silverffox52 @ 23:47 pm

did not look at the chart .gold has a tendency to go up today up 5 dollars ,10% then it has a tendency to go down the next week or so, . wanted to invest in gold .so sold the stock Gold . the profit was 125% .at 15% tax . if it goes up well leave some on the table for the others .. just sold at market ..

many times .. in my style i will follow a stock for a while glance at a chart make sure it is in my buying range then buy at market ..do my diligence i do not set any points to buy,, my style i could care less about a few lousy points.. when i sell i want to sell when i buy i want to buy.. and once again could care less if i miss by a penny or two,,

i do not short stock ieither i consider it immoral to sell something that is not mine.. if so let me sell a car or how about a house i could have sold the house short a year or two ago,, with out any ones knowledge ,, lol get full price use at my convience then replace it with one that is a few years old .. neat ,,,

Ment……..I must say……

You have a word with ways……..when you want to.

Ment

Your post of early today.  I read it wrong.

Ment

If you don’t mind stating —I would like to know what you saw in the chart of “Gold” to take a profit at this time.

Ment.

That’s a relief.  I was beginning to think you were part of the cabal.

Margaret2 @ 23:33 pm on July 31

nope not selling real… where have you read that i am getting out of bullion just the opposite .. i have said load the manure wagon, sold the stock named gold ,,, will buy sat morning ..some gold and silver

went back over the posting a whole page is missing .. clarifying the sell gold issue a message from samb my reply

Ment 23:12

Selling your bullion?  This is a surprise. You have waited this long, why now?  What have you heard that the rest of us haven’t?

another inflation opinion

www.safehaven.com/article-10880.htm

with pretty charts ..

tfh @ 23:03 pm

thanks .. still have plenty of gold/silver stocks .. will sell down between now and hui 1250 ..

then out of stocks .. and all realtionships, and contracts will be severed between the dumpster and the financial world .. except for some accounts in washington federal savings and loan the no ! rated bank in america for safety

that’s the plan and sticking with it..

may come in with play money for the final run to 4000 or so on the hui .. after the long consoldation is over,,

ment

you can buy another stock with those proceeds as long as you do not sell that lot before the settlement date of the original sale which would be tuesday. but you already knew that. howdy from the garden state.

mogambo

news.goldseek.com/RichardDaughty/1217570520.php

So if inflation is actually running at 12.6%, the interest paid on savings should be 15.6%? Even more sweet!

This prompted me to do a little research, and I found that in the whole universe there are only three species of organism where the majority of the population do not comprehend the horrific implications of inflation that is more than 3%, which is recognized everywhere in the cosmos as the cutoff between, “Mommy, I am scared!” and “Mommy, something big and ugly ate daddy, and it is looking at us and licking its lips!”

But since I don’t want to get into a big argument about the relative stupidity of Earth creatures versus, for instance, the Glarth species on Remulac V, which are actually a kind of slug, but which has a gold standard for their money and thus they keep their money supplies strictly controlled.

Instead, I want to look at how, with an “official rate of inflation” of 5%, the bank money market rate is 0.72%, a one-year certificate of deposit pays 2.25%, while a five year certificate of deposit pays 3.39%! Hell, the 30-year T-bond barely yields 4.6%! Hahaha! 8% on bank savings? In our dreams!

Mr. Hutchinson continues ominously, “The overall lesson is as usual bearish. Almost all the world has abandoned proper anti-inflationary discipline and is destined to suffer a period of high inflation and recession in the coming years.”

For mining engineers and hardrock geologists in the Goldtent audience,

in the photo posted at 22:13, note the sloping fracture plane of the rock slabs that hang above the highway and railway- the fracture plane slopes down to the infrastructure below.  From ground level, north-south views of the remaining rock face (not posted at 22:13) , one can see significant overhang of the rock slabs that did not come down with this particular slide, so rehabilitation of the highway and railway is not just a matter of removing rock rubble that has now fallen, but also a matter of blasting off and then removing several other overhanging slabs that are going to come down someday if they are not partially removed now in the present clean-up of this massive rockfall.    Equiz.

Let them eat cake

(07-31) 18:12 PDT Washington — For weeks, pressure has been mounting in Congress to approve more domestic oil drilling, but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has held the line, using her power to block a vote on offshore drilling.

President Bush has made almost daily calls for Democratic leaders to take action. House GOP leaders, citing a new poll showing that a slim majority of Californians now favor offshore drilling, issued a release today saying “even (Pelosi’s) own California neighbors oppose her efforts to block new drilling far off American coasts.” GOP lawmakers are so disgruntled they’re urging Bush to deny Congress its August break by calling a special session on energy.

