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[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

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Prieur’s readings (October 24, 2009)

Prieur du Plessis (October 24th, 2009) Writes:

This post provides links to a number of interesting articles I have read over the past few days that you may also enjoy.

• Gillian Tett (Financial Times): Rally fuelled by cheap money brings a sense of foreboding, October 22, 2009. It is crystal clear that the longer that money remains ultra cheap, the more traders will have an incentive to gamble (particularly if they privately suspect that today’s boom will be short-lived and want to score big over the next year). Somehow all this feels horribly familiar; I just hope that my sense of foreboding turns out to be wrong.

• Doug Kass (TheStreet.com): The earnings season racket, October 21, 2009. If end demand doesn’t pick up (and pick up quickly), the 2010 earnings outlook for many industries (such as semiconductors and other beneficiaries of restocking) will be in jeopardy, as

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Strayer Education – Growth And Income – Zacks Rank Buy

Alex Kolb (October 8th, 2009) Writes:
Strayer Education Inc. (STRA) surged a few weeks ago in response to a government report. The company has done well maintaining the higher share price and is seeing bullish Zacks Consensus Estimates ahead of reporting later this month.

Company Description

Strayer Education provides higher education for working adults, offering undergraduate and graduate degree programs in business administration, accounting, information technology, education, health care and public administration to approximately 46,000 working adult students at 71 campuses in 15 states and Washington, D.C. and worldwide via the Internet.

Bullish Projections and a Share Price Surge

The company continues to see higher earnings forecasts. The current full-year Zacks Consensus Estimate of $7.50 per share was increased from the 3 months-ago level of $7.27.

For 2010, the Zacks Consensus Estimate stands at $9.25 per share, up from the $8.88 over the past 3 months.

In the second-quarter report, Strayer noted that solid summer enrollment

...

Stock Market News for September 22, 2009 – Market News

Zacks Market Commentaries (September 22nd, 2009) Writes:

U.S. stocks ended the day mixed as concerns grew that a six-month old rally has gone ahead of any economic recovery.  A drop in crude prices on global demand concerns sent energy shares lower.  Also, investors appeared jittery ahead of the two-day policy meet and Friday's key post of August durable goods, and refrained from adding to their holdings.  Defensive areas like healthcare rose.  Technology shares also found some favor with investors after Dell announced plans to acquire Perot Systems in a $3.9 billion deal.

This morning’s stock futures indicate Wall Street is headed for a higher opening, helped by a rally in global stocks.  Ahead of the market’s open, Dow Jones industrial average futures rose 48, or 0.5%, to 9,766.  Standard & Poor's 500 index futures were up 6.20, or 0.6%, to 1,066.60, while Nasdaq 100 index futures rose 10.75, or 0.6%, to 1,738.50.  Ahead of the FOMC

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Bond Bubble’s Back, USPS in Trouble, Healthcare Tech, Short the Euro and More!

Contrarian Profits (July 31st, 2009) Writes:

Bond bubble remerges… details behind the gov’s latest debt struggle… The slow demise of snail mail… USPS forecasts record losses… Customized drugs: Patrick Cox on a breakthrough set to revolutionize health care… Bill Jenkins with another sign the euro is overvalued… his price targets below…

Just when you thought the bond bubble was being saved for another day…

The government managed to auction $39 billion worth of 5-year debt yesterday… barely. Wednesday’s debt sale drew a bid-to-cover ratio of 1.92, the lowest investor demand since September 2008. Low demand forced Uncle Sam to jack up interest rates at the last minute in two separate bond auctions this week — yesterday’s sale and Tuesday’s $42 billion auction of 2-year notes.

So what’s an indebted government to do? Manipulate the market, of course. Bond yields have given back yesterday’s spike partly thanks to the Federal Reserve, which bought $3

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The Death of Snail Mail

Contrarian Profits (July 30th, 2009) Writes:

The U.S. Postal Service is on track for a record $7 billion deficit this year. That’s more than double last year’s loss.

