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Forecast 2004


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Nokia raises guidance. NDX Futures up 9

Fleck shorted NOK two days ago.

 

Unfortunately, Fleck has been dead wrong about demand and channel stuffing in the PC and cell phone space.

 

These companies are reporting blowout numbers, apparently, there is an insatiable demand for new electronic stuff by the consumer.

 

The entire cell phone complex is on fire.

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That's more than a boner on gold this am. That's a serious Viagra overdose.

 

Damn.

Roger Arnold was rambling on yesterday about how today was to be the day when the new head of the ECB throws in the towel on old monetary policies and joins the reflationary competitive debasement party. B)

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Things are now really starting to get out of control to the upside.

 

Wild upside gaps in the telecommie space. QCOM, RFMD, ERICY headed towards the moon.

 

Yet another big upside gap on YHOO, now up 14 out of the last 15 trading days.

 

Big bids lifting the Large Breasted Wonders in the Pre-Market

 

Another $3.00 upside gap on SCHN. Its $8.00 opening gap down yesterday morning has been erased in 24 hours.

 

SUNW going wild, setting up on a Parabolic Run.

 

Heavy jamming in SIRI, XMSR

 

Even gold is getting a stiffie. Gold knows that hyperinflation is coming.

 

Bob "Mr. Clean" Froehlich is once again Foaming at the Mouth on CrapView.

 

But the most amazing is the Mad Cow Tester, now bidding $5.00 after being up 145% yesterday.

thanks Mark

 

I see silver refuses to give back any of the huge

gains over the last couple of weeks.

 

The dollar is doing what it does best DOWN again.

Being long the dollar is like being short the stock market

 

The bond is showing a little weakness this morning

but who knows...I wont go there anymore.

 

Mark to market just keeps getting better!

Great posts again last night stoolies!

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believe you doubters need to come to terms with what gold/crb is forshadowing...

 

end of uncle buck's supremacy, 80 on deck, 88 first... maybe.

 

but uncle buckies, cooked, stick a fornicate in him.

 

one day he'll catch some solid terrra firma for a piece, but that time

is a long ways off. may/june... maybe...

 

gold is fine. au/euro ratio getting interesting again.

 

gold advisors still screwing their sheeple... par for course, most of them

don't get what's up either.

 

220's on HUI? possible, but it's the buy of yer lifetime.

 

still looking for this trading range to expand to 400's, with another

strong consolidation in the low to mid 300s.

 

give it a week or two, you'll begin to believe in the immense power built

underneath.

 

it's coming... and the cartel be damned, hong kong owns gold now, they

decide the price, not the blomex.

 

don't be whipsawed out of your shares, hold a core, the more folks

babbling on about a correction that's overdue, the higher we'll go.

 

choose to believe or not, merely my opinion, but my money's 65%

on the real money.

 

good trading.

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Fleck shorted NOK two days ago.

 

Unfortunately, Fleck has been dead wrong about demand and channel stuffing in the PC and cell phone space.

 

These companies are reporting blowout numbers, apparently, there is an insatiable demand for new electronic stuff by the consumer.

 

The entire cell phone complex is on fire.

Did you say on fire?

 

Just like 1999 -2000

 

After Fire comes burnout CRASH :lol:

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I'm a little late this morning, just having got back from driving children to school.

 

I also can't get into the website of the Office of Workforce Security, so Reuters' report will have to do instead:

 

First-time initial claims for jobless aid rose to 353,000 in the week ended Jan. 3, up from an unrevised 339,000 in the previous week, the Labor Department (news - web sites) said. Wall Street economists polled by Reuters had expected claims to rise to 350,000.

 

The more widely watched four-week moving average, a better gauge of labor market trends because it irons out weekly fluctuations, fell 5,500 to 350,250. That was the lowest in nearly three years, since the moving average dropped to 345,250 in the week ended Feb. 3, 2001.

 

The number of people continuing to draw a week of benefits dropped by 12,000 to 3.27 million in the week ended Dec. 27, the latest week for which data are available. The four-week moving average of that barometer fell to its lowest since Sept. 22, 2001.

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