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[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

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Stocks celebrate Black Monday with fresh peaks

Prieur du Plessis (October 20th, 2009) Writes:

On the 22-year anniversary of the 1987 stock market crash yesterday, stocks marched to one-year highs, with the Dow Jones Industrial Index reclaiming the 10,000 level and the S&P 500 Index breaking through 1,100 (although it then declined again to fall shy of this number by two basis points by the closing bell).

First, some comments from regular contributor Kevin Lane, technical analyst of Fusion IQ.

“The S&P 500, which recently broke above a downtrend line (purple line in the chart below), is closing in on its 50% retracement level from the 2007 peak to the 2009 lows near the 1,120 level. This level may cause some minor profit-taking and retracement; however, only a move below 1,000, which would put the S&P 500 back below its recently broken downtrend line and near-term support, would be viewed as a negative. So, until a break of 1,000 occurs, price

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Video-o-rama: Goldman Sachs ad nauseam

Prieur du Plessis (July 18th, 2009) Writes:

I am experiencing Internet problems and have difficulty accessing my data sources. This week’s video compilation is therefore posted without the usual introductory paragraphs. But I’m sure the interesting clips will speak for themselves.

Wall St Cheat Sheet: AIG - writing stories about people who play “it” safe “Evidently, AIG is a company that plays ‘it’ safe (whatever the hell that means) and knows how to manage risk better than anyone else in the known universe. Don’t believe me? Take their word for it. We let corporations falsely advertise all the time, and here is a perfect example of the cost.”

videorama-pic1

Source: Damien Hoffman, Wall St Cheat Sheet, July 15, 2009.

Bloomberg: Shiller, Roubini discuss “anemic” economic recovery “Nouriel Roubini, professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, and Robert Shiller, chief economist and co-founder

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Tags for this Post:
Aig, Aline van Duyn, author, Bank, Bank Of America, Barry Ritholtz, bloomberg, Bonds, Can Wall Street, ceo, chief economist and co-founder, China, Chris Kofinis, Cnn, Commodities, Congress, Credit Suisse, Damien Hoffman, David Wessel;, Democratic strategist, Dennis Berman;, economics professor, Evan Newmark;, Federal Reserve System, finance, Financial Times, Fusion IQ, Fusion IQ CEO, Gary Shilling, Giles Keating;, Goldman Sachs, Hank Paulson, head, Head of Global Economics, Influential bank analyst, Intelligent Investor columnist, Internet problems, investment postcards, Jason Zweig;, Jeffery Harte, Jeremy Siegel, John Authers, Jpmorgan, Ken Prewitt, MacroMarkets;, Market Commentary, Max Keiser;, Meredith Whitney, Meredith Whitney Advisory Group;, Merrill, new york university, nouriel roubini, Professor, Republican strategist, Robert Shiller, S&P, Stern School of Business;, Terry Holt, The Macro Trader, The Wall Street Journal, Tom Keene, United States, Wall Street Journal, Wharton finance professor, Yahoo, yale, youtube

Video-o-rama: Regulatory reform dominates debate

Prieur du Plessis (June 19th, 2009) Writes:

The financial debate during the past few days was dominated by President Obama’s sweeping revamp of financial market supervision, and this issue also occupies a number of slots in today’s Video-o-rama.

But it was not all about regulation, as pundits were also trying to figure out whether there were in fact economic “green shoots” and what the implications for financial markets might be. Commentators include Michael Lewis, John Rogers, Robert Kleinschmidt, Jack Welch, Barry Ritholtz, Nouriel Roubini, Stephen Roach, Mario Gabelli and George Friedman.

The compilation kicks off with author Michael Lewis discussing his article “The End of Wall Street”, and concludes with a fascinating analysis of the Iranian situation by George Friedman of Stratfor, geopolitical analysts.

You Tube: Michael Lewis - the end of Wall Street? “Author Michael Lewis discusses how his experience working at Salomon Brothers and writing Liar’s Poker influenced his article, ‘The End of Wall

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Tags for this Post:
ailout Nation Author, Ariel Capital Management, author, Barack Obama, Barry Ritholtz, bloomberg, Bonds, Bullard, ceo, CEO & author, Chairman, Charlie Rose, Chief Executive Officer, China, Christian Dick, Cnn, Commodities, Consuelo Mack, correspondent, David Bowers, david morgan, director, Economist, Federal Reserve Bank, Federal Reserve System, Financial Times, founder, fund manager, Furthermore, Fusion IQ, Gama Funds, General Electric, George Friedman, investment postcards, Islamic Republic of Iran, israel, Jack Welch, James Bullard;, Javier Blas, John Authers, John Rogers, Jon Hilsenrath, Lauren Rublin, London, Mack WealthTrack, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Mario Gabelli, Market Commentary, michael lewis, Middle East, Morgan Stanley Asia, nouriel roubini, Obama administration, Office of Management and Budget;, Oil, Oil Price, Oil Prices, Peter Orszag, precious metal, president, Robert Kleinschmidt, Salomon;, senate banking committee, Silver-Investor.com, St Louis Federal Reserve Bank;, Stephen Roach, Steve Liesman, the CNBC news, The Wall Street Journal, Timothy Geithner;, Tocqueville Fund, treasury secretary, United States, Wall Street Journal, Yahoo

Uncle Sam, the Enabler – Memo Found in the Street

Prieur du Plessis (September 27th, 2008) Writes:

Barry Ritholtz* has put pen to paper to write the following memo, spelling out in no uncertain terms the role that Uncle Sam played in enabling the current financial mess.

To: Washington, D.C. From: Wall Street Re: Credit Crisis

Dear D.C.

WOW, WE’VE MADE QUITE A MESS OF THINGS here on Wall Street: Fannie and Freddie in conservatorship, investment banks in the tank, AIG nationalized. Thanks for sending us your new trillion-dollar bailout.

We on Wall Street feel somewhat compelled to take at least some responsibility. We used excessive leverage, failed to maintain adequate capital, engaged in reckless speculation, created new complex derivatives. We focused on short-term profits at the expense of sustainability. We not

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