Beiträge von Eldorado

    Bei dem Dialekt hier kann man wenn noetig ein kleines taschenbuch mit uebersetztung bayrisch-deutsch in einer buchhandlung besorgen, oder lebt in bayern..... eine zeit lang. :D

    Tschonko


    Es wird sich alles zeigen ob es gute kaeufe waren. :D


    Enjoy your evening,...I got a girl friend tonight staying over :P... for two month, from Thailand ! :D


    Gold and Silber must go where it must go! :]


    So do I ! ;)

    Hallo, :))


    Ganz einfach, jeder kann hier schreiben an welche aktie'n er glaubt oder hofft... die preiswert im kauf sind , ...im jetzigen stadium !.


    Anlagen fuer die naechsten 4 Jahre,bei der wir nichts verlieren,bis auf ein paar ! :D



    Keine analysen, besser meinungen, ratschlaege, kurze begruendung,.. damit wir alle hoffentlich etwas dabei verdienen... zur abwechslung. :P
    mit enter at your own risk !!... und ohne spaeter irgendwelche beschuldigungen etc. .....ok ? :))

    Es geht darum, unterbewertenden aktien/schnaeppchen gemeinsam zu finden. und jeder kann nach seinen eigenen risiko mitspielen bzw. die achterbahn reiten. 8o


    Es reicht auch wenn ihr nur den ticker der company hier ablegt .



    Ueber die einzelnen firmen bzw.aktien gibt es dann selbstverstaendlich auch separate threads wo jeder seine gruende darlegen kann und in das detail gehen kann.


    So, legt mal eure favoriten rein und jeder kann sich rausnehmen was er moechte hier in diesen thread.


    Keine eigene promotion oder schneeball prinzip !



    Thanks



    Eldorado

    @ frr


    Es kommt immer anders als man denkt und ich lache trotzdem ueber mich weil ich 25% von IMA mit einigermassen guten gewinn verkauft habe, da liegt noch potential in der IMA.


    Die wird eine gute MAMA ! :D

    @ frr


    BTW... yesterday was a buying day, I guess ! ;)
    Not for XCL.TO :(
    The trend might be my friend, today.
    Showdown days ! 8o IMHO.... as always, mehrmals quick editiert. :D
    The Rand has to move,see DRD thread. Interesting weeks ahead before
    the bull run starts. VIVA Cortez, in search of Eldorado.
    That's like the cortez trend, cowboys ! :D
    Viva Mexico, South America, China, Canada, and of course Nevada, for Viva Las Vegas, ala CC Top. 8) 8) 8) With or without,...


    DOW !!! $ $$$$ and Oilprice ! :D


    @tschonko..I'm impressed you also talk on astro show, I like that ! :), die hindukusch lieben auch gold. :D


    The fed is in trouble and if they inflate they slow down the economy.
    They are desperate to get foreing money in at the same time and that needs hikes in interest rates.



    How long last the Pope and how long last Sir Alan Greenspan,..the master of disguise ! :rolleyes: :rolleyes:


    It's just a bubble to go bust ! ...and many look 8o 8o 8o 8o 8o


    Just wait cowboys, patiently !!! :D



    Mfg


    Eldorado 8)

    One of the most interesting events of the past few months occurred almost un-noticed on the JSE this week. The bond rate for the R153 increased sharply from 7.4% up to just above 8%. South Africa is still in the Dark Ages in terms of publishing bond movement. We still quote the interest rate whilst nearly all other major bond markets quote the face value of the bond. As interest rates rise the actual face value of the bond falls. A falling price indicates sellers. The bottom line is that bonds were being sold. Of itself this is not an unusual event. But the Rand weakened against the Dollar by almost the same percentage at the exact same time as the bond weakness. The Rand went from R5.74 to touch R6.15 in parallel with the bond rate increase. A weakening Rand indicates sellers switching out of the local currency into dollars. Couple the two together and one sees that bonds were sold and currency changed into Dollars. This implies that the funk money that deluged the South African financial markets as a result of the huge interest rate differentials is starting to move out. This implies a serious re-evaluation of the South African financial market.


    Whereas this was, in my opinion, the event of the week, there was a major breakout on all the Rand charts that I have been hammering for the past month. The Rand / Dollar, Rand / Euro as well as against Sterling, Yen and the Swiss Franc all broke through major trends and resistances. I reiterate that I expect the Rand to move from being one of the strongest currencies in the world in which it out performed all the leading global units, to being one of the weakest.But the biggest chart break of the week was undoubtedly the push by the Rand price of gold above the critical R2580 an ounce level. This shot up to touch R2700. This break indicates an end to the three year bear market in the Rand price of gold and triggers a near term count to at least R3100. This is well above the Durban Deep break even of R2920.


