Ausbruchstrade! COMMERCE RESOURCES CORP. (Seite 5291)
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ISIN: CA2006977045 · WKN: A2PQKV · Symbol: CCE
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Letzter Kurs 10.05.24 TSX Venture
Neuigkeiten
12.04.24 · IRW Press |
11.04.24 · Accesswire |
04.03.24 · IRW Press |
04.03.24 · Accesswire |
Werte aus der Branche Rohstoffe
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
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1,0000 | +809,09 | |
8,0000 | +45,45 | |
11,000 | +19,57 | |
1,2000 | +18,05 | |
527,60 | +15,68 |
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
324,70 | -10,30 | |
9,8500 | -10,54 | |
0,6166 | -19,12 | |
0,6601 | -26,22 | |
47,33 | -97,99 |
Beitrag zu dieser Diskussion schreiben
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.436.599 von hotpenny am 07.09.07 11:36:04
Aber danke für die Info.
Aber danke für die Info.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.436.599 von hotpenny am 07.09.07 11:36:04
Dass Gewinnerdepot auch nicht die besten Trader sind weiß aber wohl jeder. Dieses ganze Hin- und Hergetausche von denen bringt den Abonenten auch keinen Blumentopf. Dann lieber in dieser Spitzenaktie bleiben.
Dass Gewinnerdepot auch nicht die besten Trader sind weiß aber wohl jeder. Dieses ganze Hin- und Hergetausche von denen bringt den Abonenten auch keinen Blumentopf. Dann lieber in dieser Spitzenaktie bleiben.
ich habe gerade den grund für den kurzen absacker gefunden
aus dem salazar-thread
hat ein user da reingestellt. das hat gewinnerdepot heute geschrieben.
CEO und 60%-Großaktionär Fredy Salazar ist DER Topgeologe in Ecuador. So hat es Aurelian nur der Unnachgiebigkeit von Fredy Salazar zu verdanken das sie "widerwillig" das Fruta del Norte Projekt kauften, worauf Aurelian nach sehr guten Bohrergebnissen in nur 12 Monaten von 0,50 CAD auf sagenhafte 40 CAD explodierte. Salazar ist deshalb eine extrem aussichtsreiche Spekulation auf eine zweite Aurelian, da man davon ausgehen kann das Fredy die "besten Gebiete" für sich behalten hat. Sollten die ersten Bohrergebnisse ähnlich oder gar besser ausfallen als bei Aurelian, dann könnte der Kurs ähnlich wie bei Aurelian mit einem 200% Gap eröffnen. Da ich genau darauf spekuliere, tausche ich auch Commerce in Salazar. Wer das hohe Risiko nicht eingehen will, der behält die Spitzenaktie Commerce.
Salazar kaufen mit Limit 1,90 Euro
also mal schnell die gunst der stunde nutzen und die "Spitzenaktie" commerce kaufen.
danke gewinnerdepot. 5% unter pari ist ein schönes schnäppchen
salazar = hohes risiko (aber eine schnelle 100% chance - bis mitte oktober etwa)
commerce ist spitze (bis märz ein verdoppler)
langfristig sowieso der knaller. auch wenn ich vor kurzen mal zu 82 geschmissen habe.
ohne commerce kann ich aber nur unruhig schlafen.
haufen geld in der kasse. sprott hat 1,20 cad bezahlt. bis zur produktion durchfinaziert und jeden tag kann eine übernahme einer produktiosfirma kommen. was will man mehr?
aus dem salazar-thread
hat ein user da reingestellt. das hat gewinnerdepot heute geschrieben.
