ISHARES GSCI CMDTY (GSG)
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- Don't Write off the Gold and Commodities Bull Run [view article]
- The Professor Of Commodities: Interview with James Doran (Part II) [view article]
- How to Invest Like Yale's David Swensen [view article]
- Stocks vs. Commodities: Which is a Better Investment? [view article]
- Bespoke's Commodity Snapshot (9/22/08) [view article]
- Yawning from the Market Sidelines, ETFs in Hand [view article]
- Asset Class Investing: A Strategy For Both Bull and Bear Markets [view article]
- A Rundown of Broad Commodities Indexes [view article]
- The Next Commodities Boom: Around the Corner? [view article]
- The Global Food Crisis and Gold’s Valuable Role [view article]
- Don't Get Caught in the Dot Commodity Bubble [view article]
- Agricultural Commodities: Beware the Harvest Moon Rising [view article]
Recent GSG Articles
- The Professor Of Commodities: Interview with James Doran (Part II)
- The Professor Of Commodities: Interview with James Doran (Part I)
- Stocks vs. Commodities: Which is a Better Investment?
- Chance Carson on Commodity ETFs and ETNs
- Bespoke's Commodity Snapshot (9/22/08)
- Yawning from the Market Sidelines, ETFs in Hand
- Weekly Commodities Outlook: Sept. 15 - 19
- The Benefit of Higher Commodities
- Agricultural Commodities: Beware the Harvest Moon Rising
- When Fundamentals Don't Pay
- Full List of Articles »
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Are We at the Bottom Yet? [view article]
A 40% haircut from where? Oil will be down 40% from its peak in the $93-5 area.However, I agree totally with the gist. Nickel has already been down 40% from its peak, ditto rice. Reply
Stagflation or Deflation? [view article]
This article should be required reading for every high school and university student. ReplyAre We at the Bottom Yet? [view article]
I think Mr. Roxburgh is long this market and he is hoping this article will convince the rest of us to jump right in. I think we are still at the top of the market and with energy prices at this level equities are going to need a 40% haircut before they start to make any since. ReplyStagflation or Deflation? [view article]
Excellent article...again...Jame... As an Authority once said, "he who has ears to hear, let him hear." There will always be those who refuse to hear, or hear and refuse to think, or hear and think and refuse to believe what they're hearing. But the evidence is so overwhelming as to be ludicrous...denying it is denying the elephant in the living room, despite the fact that one is stepping in his latest pie...and what the heck is that broom thing that keeps hitting me in the face?Despite what our fraudulent fiat system and its rulers are doing to most Americans, and actually to the working citizens of nearly ALL countries, most will choose to believe the lies, the spin, the Goldilocks fantasy tale continually spun out to a gullible public by those who have become sickenly rich from it. WAKE UP!!!!! You are in the final chapters of the Fall of the American Empire, and you don't even know it!!!!
Philman, I agree with most of what you say, except that you are absolutely wrong about the fact that we are no longer on a gold standard. That is a lie TPTB want you to believe. We are and always HAVE been on the gold standard. If not, the only value gold would have would be the value industry gave to it for its various industrial applications, or that jewelers gave it...and it's valued WAY above that. Gold is and has been money for millenia.
The fraud of fiat currency is not new...it has been perpetrated on its people by many govts. And the outcome has ALWAYS been the same...collapse of the paper and return to some sort of a gold standard. But we are now in the worst financial / monetary crisis in the history of the world for the simple reason that the fiat fraud is so widespread, involving as it does essentially the whole world, being perpetrated for decades and even centuries now by the banker family of all bankers, the Rothschilds, who still control from ShadowLand nearly 1/2 of the world's wealth, and with that wealth its governments. As Nathan Mayer Rothschild boasted in 1815--""I care not what puppet is placed upon the throne of England to rule the Empire on which the sun never sets. The man who controls Britain's money supply controls the British Empire, and I control the British money supply."
Just as an aside, before we attacked Iraq, there were only 7 countries in the world w/o a Rothschild family controlled central bank--Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, Cuba, and Libya. Now there are only five: Iran, North Korea, Sudan, Cuba, and Libya. jt Reply
Are We at the Bottom Yet? [view article]
What a hollow article. ReplyCost of Higher Commodities [view article]
Nice graphic.Can I borrow it?
Reply
Are We at the Bottom Yet? [view article]
well,well.is america finally starting to wake up? it may be too late folks.the american jerk is now recognized by most of the world.of course their greed made them jerks also as they hold our valueless toilet paper.all under the conservative adm.losing our liberties,our dollar value & our way. ReplyCost of Higher Commodities [view article]
As I said before, you men are men of few words...However, your statistic above about the daily cost of commodities seems ludicrous. Commodoties have fallen. Yeah, we know that. But to say that the daily increase in cost of commodoties have fallen from $4.77 to 36 CENTS per person is UNBELIEVABLE. You dudes are surely gullible. Surely, you must have taken this info from the massive propaganda/fraud machine that is pouring out of the U.S. Government Office of Misinformation.
Yeah commodities have fallen, but to think the increase in commodities has fallen from $4.77 to 36 cents is foolish.
Try disseminating some intelligent information boys. And maybe something a little more subsantive.
Reply
Cost of Higher Commodities [view article]
The graph has the wrong scale on the left.The amount mentioned is per capita, not per family and only includes some of the market basket.
Reply
Capital
Cost of Higher Commodities [view article]
The really good news for the market is that the avg cost has dramatically dropped from Q2. The market is basically priced at those levels. The news from FDX speaks to that on a business level. Already seeing the reduced costs flowing to the bottom line. ReplyCost of Higher Commodities [view article]
The point above was wages have not kept up with inflation, not even close. ReplyCost of Higher Commodities [view article]
So it's good news to the average joe he/she is only paying an extra $1,800 per year now? My household budget for food and energy alone increased $4,200 annual this year (so far) and we didn't add more steaks or turn up the thermostat, that is for sure. Replying
Cost of Higher Commodities [view article]
sadly that the prices are sticky and no significant transfer will go to the consumers, that can lead to a good retailers performance! Replys
Stagflation or Deflation? [view article]
Absolutely stunning article. Kudos my friend. ReplyAre We at the Bottom Yet? [view article]
The credit crisis has roots in usury. Reply