greatly improve process yields

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Medal of Honor: Top analyst Josh Rosner nailed the crisis

Prieur du Plessis (September 23rd, 2009) Writes:

This is a guest contribution by Damien Hoffman, editor-in-chief of the very popular Wall St Cheat Sheet blog. Make sure to put this site on your must-read list.

josh-rosner

Josh Rosner is the inaugural recipient of our first annual Medal of Honor for Excellent Service Award. Like a Navy Seal who does the most elite work yet receives the least public spotlight, Rosner has for years consistently been one of the best analysts on Wall Street. Most importantly, while other false prophets had undeservedly taken credit for nailing the crisis (for the wrong reasons), Rosner and a small handful of other hard working analysts saw and called everything for the right reasons in real-time.

For this reason, Rosner

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And Then There’s This…Thursday, April 09th, 2009

Contrarian Profits (April 9th, 2009) Writes:

Gold didn’t do much on Wednesday. It rallied a bit in the Far East and got sold off mid-morning in London. The low of the day [such as it was] came at the London p.m. gold fix at 10:00 a.m. Eastern time. The subsequent rally got capped shortly after the price punctured $890…and then proceeded to get sold off [on big volume] right into the Globex close at 5:15 in New York. Total estimated volume was 87,493 contracts…with a switch effect of 5,876.

Silver was similar. A vertical spike at 8:30 a.m. in New York got squashed…and the low of the day was also at the London p.m. gold fix. And, like gold, the subsequent rally got capped at 1:00 p.m. Eastern before getting sold off to almost unchanged. Nothing to see here folks…please move along.

Open interest changes for Tuesday’s Comex trading showed an increase of 1,653 contracts in gold o.i….now

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Why Does the CIBC Slam Silver?

Alex Stanczyk (February 16th, 2009) Writes:

by: David Morgan February 15, 2009

I’m going to comment on Jon Nadler’s remarks in his February 9 article titled “The Silver Medalist.” Jon pointed out some interesting quotes about the silver market, and some of these I have issue with and some I don’t. Mostly what he did is quote CIBC Global Markets and their assessment of the silver market. And one thing that he quotes from CIBC is that in 2008 silver had risen to about $20 an ounce and lately it’s been languishing at around the $10 level; those are facts, no dispute there. And then they (CIBC) go on to state at the first sign of a decline in gold that investors are likely to sell their silver holding but retain more of their gold holdings since gold has a supe­rior reputation as an insurance policy, compared to silver. I really don’t have an issue with that,

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Global Infrastructure Spending to Reach $35 Trillion Over the Next 20 Years

Money Morning (February 5th, 2009) Writes:

A wave of government bailouts around the world and a sharp deterioration in existing infrastructure could lead to as much as $35 trillion in public works spending over the next 20 years, according to a new study by CIBC World Markets.

The study, released last week, says that many of the countries that balanced their budgets over the past 10 years did so by skimping on the construction costs for new public assets and the maintenance of existing buildings and roads, CBC reported.

“The global economy is running a major infrastructure deficit as the cost of decades of under-investment is now surfacing,” said Benjamin Tal, the analyst who authored the study.

Canada, for example, has eliminated an enormous budget deficit left over from the 1980s, but built up an infrastructure deficit of $120 billion in the process.

Governments have come to realize that …

And Then There’s This…Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Contrarian Profits (January 27th, 2009) Writes:

It came as no surprise to me that both gold got sold off a bit the moment that the gold market opened in the Far East on Monday morning. But it didn’t amount to much, because shortly after 2 p.m. in Hong Kong…1:00 a.m. Monday morning N.Y. time…gold began a slow rise that continued right through the London open. This lasted until the silver fix in London (noon) before selling off about ten bucks. But as soon as floor trading opened on the Comex in New York, the price rose…then spiked to its high of the day…before it was gently capped and then got slowly sold off until the end of Globex trading at 5:15 p.m. Eastern time.

