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Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know Newsby SA Editor Rachael Granby- Bank trio becomes duo. Wells Fargo (WFC) will become the largest U.S. bank by branches with its bid for Wachovia (WB), after Citigroup (C) withdrew from compromise negotiations late yesterday on concerns about the quality of some of Wachovia's assets. Wells Fargo, with a bid valued at $11.4B, expects the purchase to be completed by the end of the year, and denies it will have to absorb assets shakier than originally thought.
- Government considers next steps. As the financial crisis continues to worsen, the U.S. government is considering two dramatic steps to turn around, or at least slow, the damage: guaranteeing billions of dollars in bank debt and temporarily insuring all U.S. bank deposits. The moves, which would mark the government's most extensive intervention to date, are in discussion stages only.
- Credit stays frozen. As frozen credit markets refuse to thaw, the cost of default protection on corporate bonds reaches new global records amid investor concerns the credit crisis will trigger corporate failures as companies struggle to finance their businesses. Interbank lending remains limited, and borrowing from the Fed's expanded discount window continued its trend of setting new highs every week, as the total daily average rose to $420.2B vs. $367.8B last week.
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Oil Price- Oil Below $75: Increased Chance of OPEC Production Cuts by Money Morning
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- Jim Cramer's Picks -SampleBetter Choices - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/15/08)by SA Editor Rachael GranbyStocks discussed in the lightning round session of Jim Cramers Mad Money TV program,
Wednesday, October 15.Bullish Calls:Continental Resources (CLR) -- "This is a remarkable decline. All of the high quality ones are down so much, I can't go against it. This is where you pull the trigger.
3M (MMM) -- The moment this stock starts yielding 5%, I'm a buyer. Until then, keep your powder dry.Bearish Calls:Computer Sciences (CSC) -- This is a company that was going to be bought, but they passed up the chance. Now I don't want to buy it."Email continues...
Annaly Mortgage (NLY) -- I think this is a business model that needs to borrow money. Definitively do not buy."
Northrop Grumman (NOC) -- You can't own the defense stocks right now. If I had to own one, I'd look at Lockheed Martin (LMT) with its good dividend. - Stocks & Sectors -SampleSeeking Alpha - Stocks & SectorsInternet
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Housing & Real Estate- Too Early To Buy Homebuilders ETF by Larry MacDonald
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Latest Comments16 Comments
China: What Comes After the Olympics?
Can I help answer any more questions on China's mobile networks? Apologies as I did not mean to be rude.
Jason
Emerging Markets Ready to Re-emerge - Barron's
China: What Comes After the Olympics?
I live in Beijing.
Hedge Fund Manager's Notebook: Lehman, Korea, and 3 Uranium Plays
Anyone want to go in half on a used penis?
Potash Corp. Earns $2.82, a 220% Increase
You Can't Solve the World's Problems with Your Portfolio
Chart of the Day: Anatomy of a Bear Market
Q1 Earnings 'Triple Plays'
Chinese Revaluation: Be Careful What You Wish For
SunPower Buy Opportunity?
Appreciate your continuous comments on this sector on this site. Your appear well researched and clearly state your ideas - and your positions.
Thanks.
Choosing the Best Industry ETFs
Also, if I wanted large cap oil service company exposure, I would just buy SLB, BHI and HAL directly. Why choose an oil service ETF to get these guys?
I guess I don't get it.
China Stocks: April Was Kind
I appreciate your comments but I have a few questions
-if the US and Europe are in recession, won't that free up FDI to go where there is growth, ie China?
- 20% exports can easily be sucked up into domestic China or re-routed to other growing Asian economies. This might also have the effect of reducing domestic Chinese inflation as well
-The US economy is growing at <1% and companies are still growing. Good companies are growing at significantly better than 10%. China's economy is is growing at >10%, what type of growth rate would you expect is reasonable for Chinese companies serving a domestic China consumer (BIDU, SOHU, LFC, COGO, CTRP, CHL, FMCN, EDU, etc)?
- Infinity is a very long time, but can't good companies grow at 10% for a very long time? Or could they at least grow long enough to make good investments for long term investors not to mention short term traders?
- If safety is your objective, go to TIPS
I am not trying to be flippant, but where else can you find compelling growth opportunities in real companies serving a strong growth environment?
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News
People whining while drive hummers and wishing oil prices go back to $20 bbls.
People buying bottled water for $5 and $4 cups of coffee.
People shut off drilling in areas based on 1970's era technology for environmental protection.
People arguing out one side of their mouth about free markets, yet wanting windfall taxes on petro companies and gov't intervention in oil markets.
Give it a rest. Accept that your choices have consequences.
Walk or Ride a Bike.
But please just stop whining.
Opening Foreign Brokerage Accounts Is a Silly Idea
Speculators are stupid enough to lose large amounts of money in the US and are fully capable of losing that money abroad.
Investors can make money all across the globe and just because they aren't in the 'investment community' doesn't mean they aren't capable of discerning information that gives them an insight to exploit and profit from.
The difference these days is they can invest and profit without middle men who profit whether the investor wins or loses.
IMO, seems like the usual Wall St. arrogance.
Profiting from Apache Corp.: Enjoy the Ride, Utilize Trailing Stops
The problem with Apache these past two years was that it historically has been a deal making company and very good at it. This comes from being founded in the 50's by bankers looking for tax shelters and finding there was actual money in the oil business. They would take sub-economic properties from the big guys (Shell and especially BP) and then monetize the reserves better. With oil prices high and valuations very high, they couldn't make these kinds of deals anymore and wisely had the financial discipline to not overpay. In fact, they sold some properties at great prices (China unit sold to Roc Oil). They were even castigated for not making deals by these same analysts.
With nat gas prices high, the stock is moving along with its peers, but I would argue its peer group is not really just the GOM guys and this growth in stock is overdue and justified.
Thanks for the article.