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  • Millicom Posts Decent Numbers, but Why Does the Stock Drop? [View article]
    Millicom is highly undervalued, has low debt, and a great and growing business. When people decide to like stocks again Millicom will quickly be 100 a share again. A great place to parjk money and wait. This, along with Alcoa, are my two favorite stocks right now. Sure fire winners. Just be patient.
    Nov 27 02:08 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Interview with Nalco Holding Company  [View article]
    This company has far too much debt with maturities coming due soon. It will also be hurt by the falling consumption of oil.
    Get out.
    Dec 25 00:14 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Black Friday Traffic Can Be Misleading  [View article]
    Markos Kaminis, the "Journalist" who wrote this article has all the talent of a high school senior trying to follow through the guidlines on a journalism assignment. Yes, he's provided a thesis and grindingly followed it through, but his resposibilities as a real world financial reporter have been trashed. Given all the recent trauma to our economy it speaks volumes that black Friday consumption has held up to the degree it has. Now that may not be as much of a grabber as "The Great Depression II" but it's this guy's etical responsibility to find the truth in the story, not the hype.
    Nov 30 17:35 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • High Yield Corporate Spreads Not Yet at Great Depression Levels [View article]
    Who's writing this stuff, Paulson? This is about as helpful as cracking open a fortune cookie. If you want to try to peer into the future of the financial markets just follow unemployment anbd the rate of inflation. If unemployment continues to rise stocks will go down and spreads on bonds will widen. Unemployment is rising. Inflation is weakening because unemployment is gaining. What you can debate is how much the October stock market crash will affect the psyche of the consumer. If the consumer has been injured emotionally by his loss of paper wealth but is still fundamentally solvent unemployment will rise to 7 or 8 percent, inflation will in turn be dampened and one day people will wake up and see a really cheap stock market and start to buy in -- sending it up and startng a repairative process. If the consumer, like many banks, is FUNDAMENTALLY insolvent due to excessive use of leverage from Greenspan's 1 percent interest rates and disdain for regulation, and since the banks can't lend, then we're in for a downward spiral much like the 1930's which all out government policy can only amerliorate -- not fix.
    Welcome too the consequence of Alan Greensopan's unparalled hubris and the learning disabled lack of policy of George W. Bush who was busy guarding mid east oil for the last 8 years. And while turning his back to all spects of domestic oversight, still couldn't find one very tall and distinct looking guy with renal failure -- Osama Bin Laden.
    Nov 16 14:53 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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