Wall Street cheers Chesapeake's (CHK +4%) appointment of Doug Lawler as CEO as a vote of confidence in CHK after building a strong reputation at Anadarko (APC). While hopeful the move will improve capital discipline and allocation decisions, Tudor Pickering cautions it will be a steep wall to climb "given the balance sheet leverage and need to materially sell assets into a weak [acquisitions] market." [View news story]
We're getting there,in short the pistols pushed her Majesty and She shoved and that genre has limped ever since."God Save The Queen" The Agent Booked the boys in Clan territory in the deep south.
I understand,like when punk was in vogue it always seemed to be taking off,aside that industry is savvy,and seems to have the quality of an institutional and generational investment.
E-Commerce China Dangdang (DANG) is upgraded by Morgan Stanley to an Overweight rating and assigned a price target of $6.50. DANG +5.1% premarket to $6.00. [View news story]
Directors at Chesapeake Energy (CHK) recruit Anadarko (APC) senior VP of international and deep-water operations Robert Douglas Lawler to succeed Aubrey McClendon as CEO, WSJ says. Lawler, a seasoned industry veteran, will join CHK on June 17 and says he "looks forward to generating value for shareholders in the years ahead." Besides plugging a multi-billion dollar gap between the company's spending and cash flow, Lawler's greatest challenge might be dealing with McClendon, whose contractual well investment rights mean he will likely be a part of the picture at CHK even if he isn't at the helm. [View news story]
Market recap: The familiar buy-the-dip trade was back in action, and a bigger than expected rise in consumer sentiment plus a gain in leading economic indicators bolstered the view that maybe the economy isn't so bad. All key S&P sectors were in the green, led by energy and industrials. The dollar index jumped to its highest since July 2010, one of the factors behind gold's seventh straight losing session. [View news story]
I know we all work hard and have held our market up.
Stocks at all-time highs aren't reeling in too many investors to the bullish side on the AAII Investor Sentiment Survey which shows a 2.3 point decline in bulls to 38.5% - just below the long-term average of 39%. Bears gained 1.9 points to 29.3%. also just under the long-term average. [View news story]
U.S. Supreme Court Rules Unanimously for PPL in Foreign Tax Case [View article]
Wall Street cheers Chesapeake's (CHK +4%) appointment of Doug Lawler as CEO as a vote of confidence in CHK after building a strong reputation at Anadarko (APC). While hopeful the move will improve capital discipline and allocation decisions, Tudor Pickering cautions it will be a steep wall to climb "given the balance sheet leverage and need to materially sell assets into a weak [acquisitions] market." [View news story]
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Shades Of 1999 [View article]
The Agent Booked the boys in Clan territory in the deep south.
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Shades Of 1999 [View article]
Shades Of 1999 [View article]
wasn't the best of investments.
Shades Of 1999 [View article]
E-Commerce China Dangdang (DANG) is upgraded by Morgan Stanley to an Overweight rating and assigned a price target of $6.50. DANG +5.1% premarket to $6.00. [View news story]
Shades Of 1999 [View article]
Directors at Chesapeake Energy (CHK) recruit Anadarko (APC) senior VP of international and deep-water operations Robert Douglas Lawler to succeed Aubrey McClendon as CEO, WSJ says. Lawler, a seasoned industry veteran, will join CHK on June 17 and says he "looks forward to generating value for shareholders in the years ahead." Besides plugging a multi-billion dollar gap between the company's spending and cash flow, Lawler's greatest challenge might be dealing with McClendon, whose contractual well investment rights mean he will likely be a part of the picture at CHK even if he isn't at the helm. [View news story]
Shades Of 1999 [View article]
Market recap: The familiar buy-the-dip trade was back in action, and a bigger than expected rise in consumer sentiment plus a gain in leading economic indicators bolstered the view that maybe the economy isn't so bad. All key S&P sectors were in the green, led by energy and industrials. The dollar index jumped to its highest since July 2010, one of the factors behind gold's seventh straight losing session. [View news story]
Stocks at all-time highs aren't reeling in too many investors to the bullish side on the AAII Investor Sentiment Survey which shows a 2.3 point decline in bulls to 38.5% - just below the long-term average of 39%. Bears gained 1.9 points to 29.3%. also just under the long-term average. [View news story]
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]