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Strategies & Market Trends : The Epic American Credit and Bond Bubble Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: XBrit who wrote (92122)3/11/2008 8:15:55 AM
From: orkrious  Respond to of 110194
 
Then I go to his website and I find he's charging $500/year for essentially an expanded market report with commentary.

He started out at $100 and went to $250 a few years ago. he recently upped it to $500 but gave his existing subscribers the option of getting an additional two years at the old $250 rate.

I'll have a decision to make in 2010. <g>

I do think it's a lot more than commentary. there's a lot of news in the world that he comments on that I don't have access to that I find worthwhile.



To: XBrit who wrote (92122)3/11/2008 2:45:39 PM
From: MythMan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 110194
 
Just my 2 cents....He includes charts and data that you can't get anywhere else. For a daily piece, it's cheap. gartman's daily is $500 a MONTH. richard russell recently raised his yearly subscrip to $300.

Try out the free 15-day trial. You can find the trial request email address here:

dailymarketsummary.com



To: XBrit who wrote (92122)3/12/2008 5:37:44 PM
From: orkrious  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 110194
 
An example of what you get with a Lance Lewis subscription. From his intraday comment:


dailymarketsummary.com




March 12, 2008



3:27 EST: Saudi Arabia Open To Dropping Its Dollar Peg?




At a joint seminar of the Eurosystem and the GCC in Mainz, Germany today, Hamad Saud al-Sayari, governor of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority, said there are `no impediments'' to the use of the euro as a reserve currency and it will become more attractive as it increases in liquidity.

Although the governor denied the GCC is planning to meet next week to discuss whether member states will continue to peg their currencies against the dollar, this is a significant change in rhetoric from Saudi Arabia, which up until today has always immediately dispelled any suggestion that Saudi Arabia could depeg from the dollar. The GCC has scheduled a meeting on the 23rd and 24th to discuss their common inflation problem and dollar peg. With the Fed set to ease 75 bps next week, this peg is increasingly become untenable. And any depeg from the dollar by the GCC would be a de facto repricing of oil in currencies other than the dollar by OPEC, which would obviously have huge implications for oil, gold, the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency, US bonds, and US inflation.

Does this have something to do with the fact that both oil and the euro made new all-time highs today? I suspect it does… It could also be part of the reason that spot gold rallied up to its downtrend on the hourly charts today and appears to be poised to make a run for $1000 tomorrow…