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


To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (78715)8/29/2011 3:38:56 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 217822
 
We the boyz incl self are evaluating a gold mine for operations.

Given the ease with which we filed for the claim on an old mine, cannot sense bubble, since no one seem interested and locating the suitable mine took merely 3 days n 4 nights trip.

We are arranging for a few tons of rocks n dirt to be loaded n processed by way of contract mining, and our all-in cost should be between 800-1,000 per troy oz, so, if successful with a few loads resulting in a few ounces, then we aim the big guns and gather the troops, because the prospective ounces seem rather large based on old data.

Now I am a gold miner, hotelier, landlord, coal trader, vc, dental entrepreneur, consultant, and foremost, PC gamer.

The intention is to mine gold, and exchange for HK real estate, platinum, and paper money, and with paper money, engage with more gold claims



To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (78715)8/29/2011 4:21:50 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217822
 
Caterpillar’s CEO hit out at politicians in Washington for stalling economic reform but is optimistic that the global economy will not be dragged into a double-dip.

This is in line with Bernanke: it's a political problem. Solved it via fiscal policy.

Caterpillar’s CEO also added that the Middle East and Brazil demonstrated few signs of a potential slow-down.

Caterpillar CEO: There will be no double dip
He also added that the Middle East and Brazil demonstrated few signs of a potential slow-down.
“Traditionally, we’ve been perceived as an indicator of the global economy. Investors are just nervous about the uncertainty of global economic growth,” he told the FT. “There won’t be a double-dip. I don’t see a return to high growth, but I think we’re going to bump along.

“There has been a slowdown in China, which is healthy,” he says. “Thank God it happened, because we were all rushing in there, committing resources, growing at rates that couldn’t be sustained over time. So now we’ll see a lower growth rate but one that’s still pretty high by world standards.

“We’ll see China reflate in the next few months, going into the Chinese New Year [in January],” he said. “That will remove a very large question mark in the world economy about what China’s going to do, which has been a big damper on sentiment.”

He added: “Brazil is red-hot. We’ve not seen any breather down there. The Middle East is still doing well, the mining business is still strong.”