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Monsanto Wins New Contract – Analyst Blog

Zacks Market Commentaries (October 26th, 2009) Writes:
Monsanto Company (MON) has signed a long-term supply contract with Air Products (APD), the leading global hydrogen provider. According to the contract, Air Products will build a new world-scale hydrogen production plant to be located at Monsanto's Luling, Louisiana, Roundup facility. The new hydrogen plant is scheduled to be on-stream in Jan 2012.  Air Products will build a steam methane reformer (SMR) producing over 100 million standard cubic feet per day (MMSCFD) of hydrogen. The SMR will be connected to Air Products' East Gulf Coast pipeline network, which supplies refineries with hydrogen needed to make cleaner burning transportation fuels, in addition to meeting the hydrogen needs of the local petrochemical industry. In addition, the facility will produce additional hydrogen via a clean-up of a hydrogen-rich off-gas feed coming from Monsanto. Monsanto will use steam from Air Products' SMR process to benefit its Roundup production plant. ...

Jim Rogers: The Next 10 Years

IndexUniverse Staff (October 9th, 2009) Writes:

I’m moving to China … possibly to live in a bunker. At least that was my inclination after listening to a presentation by Jim Rogers yesterday.

Now don’t get me wrong―Mr. Commodities wasn’t all doom and gloom. In fact, his talk was both informative and highly entertaining. But Rogers doesn’t sugarcoat things―he’s very matter-of-fact about his concerns and projections for the future. And most of them don’t bode well for the U.S.

I’ll be posting an interview with Jim Rogers on the site in the coming week, but for now, I just wanted to offer some highlights from his speech at ETF Securities' mini-conference and the Q&A that followed.

1. The 21st century belongs to China

According to Rogers, the 19th century was the era of the British Empire and the 20th century was the

...

US Dollar Sags Under Weight of Global Imbalances Pre-G20

Contrarian Profits (September 22nd, 2009) Writes:

The U.S. dollar slid to a 1-year low against the euro on Tuesday near $1.48 as deteriorating sentiment on the U.S. currency encouraged selling ahead of a Federal Reserve meeting and Group of 20 summit this week.

Traders took advantage of a dollar rally in the prior session to sell on views the Fed will signal plans to maintain loose monetary policy well into 2010.

Currency investors are also bracing for G20 leaders to discuss rebalancing the global economy this week, a process that would almost certainly require a weaker dollar.

A document obtained by Reuters showed how Washington would urge G20 leaders to launch a new push this year to get debtor nations like the United States to save more and exporters like China, Germany and Japan to spend more.

“If you take the view that too much of U.S. growth has been domestically driven, the next logical step is to say an

...

Gordon the rooster

Prieur du Plessis (September 13th, 2009) Writes:

Trevor the farmer was in the fertilised egg business. He had several hundred young layers (hens), called “pullets” and eight or ten roosters, to fertilise the pullets’ eggs.

The farmer kept records and any rooster that didn’t perform went into the soup pot and was replaced. That took an awful lot of his time so he bought a set of tiny bells and attached them to his roosters. Each bell had a different tone so Trevor could tell from a distance, which rooster was performing.

Now he could sit on the porch and fill out an efficiency report simply by listening to the bells.

The farmer’s favourite rooster was Gordon, and a very fine specimen he was too, but on this particular morning Trevor noticed Gordon’s bell hadn’t rung at all! Trevor went to investigate. The other roosters were chasing pullets, bells-a-ringing. The pullets, hearing the roosters coming, would

...

PennyOmega.com Stocks Upgraded, Downgraded and Short Highlights Before the Bell Tuesday September 1st, 2009

Penny Omega (September 1st, 2009) Writes:

 

PennyOmega.com Hot Stock News & Alerts!

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Tuesday September 1st, 2009

PennyOmega.com Stock Report!

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China Valves Technology, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: CVVZ), a leading metal valve manufacturer with operations in the People’s Republic of China, today announced that the Company’s new production facility at its Henan Kaifeng High Pressure Valve Co., Ltd. subsidiary will begin formal production in mid September 2009.

Yucheng Technologies Limited

...