CEO und 60%-Großaktionär Fredy Salazar ist DER Topgeologe in Ecuador. So hat es Aurelian nur der Unnachgiebigkeit von Fredy Salazar zu verdanken das sie "widerwillig" das Fruta del Norte Projekt kauften, worauf Aurelian nach sehr guten Bohrergebnissen in nur 12 Monaten von 0,50 CAD auf sagenhafte 40 CAD explodierte. Salazar ist deshalb eine extrem aussichtsreiche Spekulation auf eine zweite Aurelian, da man davon ausgehen kann das Fredy die "besten Gebiete" für sich behalten hat. Sollten die ersten Bohrergebnisse ähnlich oder gar besser ausfallen als bei Aurelian, dann könnte der Kurs ähnlich wie bei Aurelian mit einem 200% Gap eröffnen. Da ich genau darauf spekuliere, tausche ich auch Commerce in Salazar. Wer das hohe Risiko nicht eingehen will, der behält die Spitzenaktie Commerce.
Salazar kaufen mit Limit 1,90 Euro
also mal schnell die gunst der stunde nutzen und die "Spitzenaktie" commerce kaufen.
danke gewinnerdepot. 5% unter pari ist ein schönes schnäppchen
salazar = hohes risiko (aber eine schnelle 100% chance - bis mitte oktober etwa)
commerce ist spitze (bis märz ein verdoppler)
langfristig sowieso der knaller. auch wenn ich vor kurzen mal zu 82 geschmissen habe.
ohne commerce kann ich aber nur unruhig schlafen.
haufen geld in der kasse. sprott hat 1,20 cad bezahlt. bis zur produktion durchfinaziert und jeden tag kann eine übernahme einer produktiosfirma kommen. was will man mehr?
Rick Rule:
The broad resource markets are in the midst of a classic “wall of worry” correction. Junior markets are collapsing for a variety of very valid reasons.
1) First and foremost, the junior markets as a whole were, and still are, insanely overpriced. Only about 10% of 5000 odd junior companies have any real value, and most of the market players don’t have the ability or the will to discriminate between the good, the bad, and the ugly. The Uranium mania is a classic example of this. In 2000, the price of Uranium as a commodity was very cheap, it had to go up, but because the markets had been dormant for so many years, nobody cared. When the price did go up, people began to care, and after the price had increased enough that it didn’t have to rise further, people became obsessed. By this year, 550 “uranium” companies littered the investment landscape. The vast majority (maybe 500!) shared two serious faults: First, THEY HAD NO URANIUM. If the price of something you don’t have any of rises, it makes no real difference to you. Secondly, after a 25 year “bear market” in uranium, there are perhaps 30 qualified exploration teams left to run 550 companies, (meaning that the probability that an individual company had a qualified team was a function of dividing 30 by 550).
There are too many juniors in the market, and the VAST majority are totally valueless. Many of my investment conference colleagues bemoan the degradation of the US dollar by the profligate printing of same by the treasury. The US treasury is an abject failure at printing worthless paper when compared to the Canadian dealer community. The private sector is always more efficient! It is difficult to research and find the one in ten juniors that stand a chance, and more difficult yet to discriminate rationally among the good ones. It is easier for the dealers to create brand new worthless paper, than to sort out the existing paper, and if the market doesn’t discriminate, it is much more profitable.
2) Many important market players were and are incompetent. A twenty year “bear market” in resources has thinned the ranks of competent participants in resource financial services. The professional function of discrimination in resource capital markets has with some exceptions (Global, I hope) has gone largely unfulfilled. The brokers and investment bankers are increasingly “fee whores” rather than gate keepers, and the level of professionalism among many of the large and small institutional investors would be laughable had it not become tragic.
3) The market is liquidity driven. Global flows of liquidity; from the Japanese Central Bank bailout of their finance industry to the US Fed’s destruction of the dollar has left the world awash in cash. The same instinct that spawns a trillion dollar industry devoted to lending mortgage money to people who can’t pay it back in order that they can buy overpriced real estate, is the instinct that finances uranium companies with no uranium, run by people who can’t spell uranium. A bunch of that “dumb money” is going to go to “money heaven”, that is, it will disappear into the same thin air out of which it was created. A good thing of course, unless that “dumb money” was yours. The evaporation of vast quantities of “dumb money” has led to a liquidity crisis, which has damaged liquidity driven markets, and junior resource markets are like most risk markets, generally very illiquid.
