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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (7996)3/2/1998 7:43:00 AM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116836
 
BOBBY: Near record consumer confidence numbers another sign that the financial bull is in its final stages and a new gild bull finally is beginning. The last time consumer confidence reached thee levels was back in 1973 -- just before the biggest stock bear and the most powerful gold bull sine World War 2.

Does look like bullion will decisively take out $300 very soon.



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (7996)3/2/1998 9:53:00 AM
From: Little Joe  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116836
 
Bobby:

I also experience those type of problems with the net. I don't know what its all about, but it is frustrating.

Live long and prosper,

Little joe



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (7996)3/5/1998 1:47:00 AM
From: Abner Hosmer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116836
 
Hi Bobby -

>>''persistently, prudently, patiently and carefully.''<<

biz.yahoo.com

Just can't get over what we are hearing from within China in these days. The only thing I can compare it with is '87 or '88, when even those inside the Kremlin first started to publicly acknowledge that the State as it currently existed probably was not sustainable. The voices from Beijing strike me with far more power than the muted whispers of despair that emerged from the Kremlin then. Beyond the crises in Asia, we are deaf witnesses to a drama of far more historic import. While Japan and the West struggle to salvage the debt of their dollar-pegged creditors, other forces are moving with admirable swiftness and alacrity, and both eyes toward the future. The days when America will roll it's fleet into the South China Sea in defense of Taiwan are numbered. In a former time, Americans would have found much to admire in such persistence in the pursuit of reform. Now we stumble about like the blind. The US concerns herself mightily with Bosnia, Haiti, Somalia, and Rwanda, then again with Kuwait, Iraq, Syria, or Israel, and again with the expansion of NATO eastward, with Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, onward to Lithuania in the Baltics, she concerns herself with economic crises in Indonesia, South Korea, and Mexico. China quietly concerns herself with the problems of China, and along with the memories of a colonial past, soundlessly fathoms her future. China is not the West. Hong Kong also has never been a democracy, but does she leave us with nothing to contemplate as well?

Tom