Monsanto Focused on Long-Term Growth, but DuPont Dustup Draws Attention from Regulators

Contrarian Profits (August 21st, 2009) Writes:

Monsanto Corp. (NYSE: MON), the world’s largest seed maker, says it’s on track to more than double its 2007 profit by the year 2012 and is expecting a “technology explosion” to provide even stronger products going forward. But while Monsanto continues to build on its reputation as a cutting edge agricultural business, it is also under siege by competitors and advocacy groups who claim the company is a monopoly.

The St. Louis-based Monsanto said in June that its fiscal third-quarter earnings fell to $694 million, or $1.25 a share, from $811 million, or $1.45 a share, in the same period a year ago. Sales slipped to $3.16 billion from $3.54 billion last year. The company also said its annual earnings would likely be at the low end of its $4.40 to $4.50 a share forecast range.

That’s not very impressive for a company that last year posted record net sales

...
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Why Stimulus Won’t Magically Heal the US Economy

Contrarian Profits (August 5th, 2009) Writes:

The bulls have their reasons, of course. Manufacturing is recovering, they say. Green shoots are sprouting! What they don’t seem to know/care about is that the reason manufacturing is recovering has little to do with a better economy.

This from Payout Trader editor Charles Delvalle (who, by the way, is bullish on US equities in the medium term):

Truth is the economy is still circling the drain, albeit at a slower pace. The real reason why the Institute of Supply Managements Factory Gauge showed better than expected numbers was because of the 12% increase in government spending due to fiscal ‘stimulus’ programs.

The June report showed up at 48.9 – just shy of the 50 mark. If the ISM rises above 50 it signals growth in manufacturing; less than 50 signals contraction. This 50 mark is extremely important, because most economists look at it to determine whether we are in a recession or

...

One Commodity Worth Buying

Chris Mayer (August 3rd, 2009) Writes:

All the factors that set the fertilizer bull market in motion in the first place are still here. Populations are still growing. Diets are shifting toward more fruits, vegetables and meats — all fertilizer intensive. As Potash CEO Bill Doyle says, “This will continue to put pressure on global grain supplies, as farmers are being challenged to produce more with land and water resources that are shrinking on a per capita basis.”

Fertilizers are a key part in meeting that challenge. And the farmers are financially in good shape to buy more. The debt-to-equity ratio for the U.S. farmer is only around 10-15%.

Overseas, farmers are subsidized directly. In India, the government picks up the tab of higher fertilizer costs. As Doyle pointed out: “With low grain stocks and low yields and 1.2 billion people, they’re not going to drop the ball. They’ll continue to support the Indian farmer.” China has also

...

Sticking With the Basics

Bill Bonner (August 3rd, 2009) Writes:

What’s new? Nothing much…Markets still moving up…

Oil rose $2.50 on Friday…to $69. Gold rose $18 to $953. The Dow was up 18 points. And the dollar fell to $1.42 per euro.

And governments are still doing the wrong thing…trying to increase demand. It’s not possible…for reasons we describe below…

Well, it’s August…and we’re on vacation. But just because we’re on vacation doesn’t mean the world stops turning. It just doesn’t turn quite so fast.

“Why don’t you just stop writing for a while?” our mother asked this morning. She is visiting for the summer.

“I don’t know how you write every day anyway. You must say the same thing…”

Richard Russell has given a Dow Theory bull market signal. When you get a signal, he says, you don’t argue with it; you go with it. Stock prices are going up.

We don’t doubt it. The Dow would have to clime to about 10,300 just to give

...

Indian Budget Disappoints Market – Analyst Blog

Zacks Market Commentaries (July 6th, 2009) Writes:
The Indian market reacted with disappointment to the budget presented this morning by the new Finance Minister, due to lack of any new liberalization measures and the ballooning budget deficit. The Bombay Sensitive Index plunged 870 points, or almost 6%, as the high hopes for major pro-market structural reform in pensions, insurance and retail sectors were not met. Markets were expecting that there would be a roadmap for bringing down the fiscal deficit, as also details of disinvestment and deregulation of oil prices.The budget seeks to boost government spending that would increase the fiscal deficit to 6.8% of GDP. The country's fiscal deficit has been soaring since the government enacted three fiscal stimulus packages of tax cuts and spending, on top of deep spending on fuel subsidies, government pay hikes and farmer loan and employment programs. Last year, the deficit was 6.2% of GDP, and the year ...

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