4) The market and its participants suffered from irrational expectations. After several years of a raging bull market, participants have come to believe that inordinate success is a condition they have a right to expect. A very famous Canadian investment banker was quoted as saying he “wouldn’t get out of bed for deals less than C$100,000,000”. He should develop insomnia. Investment conference participants explain that they use the maximum margin available, and enquire of the speakers “what do you have that will triple in ninety days?” The correct answer is that the questioners debit balance and tax losses are the most likely near term triples we are aware of. This market has good money left in it, don’t spoil it for yourself with idiotic expectations
5) Many of the “players” are momentum driven. These traders are market players, traders who are often unknowing and unconcerned with industry or company specific fundamentals. Competent traders are good for markets, they add liquidity and if they are canny and disciplined, can make a fortune. But that’s a big “if”. Most of the momentum players are as apt as the fictional husband in our tuna story, and as likely to experience success. They rush into “up” markets, overpaying for instruments they don’t understand, and crowd out of down markets, liquidating the good with the bad.
Every great party results in a great hangover, and this week we all have headaches. The “sorting out” will be painful but profitable. The lessons learned, if learned, will be invaluable. The factors that caused the euphoria in resource markets earlier in the year are still present, they are just available at a discount. We need to learn to profit from cyclicality, not become its victim. We need to cherish volatility, not fear it. We need to remember that there is no commandment from God that says we must emulate the stupidity of the mob. We must use liquidity, and avoid being used by the “fee whores” In essence; we must employ common sense, and buy financial assets on sale.
The broad resource markets are in the midst of a classic “wall of worry” correction. Junior markets are collapsing for a variety of very valid reasons.
1) First and foremost, the junior markets as a whole were, and still are, insanely overpriced. Only about 10% of 5000 odd junior companies have any real value, and most of the market players don’t have the ability or the will to discriminate between the good, the bad, and the ugly. The Uranium mania is a classic example of this. In 2000, the price of Uranium as a commodity was very cheap, it had to go up, but because the markets had been dormant for so many years, nobody cared. When the price did go up, people began to care, and after the price had increased enough that it didn’t have to rise further, people became obsessed. By this year, 550 “uranium” companies littered the investment landscape. The vast majority (maybe 500!) shared two serious faults: First, THEY HAD NO URANIUM. If the price of something you don’t have any of rises, it makes no real difference to you. Secondly, after a 25 year “bear market” in uranium, there are perhaps 30 qualified exploration teams left to run 550 companies, (meaning that the probability that an individual company had a qualified team was a function of dividing 30 by 550).
There are too many juniors in the market, and the VAST majority are totally valueless. Many of my investment conference colleagues bemoan the degradation of the US dollar by the profligate printing of same by the treasury. The US treasury is an abject failure at printing worthless paper when compared to the Canadian dealer community. The private sector is always more efficient! It is difficult to research and find the one in ten juniors that stand a chance, and more difficult yet to discriminate rationally among the good ones. It is easier for the dealers to create brand new worthless paper, than to sort out the existing paper, and if the market doesn’t discriminate, it is much more profitable.
2) Many important market players were and are incompetent. A twenty year “bear market” in resources has thinned the ranks of competent participants in resource financial services. The professional function of discrimination in resource capital markets has with some exceptions (Global, I hope) has gone largely unfulfilled. The brokers and investment bankers are increasingly “fee whores” rather than gate keepers, and the level of professionalism among many of the large and small institutional investors would be laughable had it not become tragic.
3) The market is liquidity driven. Global flows of liquidity; from the Japanese Central Bank bailout of their finance industry to the US Fed’s destruction of the dollar has left the world awash in cash. The same instinct that spawns a trillion dollar industry devoted to lending mortgage money to people who can’t pay it back in order that they can buy overpriced real estate, is the instinct that finances uranium companies with no uranium, run by people who can’t spell uranium. A bunch of that “dumb money” is going to go to “money heaven”, that is, it will disappear into the same thin air out of which it was created. A good thing of course, unless that “dumb money” was yours. The evaporation of vast quantities of “dumb money” has led to a liquidity crisis, which has damaged liquidity driven markets, and junior resource markets are like most risk markets, generally very illiquid.
