Archive for December 17th, 2009

The climbing U.S. dollar

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Sykes further distances himself from GunnAllen in latest deal

First, John Sykes this month quit the board of GunnAllen Holdings Inc., the company he owns, setting off a firestorm of speculation about the future of GunnAllen Financial Inc. Now, after Finra regulators have finished combing through GunnAllen’s books, Mr.

Gold and Oil: Why These Two Commodities Are Set to Blast Higher in 2010

Gold and Oil: Why These Two Commodities Are Set to Blast Higher in 2010 by Lee Lowell , Stock and Commodity Option Specialist Thursday, December 17, 2009: Issue #1160 If you’re looking for some calm during the market’s ongoing storm, don’t expect to find much in the commodities sector. Not that this is a bad thing. If you know what you’re doing, commodities offer some of the most lucrative and potentially explosive profits anywhere in the investment world.

Difference Between Limit Orders, Stop Orders

What are Limit and Stop Loss Orders in Stock Exchange? Dec 17, 2009 Thomas Wyatt The difference between limit and stop orders in trading stocks is that limit orders are designed, for the most part, to maximize gain, and stop orders, also called stop loss orders are intended to cut as much loss as possible. Below are descriptions of what limit and stop orders really are and how they function.

Trial leaves eBay, Craigslist with plenty to regret

A battle by eBay Inc. to regain its board seat on popular U.S. classifieds website Craigslist has left both sides bloodied and bruised, yet the catfight is likely to continue even after one court trial wraps up this week

Job creation to pick up in 2010, bank says

T he Toronto-Dominion Bank says the Canadian economy is ready to start creating jobs, about 280,000 of them next year. The estimate released Thursday is part of the bank’s newest forecast for the world and Canadian economies that shows growth has begun after about a year of contraction.

BlackBerry service disrupted

R esearch in Motion RIM-T says some of its BlackBerry smartphone customers in North America are experiencing delays receiving email. RIM says it has technicians working on the problem. The Waterloo, Ont.-based company says BlackBerry phone, Internet browsing and texting are not affected by the problem.

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