Postmaster General John Potter bumped up his previous projection by a billion bucks yesterday, citing the growing expenses of six-day delivery and employee retirement/health care plans. Potter and his team are scrambling to cut costs left and right — from a yearlong hiring freeze to early retirement offers to branch closures. But we wonder… will it even matter?

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The Government Accountability Office recently labeled the USPS a “high risk” federal program, and while we’re hard-pressed to think of any risk-free government program, we’re inclined to agree.

The Postal Service is facing a perfect storm of business risk: The business is already loaded up with debt. Minimum wage and benefit costs are rising while revenues are

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Audit the Fed, China’s New No. 1, Short Canada? and More!

Contrarian Profits (July 9th, 2009) Writes:

Idiocracy in action: Congress blocks bill to audit the Fed… No surprise: American loan defaults hit record… Surprise: Could Canadians be next? China takes another “World’s No. 1” from U.S. … Dan Denning, Byron King on recent triumph and tragedy in the oil patch…

Great news: The Federal Reserve will retain its right to operate in secrecy.

“Thank God for Rule 16!”

Late yesterday, the Senate majority put the kibosh on a last-hour provision in the 2010 spending bill that would audit the Fed. Not because it’s a bad idea… but because of the arcane Rule 16, which prohibits policy legislation from being added to spending bills. (The kind of “rule” that’s only evoked when the majority gets uncomfortable.)

“The Federal Reserve will create and disburse trillions of dollars in response to our current financial crisis,” said Sen. Jim DeMint, who spearheaded

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Global Economics On Tilt – How To Protect Your Assets

Contrarian Profits (May 7th, 2009) Writes:

Gold isn’t going to $2,000 an ounce. Before you gag on your coffee or suffer chest pains, allow me to explain.

We’re about eight years into the bull market, and gold has breached the $1,000 level twice and has spent weeks trading above the old high of $850. Some observers are now saying that gold’s pretty much had its day and that once the recession is over, it will retreat for good.

However, the four-digit gold price we’ve seen so far is with no price inflation to speak of, no effects of the atrocious increase in the money supply, and despite a rising dollar. What happens to gold when each of those pictures gets turned upside down – high inflation, excess cash jolting the economy, and a falling dollar? After all, gold’s performance to date has been powered only by general anxiety, not by any visible erosion in the dollar’s value.

I decided

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Political Stupidity

The Energy Report (June 19th, 2008) Writes:

Source: David Galland, Casey Research  06/19/2008
A few weeks ago we witnessed a political act of such unimaginable stupidity, it is hard to not choke at the mention of it.

A cursory review of the details is worth a minute of your time. This compliments of The Oil & Gas Journal…

WASHINGTON, DC, May 20 — The US House passed, by a vote of 324 to 84, a bill that would create a new oil antitrust task force within the Department of Justice. Supporters of HR 6074, which also would give DOJ authority to sue foreign oil cartels for violating US antitrust laws, included 103 Republicans, according to its sponsor Rep. Steve Kagen (D-Wis.).

“Until we finally have an energy policy other than drill-and-burn, this bill will begin to set things right for the American people. We cannot drill or grow our way out of this energy crisis. We must begin to think …

Boeing’s™ Air Force Petition Sustained, Back in Running for $35 Billion Contract

Money Morning (June 18th, 2008) Writes:
By Mike Caggeso Associate Editor The Government Accountability Office backed The Boeing Co.’s (BA) petition that the U.S. Air Force altered the auction for a $35 billion aerial-tanker contract - a bid that went to rivals Northrop Grumman Corp. (NOC), and in turn, helped push Boeing’s stock down more than 11%. Boeing filed the complaint in early March, claiming that the Air Force misled the company and modified its specifications to accommodate models made by Northrop and Airbus S.A.S. The GAO agreed. “The Air Force conducted misleading and unequal discussions with Boeing by informing Boeing that it had fully satisfied a key performance parameter objective relating to operational utility, but later determined that Boeing had only partially met this objective,” according to the GAO, as reported by MarketWatch. Story continues below…...

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