4) The market and its participants suffered from irrational expectations. After several years of a raging bull market, participants have come to believe that inordinate success is a condition they have a right to expect. A very famous Canadian investment banker was quoted as saying he “wouldn’t get out of bed for deals less than C$100,000,000”. He should develop insomnia. Investment conference participants explain that they use the maximum margin available, and enquire of the speakers “what do you have that will triple in ninety days?” The correct answer is that the questioners debit balance and tax losses are the most likely near term triples we are aware of. This market has good money left in it, don’t spoil it for yourself with idiotic expectations
5) Many of the “players” are momentum driven. These traders are market players, traders who are often unknowing and unconcerned with industry or company specific fundamentals. Competent traders are good for markets, they add liquidity and if they are canny and disciplined, can make a fortune. But that’s a big “if”. Most of the momentum players are as apt as the fictional husband in our tuna story, and as likely to experience success. They rush into “up” markets, overpaying for instruments they don’t understand, and crowd out of down markets, liquidating the good with the bad.
Every great party results in a great hangover, and this week we all have headaches. The “sorting out” will be painful but profitable. The lessons learned, if learned, will be invaluable. The factors that caused the euphoria in resource markets earlier in the year are still present, they are just available at a discount. We need to learn to profit from cyclicality, not become its victim. We need to cherish volatility, not fear it. We need to remember that there is no commandment from God that says we must emulate the stupidity of the mob. We must use liquidity, and avoid being used by the “fee whores” In essence; we must employ common sense, and buy financial assets on sale.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.433.398 von steini69 am 07.09.07 09:26:47
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.433.398 von steini69 am 07.09.07 09:26:47
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.431.601 von casameki am 07.09.07 07:46:53du hast einen wichtigen termin vergessen, hab ihn entsprechend eingefügt:
07:00: JP; ESRI Frühindikator Juli
08:00: DE; Außenhandel Juli
08:00: DE; Insolvenzen 1. Halbjahr
08:00: DE; Arbeitskostenindex 2. Quartal
08:45: FR; Handelsbilanz August
09:30: SE; Riksbank Sitzungsergebnis
10:00: IT; Handelsbilanz ohne EU-Länder Juli
12:00: DE; Industrieproduktion Juli
12:00: FR; OECD Frühindikatoren Juli
12:30: DE; Currywurst mit Pommes essen
14:30: US; Beschäftigte ex Agrar August
14:30: US; Arbeitslosenquote August
14:30: US; Stundenlöhne August
14:30: US; Wochenstunden August
14:30: CA; Arbeitsmarktdaten August
16:00: US; Lagerbestände und Umsätze im Großhandel Juli
21:00: US; Treasury STRIPS August
07:00: JP; ESRI Frühindikator Juli
08:00: DE; Außenhandel Juli
08:00: DE; Insolvenzen 1. Halbjahr
08:00: DE; Arbeitskostenindex 2. Quartal
08:45: FR; Handelsbilanz August
09:30: SE; Riksbank Sitzungsergebnis
10:00: IT; Handelsbilanz ohne EU-Länder Juli
12:00: DE; Industrieproduktion Juli
12:00: FR; OECD Frühindikatoren Juli
12:30: DE; Currywurst mit Pommes essen
14:30: US; Beschäftigte ex Agrar August
14:30: US; Arbeitslosenquote August
14:30: US; Stundenlöhne August
14:30: US; Wochenstunden August
14:30: CA; Arbeitsmarktdaten August
16:00: US; Lagerbestände und Umsätze im Großhandel Juli
21:00: US; Treasury STRIPS August
Bei seltenen Metalle geht der Boom jetzt richtig los!
Schaut euch mal CHINA RARE an, die machen heute aus der Kalten fast 16%.
Da wird CCE nicht lang auf sich warten lassen ....
Schaut euch mal CHINA RARE an, die machen heute aus der Kalten fast 16%.
Da wird CCE nicht lang auf sich warten lassen ....
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