Even some Democrats are getting antsy, fearing the party’s stance could hurt in the fall elections. But Pelosi, who has opposed offshore drilling throughout her two decades in Congress, insists opening new areas to drilling won’t lower gas prices in the short-term. She believes a vote would only help the GOP blame Democrats for high gas prices.

http://tinyurl.com/5wbmtn

Moggy, to paraphrase the heading of your 21:30 posting,

 below is a link that has a photo of  ”A place NOT to hatch your dreams”.  This slide, along a highway linking Vancouver to Whistler, site of the 2010 Winter Olympics, is one of many slides that occur from time to time along this rugged terrain.

Ironically, Augirl and I had some Goldtent discussion not too long ago about the prospect of a field trip to a historical  mining site of interest that is near the rockslide pictured below if there was ever a meeting of Goldtenters in Vancouver.  (Note to any Goldtenters who had dreams of a field trip out of a Vancouver meeting - come with hard hats, and make sure you have your personal affairs in order ahead of time and say good bye to loved ones too before you set out north from Vancouver towards Whistler).

Cheers, on not an entirely cheery geological stability subject.  Equiz.

http://tinyurl.com/6qxyst

ment17 As POG starts edging down to again test somewhere

just under $900 U.S. dollars per ounce, as it did momentarily a couple of days ago, even if the price of oil is still showing reluctance to drop down to $100 U.S. dollars per barrel, do you think it’s time yet for me to pounce now on purchase of some more physical silver?  Alternatively, do you think I should wait for POG to more forcefully show a price below  $900 and oil to show a price just under $100 per barrel before I load up on some more silver?

While I wait for the market to let the above scenario unfold for me so that we can pick up some silver at a good price, I decided for this interim waiting period to today  pick up some shares of SGR.X, on a tip I got from a friend on Goldtent.  Cheers.  equiz.

Moggy

My way of thinking must be changing. I look at that picture and I all I can see is a big shower for bathing. Haaaaaa
All is well..Leuko is getting me even more seeds. Sinbad and I are going to look at a large tract of farmable land Wed. R.N.O saw a little of it on his last trip. Bankers want sand on some projects..heck we may tell Caymens we want more money …well let’s wait and see before I get goofy here.
Wanka…..I snuck in a Dec. Gold here behind yer back…. ooopps ,water board meeting downstairs,I waant to talk to someone..Love ya kid

Survival Food

The first week of May I paid $18.69 for this…now the cost is $34.25…in less than three months:

http://www.ldscatalog.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10151&storeId=10151&productId=10151&langId=-1

Moggy

Overseas…….

ASIA MARKETS

Tokyo stocks drop on bank earnings, U.S. concerns……

HONG KONG (MarketWatch) — Asian markets declined early Friday, with Japanese banks such as Mizuho Financial Group and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group falling sharply a day after they reported weak quarterly performance.

Other stocks in Tokyo, as well as the rest of the region, were also weighed down after weak economic data dragged on Wall Street overnight.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Average dropped 1.3% to 13,209.42, while the broader Topix index gave up 1.5% to 1,283.99.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 shed 0.9% to 4,931.50 and South Korea’s Kospi lost 0.9% to 1,581.14, while New Zealand’s NZX 50 index gave up 0.6% to 3,317.34.

- complete -> tinyurl.com/5rfem7

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Asia/Pacific Region tonight…….

finance.yahoo.com/intlindices?e=asia

The AMERICAS earlier today…….

finance.yahoo.com/intlindices?e=americas

….and before that in EUROPE

finance.yahoo.com/intlindices?e=europe

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Dow Jones World Stock Index

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JBI

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A Place To Hatch Your Dreams

Upper Mesa Falls

“Long-term trend is now down” on the SM….Russell

Richard Russell has turned bearish on major trend…….

ANNANDALE, Va. (MarketWatch) — Richard Russell celebrated his 84th birthday last week, but he finds little to celebrate in the stock market’s recent action.

Russell is the editor of Dow Theory Letters, a newsletter he has been writing continuously since 1958. That makes him the granddaddy of the investment newsletter arena; no other current investment newsletter editor has been publishing for as long and most don’t even come close. In fact, many of today’s investment advisers weren’t even born when he inaugurated his letter.

I pay attention to what Russell is saying for the simple reason that his long-term record is quite good. Consider the performance of a hypothetical portfolio that switched between the stock market and cash according to Russell’s grading of the stock market’s major trend, as opposed to his grading of the shorter-term trend, where his record hasn’t been as good. Over the past 28 years, this portfolio is tied for first place on a risk-adjusted basis among the market-timing newsletters tracked by the Hulbert Financial Digest.

Paying attention to Russell nevertheless baffles many, who find the day-to-day musings on his Website to be often inconsistent, if not outright contradictory. But just as a Freudian analyst can eventually find coherence in the free-associated ramblings of a client, devoted Russell followers claim they are able to make sense of what he writes.