    All the gold shares reversed off their bases that had been forming for the past six months and to which I have drawn your attention on numerous occasions. This movement, like that of the Rand price of gold, has broken several critical resistance levels and indicates that the bear market that started in April 2002 is over. I will again place on record that a resumption of the major bull trend MUST take the share prices to well above their previous highs made in April 2002. And that includes Durban Deep!!


    http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_05/roffey032105.html

    Golden century


    Von mir aus ist es recht wenn sie die unprofitablen verhoeckern oder einmotten. Die Unions Cosatu brauchen so oder so einen denkzettel und die Reserve Bank ebenfalls. Soll sich DRD mehr im Ausland aktivieren und etablieren, waere es mir ebenso angenehm.
    Egal wie, sobald wieder profite da sind streiken die neger wieder und wollen more, more, more !!


    Bis der Rand wieder im Eimer ist lasse ich jede weitere Investition.
    DRD war eine Ausnahme bei dem Spottpreis. Sobald ich da ein wenig verdiene haue ich diese aktien wieder raus aus meinen depo.
    Wer hier lebt, versteht die moral der menschen besser in sunny, crazy RSA. 8)



    mfg


    Eldo

    Does gold's latest tumble signal the start of a new dollar
    rally? Or is this sell-off merely the latest of many buying
    opportunities gold has presented to investors during the
    last three years?


    Your editor favors the latter interpretation, and will
    seize this opportunity to offer a couple of predictions for
    the collective benefit – or detriment – of all Rude
    Awakening readers:


    1) Gold will recover its footing later this week, as
    surprisingly strong PPI and CPI readings cross the
    newswires.


    2) Villanova MIGHT win the NCAA championships.


    (In the event that neither of these predictions comes to
    pass, your editor reserves the right to revise history
    according to his liking, or to offer a new and improved
    prediction concerning some other future event).


    Most likely, neither of these predictions will come to
    pass. Even so, investors should brace themselves for the
    possibility that financial underdogs will deliver a few
    more "shockers" over the coming weeks and months.
    Specifically, we investors should not be too surprised if
    the gold market "pulls a Bucknell" over the stock market,
    by charging toward $500 an ounce while the Dow slumps below
    10,000. Nor should we be surprised if the bond market
    withers in the fourth quarter...just like Wake Forest.


    The current "buying opportunity" offered by the gold market
    may prove to be more remunerative than most, simply because
    the gold market has quite a bit of catching up to do. Even
    before yesterday's miserable performance, gold had been
    lagging well behind most other commodities. As the chart
    below illustrates, gold has advanced a mere 4% since the
    end of 2003, compared to a gain of 26% for the CRB index.
    We suspect that this underdog is on the verge of producing
    a string of surprising "upsets," perhaps as early as today,
    when the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its producer
    price index (PPI) report for February at 8:30 AM Eastern
    time. Or maybe tomorrow, after the CPI report crosses the
    wires.


    "Gold is one of those markets that can snap back and rally
    quite quickly," says Kevin Kerr, editor of the Resource
    Trader Alert, "so trading back down here may entice some
    investors to step back in and buy value where they might
    not have been willing to before."


    Assessing gold's long-term prospects, John Myers, editor of
    Myers' Finance & Energy, notes that global gold production
    has finally topped out after two decades of relentless
    expansion.


    "According to the World Gold Council," Myers reports, "gold
    mine production in 2004 totaled 79.7 million ounces. That
    was down from was 83.3 million ounces in 2002 and 2003. It
    is true that world mine production doubled between the
    early 1980s and early 1990s. Yet since 1997 mine production
    has stalled at around 80 million ounces per year."


    Myers suspects the constrained supply of newly mined gold
    will support of the gold price, especially in light of the
    fact that the unrestrained supply of newly minted dollar
    bills pouring out of the U.S. Treasury.


    "Alongside the stagnation in world gold production," says
    Myers, "is another important fact: M1 money supply has
    grown by a whopping 30 percent since 2001." In other words,
    the kind of money produced by printing presses continues to
    proliferate rapidly, while the type of money extracted
    painstakingly from the earth's crust proliferates very
    slowly. At the margin, the relatively precious item should
    appreciate against the relatively common item.


    Our advice: Don't count out the underdogs.