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Strategies & Market Trends : Zeev's Turnips - No Politics -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TREND1 who wrote (33868)2/26/2002 11:26:25 PM
From: ajtj99  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99280
 
I guess I'm just seeing the glass half empty rather than half full as you are seeing it. Either way, it's not a full glass.

We both could be right or wrong, that's what makes this market interesting.



To: TREND1 who wrote (33868)2/26/2002 11:29:27 PM
From: DrGrabow  Respond to of 99280
 
drought.unl.edu

This is the worrysome part....
The Plains and Midwest: The biggest drought-related news item in the Midwest continues to be the low lake levels in the Great Lakes. Although not captured on the Drought Monitor map, the low lake levels will have increasing impacts as spring approaches. The past week was dry across the entire Great Plains. The Fargo and Grand Forks areas in North Dakota, for example, are at 21% and 6% of normal, respectively, for the year-to-date precipitation. No changes were made to any of the drought or abnormally dry areas in the Midwest or Plains.

The West: Little precipitation fell in the western United States during the past week. Concerns about the low snowpack levels are increasing in the Rockies as the winter season progresses toward spring. As a result, D1 (moderate drought) expanded to include southwestern Wyoming, western Colorado, and eastern Utah. Snowpack levels in Utah, for example, ranged from 35% to 75%.


Unemployment is next...

Yuck, yuck....