Russell himself acknowledged that earlier this week in response to a subscriber who complained that Russell’s musings were “all Greek” to him and that he “didn’t understand” what Russell was trying to say.

Russell’s response: “I don’t expect a new subscriber to take it all in and understand it all on the first reading or even in the first few months of readings. The stock market and its ‘language’ is a 60-year learning experience for me, and how in the world can anyone absorb it all in one or 10 or 20 readings … [New subscribers need to] have patience, to read the sites and ‘work on it’ for three or four months or preferably for a year, and by that time a lot of what I’m writing and a lot of chart-reading should make sense.”

Though I have been reading Russell’s writings for more than 28 years, I must confess that I still have trouble integrating all of what Russell says into a coherent narrative. But, as best as I can interpret, Russell recently turned bearish on the stock market’s long-term trend.

I base my interpretation on an analysis Russell conducted a couple of days ago of a chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average back to 1982, some 26 years ago. On that chart, he drew a trendline that connected the low of the stock market in August of that year to the low of the 2000-2002 bear market, which occurred in October 2002.

What Russell found: “As you can see, the long-term trendline has been violated [by the stock market’s recent action]. That means that the rate-of-growth in the Dow has been reversed. Until proven otherwise, the long-term trend of the Dow is now down.”

Russell goes on to address those who try to wriggle out from underneath the force of this bearish conclusion by dismissing the Dow as representing just 30 stocks. “Let’s take the S&P Composite, which includes 500 large-cap stocks. Same thing here, the long rising trendline has been violated.”

To be sure, not all of Russell’s recent musings have been this apocalyptic. For example, he also writes that it is at least potentially bullish, from a Dow Theory point of view, that the Dow Jones Transportation Average in July did not come close to breaking its lows from earlier in the year, even as the Dow Industrials did sink to new lows.

Nevertheless, on several occasions in recent years Russell has chosen to completely ignore the signals that he previously had said the Dow Theory was about to issue or, alternately, he has interpreted those signals as having only minor significance. I think the same will prove to be the case for Russell this time around, given how unambiguously and boldly he stated that “until proven otherwise, the long-term trend of the Dow is now down.”

Undoubtedly, however, Russell followers will endlessly debate my interpretation, just as they will his many other pronouncements.

But, hopefully, despite being 84, Russell will continue to provide those followers with many more years of musings to argue about.

By Mark Hulbert
MarketWatch
Last update: 9:19 p.m. EDT
July 31, 2008

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JBI

21,926,607 . . . . . . . . . . . bald7.gif

OT info re Mountain House freeze-dried food—

I received this email today from Mountain House:

Mountain House

Updated: 7/31/2008Dear Valued Customers:

This is an update on Oregon Freeze Dry’s #10 can situation. Because sales remain high, we continue to be unable to meet all #10 can needs. OFD is continuing to allocate as much production capacity as possible to this market segment, but we must maintain capacity for our other market segments as well.

We are able to meet demand for Mountain House pouches and most of these products are available for purchase on our website. For a list of locations where you can purchase #10 cans, which should enable you to obtain product from reputable dealers NOW, or at least in the very near future…click hereWe also want to again clarify inaccurate information we’ve seen on the Internet. This situation is not due to sales to the government domestically or in Iraq. The reason for this decision is solely due to an unprecedented sales spike in #10 cans sales.

We expect this situation to be necessary into 2009. We will update this information as soon as we know more. We apologize for this inconvenience and appreciate your patience. We sincerely hope you will continue to be Mountain House customers in the future.

Sincerely,

OREGON FREEZE DRY INC.
CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPARTMENT
1-800-547-0244

TED BUTLER COMMENTARY

www.investmentrarities.com/07-28-08.html
“I have taken your time in explaining what has occurred in oil, not because it may have confirmed what I had written in a previous article, but because I think it is important to fully understand what has transpired. Additionally, I believe it has special relevance for silver investors. There is a remarkable similarity to what has just occurred in oil to what will occur in silver.”

I guess it will not show up on Freddie’s bad loans for 300 days either - CROOKS!

The decision to eliminate timeline compensation, however, was only part of a much broader program change rolled out by Freddie; the mortgage finance giant also said that it was increasing its allowable foreclosure timeline in 21 states to a whopping 300 days from last of date payment, and 150 days from initiation of foreclosure, effective on Friday.

http://www.housingwire.com/2008/07/31/freddie-mac-pushes-out-foreclosure-timelines/

North @ 19:34 pm

That great news for Canadian Zinc.  If they can get all their permits it’s going to be a fine operation.  I imagine the shareholders are getting a little antsy by this time.  :-)

USDA Zone 5b

TQ and other gardening lovers…..we have had a Yukka plant for almost 8 years in our yard to give our zone 5b a little tropical diversification and to our surprise this year we had a tremendous bloom for the first time. We use lots of “black gold”……so perhaps its a good omen???

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winedoc