Żyla, żyletka, śmierć.Aniele usłysz moje myśli,które uciszyleś ...

On Apr 12, 4:38 pm, fatso <fatso60@ntlworld.comwrote:

Darius wrote:
|  Each research firm has a different objective for its ratings. The
| analysts at each firm who attain those objectives are designated as
| Power Analysts at Investars. At Investars you can view how these Power
| Analysts rate the stocks that you are interested in. In many cases you
| can also obtain free reports by these analysts.
| Rank       Analyst Name    Reports         Chart
| 1  Kim, Chris
| 2  Shope, William
| 3  Smith, Andrew

| wchodze na raporty i tam pusto

| http://www.investars.com/synopsis.asp

| I ciagle pisze ze napisza do Morgana o raport.

| Juz to jest lepsze, rating sektorowy, ktorym sie zajmuje.

| http://www.investars.com/strengths.asp

| Moc, sila .... (cos takiego bylo w reklamie w tv)

aby cos zmierzyc to musisz miec narzedzie miernicze i to narzedzie
odpowiednio skalibrowac. IIR jest w danym momencie najlepsza.
Kup troche akcji w poniedzialek. 750 szt po 17p= wyjdzie ci jakies 120
funtow=500 zl. Podbijesz cene i sprzedaz 3 x drozej

f


Investars to Netologic
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Netologic+Inc.&btnG=Google+Search

http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-431942/Small-business-stays-a...

Small business stays alive by outsourcing; Netologic relies on
programmers in Belarus; success abroad leading to growth at home.(New
York Economy)



Gary shilling też popiera nas deflacjonistów:
www.investorsinsight.com/blogs/john_mauldins_outside_the_box/archive/2009/03/16/long-term-outlook-slow-growth-and-deflation.aspx
we wrote two books on deflation in the late 1990s, Deflation: Why it's coming, whether it's good or bad, and how it will affect your investments, business and personal affairs (1998) and Deflation: How to survive and thrive in the coming wave of deflation (1999). As a result of rapid productivity growth, fewer and fewer man-hours are needed to produce goods and services. Estimates are that 65% of jobs lost in manufacturing between 2000 and 2006 were due to productivity growth with only 35% due to outsourcing overseas.

We've consistently predicted the good deflation of excess supply, but in our two Deflation books and subsequent reports, we said clearly that the bad deflation of deficient demand could occur



Job-cut announcements jump
U.S. companies set 172,000 job cuts last month, the highest in a year,
outplacement firm says.
November 4, 2003: 10:13 AM EST

NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - U.S. job-cut announcements rose in October to their
highest level in a year, according to a report Tuesday by an outplacement
firm that keeps track of job cuts.

U.S. businesses announced 171,874 job cuts in October, up 125 percent from
September's level of 76,506, according to Chicago-based Challenger, Gray &
Christmas. It was the greatest number of job cuts since 176,010 in October
2002.

Challenger CEO John Challenger noted that October has in recent years become
one of the worst job-cutting months of the year, since it's a time when many
companies are finalizing budgets and plans for the following year.

Nevertheless, Challenger said he doubted new jobs would be quick in coming.

"With factors like technology, outsourcing and consolidation working against
job creation, any job market rebound we see in the near future will be
relatively small," Challenger said.

Though unemployment is typically a lagging economic indicator, the U.S.
economy has enjoyed eight straight quarters of economic growth, including a
growth rate of 7.2 percent in the third quarter of 2003, without significant
job creation.

In fact, since the declared end of the latest recession, in November 2001,
more than a million payroll jobs have been lost, according to the Labor
Department.

Challenger's firm also surveyed about 50 human resources executives and
found that 78 percent don't expect to see a "significant" upturn in hiring
until the second quarter of 2004.

Eleven percent of those surveyed said the pick-up would be delayed until the
third or fourth quarter of 2004. Another 11 percent said there would be no
hiring rebound at all in 2004.

So far this year, there have been 1.04 million job-cut announcements, making
2003 the third straight year in which more than a million cuts have been
announced.

The automotive industry led the payroll-trimming, with 28,363 announced
cuts. Retail followed with 21,169 cuts, the long-suffering
telecommunications sector announced 21,030 cuts, the "industrial goods"
sector announced 17,484 cuts and the consumer products sector announced
12,077 cuts.

Among U.S. states, Michigan had the most job-cut announcements, with 31,105.
Texas followed with 21,033 cuts, New York had 20,486 cuts, New Jersey had
10,750 cuts and California had 10,719 cuts.

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