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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TobagoJack who wrote (73483)4/23/2011 4:02:03 PM
From: Snowshoe1 Recommendation  Respond to of 218059
 
If tsunami threatens I would run at max speed to base of hill, then climb at much slower pace so to avoid exploding my heart...



Climbed this on Monday. Off to my left a bit and out 100 miles or so lies the world's largest gold deposit. R U going 2 bid? :0)

Northern Dynasty looks to sell Pebble stake
alaskajournal.com

The CEO of Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd. told Bloomberg News March 8 it expects to divest its 50 percent stake in the Pebble mine prospect "anytime later this year or next year."

"I could see it being either one of the diversified majors singly or a partnership of a major mining company and perhaps an Asian metals trading-slash-smelting company, like a Mitsubishi, Mitsui or Sumitomo, or even one of the Chinese groups," Northern Dynasty CEO Ron Thiessen told Bloomberg.

*****

Dickinson called Pebble a "game-changer" for global minerals markets as the fifth-largest copper deposit ever discovered and the world's single largest deposit of gold.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (73483)4/24/2011 6:17:58 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 218059
 
tsunami is the last thing Snowshoe should worry about. The debt of a handful of rich countries increased by U.S. $ 16 trillion (more than the U.S. GDP) since 2007 and now reaches $ 42 trillion, or 61% of global GDP, representing a major threat to global economic recovery.

This debt weighs on the United States today, countries in the euro zone, Britain and Japan, just the richest part of the world, which for centuries was the engine and the vanguard of the expansion of human prosperity. In 2007, before the global economic crisis, the rich countries' debt was U.S. $ 26 trillion, and accounted for 47% of global GDP.

And there is no hill to go up against thi threat!