Silver followed a similar route, but it got sold off shortly before the Comex opened…with the selloff continuing until about 8:30 a.m. in New York. From there it rose in fits and starts

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Is a ‘Shock and Awe’ Stockmarket Rally Imminent?

Sean Maher (December 7th, 2008) Writes:

div align=”justify”As a sign of how hysterical and overextended the bear case has become, I note the most idiotic piece of analysis since that GS and span class=”blsp-spelling-error” id=”SPELLING_ERROR_0″CIBC/span $200 oil forecast a few months back is span class=”blsp-spelling-corrected” id=”SPELLING_ERROR_1″ricocheting/span around the financial media. span class=”blsp-spelling-error” id=”SPELLING_ERROR_2″Bloomberg/span has been quoting Jim span class=”blsp-spelling-error” id=”SPELLING_ERROR_3″Bianco/span, who totted up the cost of the biggest historical US government programs such as WW2, the New Deal, the Korean and Iraq Wars etc and worked out that on an inflation adjusted basis, emstrongthe credit crisis bailout at $8span class=”blsp-spelling-error” id=”SPELLING_ERROR_4″trn/span is bigger that the whole lot combined. What utter, economically illiterate, nonsense/strong/em. Simply multiplying the cost of a war many decades ago by a cumulative inflation factor ignores the changing relative value of economic inputs over that span class=”blsp-spelling-corrected” id=”SPELLING_ERROR_5″time frame/span, as well as huge qualitative differences due to technological change and social expectations. emstrongOn …

Ugly Thursday

Sean Brodrick (November 6th, 2008) Writes:
The morning rally in gold has faded. The market is going downhill in a hurry. Whatever bounce associated with the election seems to be fading.Barack Obama's Yuan Calls May Place U.S. on Collision Course With China Barack Obama's calls for changes in China's yuan policy may put the president-elect on a collision course with the U.S.'s second-largest trade partner, which is holding the currency stable to support its export-led economy.Euro Falls Against Dollar After ECB Cuts Rate to Lowest Level in Two Years The euro fell against the dollar, the yen and the pound after European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet said the economy ``weakened significantly'' and the International Monetary Fund cut growth forecasts for the region.Oil Falls, Tracking Equity Prices, on Concern Slowdown Is Cutting Demand Crude oil fell to an 18-month low, following equities, on signs that fuel demand will contract as ...

The helicopters are coming

Prieur du Plessis (October 7th, 2008) Writes:

This post is a guest contribution by Niels Jensen*, chief executive partner of London-based Absolute Return Partners.

It is time to move on. Not that the crisis is over, by no stretch of the imagination. But it is not going to make one iota of difference if I join the blame game bandwagon. It is what it is. Allow me instead to focus my energy on what is likely to happen next. That is more productive and definitely more useful.

A can of worms We are dealing with a rather large can of worms. The lid is off and the worms are all over the place. Let’s focus on what these worms might be up to. For all the

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Early Morning Tid-bits:

Notable Calls (September 3rd, 2008) Writes:
- CSFB is lowering Goldman (NYSE:GS) ests FQ3/FY2008 for the second time in couple of weeks.- RBC Capital is positive on Potash (NYSE:POT) reiterating their $375 tgt telling to look for sig. potash price increases in China.- RBC Capital is positive on Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) saying 4MM iPod announcement coming soon.- Oppenheimer out positive on RF Micro (NASDAQ:RFMD) saying qtr is tracking better than consensus. Reits Outperform and $7 tgt.- Lehman (NYSE:LEH) looks interesting as KDB's $5 bln offer for 25% stake shows there may be a premium to the story after all. Especially with HSBC also looking into buying the co.- CIBC is upgrading US Steel (NYSE:X) to Outperform.- Citigroup is defending Dell (NASDAQ:DELL)Notablecalls: Hope it helps - fyi

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