Central Banks Pour into Gold, Reports Top Financial Web Site Penny Stock Detectives
Danny Esposito, editor for Penny Stock Detectives, believes that, as the price of gold corrected in March, central banks around the world seized the opportunity to buy. According to the editor, the International Monetary Fund released a report that revealed that, in March of 2012, central banks not only took advantage of the lower prices in gold bullion to buy, but they were also buying in large ...
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Investors Ignoring Energy Stocks While Prices Remain High, According to Popular Financial Site Penny Stock Detectives
Sasha Cekerevac, editor for Penny Stock Detectives, believes that oil prices will remain high for a long period of time for a number of reasons, including increasing world population and the explosive growth of car buying in Asia. In a recent Penny Stock Detectives article, Cekerevac points out that many junior energy companies are taking advantage of high oil prices by searching for wells at an ...
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China's Record Imports to Drive Oil Prices, Reports Leading Financial Site Penny Stock Detectives
Danny Esposito, co-editor for Penny Stock Detectives, believes that, although the tensions in Iran are keeping oil prices elevated, there is another factor that is receiving less attention. In his recent Penny Stock Detectives article, Esposito argues that China’s growing demand for oil and the fact that it has small strategic reserves mean that the country does not want to be in a situation ...
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Penny Stock Detectives, Top Financial Site, Points Out Bullish Technical Formation in Copper
Sasha Cekerevac, co-editor for Penny Stock Detectives, believes that, of the commodities junior mining stocks are involved with, copper is quite interesting lately. In his recent Penny Stock Detectives article, Cekerevac points out that copper looks to be making a bullish formation, if it can hold this lower level of support. Considering the big sell-offs in some of the other commodities, copper ...
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Penny-stock swindle alleged
WASHINGTON -- U.S. investors thought they were buying access to a stock-picking robot named "Marl." Instead, they paid millions to teen twin brothers in England who face civil fraud charges for an alleged penny-stock swindle. The robot didn't exist.
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