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Weekend EditionThe Best of The S&A DigestSaturday, August 9, 2008 We believe we're in the early stages of a bull market in biotech, and these could be the best-performing stocks over the next few years. If you're interested in getting on board, you have to let us know by midnight Monday.
Winters isn't the only super-investor buying Norway. Jim Rogers told the crowd in Vancouver last week he's holding the Norwegian kroner. And, of course, he's still selling the U.S. dollar.
If you want to protect your money, Steve recently wrote an essay detailing one way to capitalize on the CPI's big numbers. Click here to read it.
He was telling the truth: Last week, GM announced a $15.5 billion loss, including a $6.3 billion operating loss and a $3.6 billion cash loss. Sales fell 20% year over year in North America. Officially, chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner says he's still "comfortable" with the company's liquidity. Meanwhile, the company's CFO tapped GM's $6 billion revolving credit line for the first time, drawing $1 billion.
That's how you know you've got a real economic moat on your hands, by your pricing power. And that's why you buy stocks like P&G when they get cheap and hold them forever. At 16 times trailing free cash flow, I don't think P&G is in Extreme Value territory, but it's something to keep an eye on.
I doubt that's true. Whether Freddie survives or not (we'd bet heavily on the latter outcome), Syron is sure to walk away a very, very rich man. Meanwhile, his company announced an enormous $821 million quarterly loss. This follows a $528 million loss last quarter.
If Freddie is already insolvent and the housing market decline is only halfway through, don't you wonder how both our Federal Reserve chairman and Treasury secretary could have testified before Congress last month that Fannie and Freddie were "well-capitalized"? If a private-sector CEO had told the same fat lie about his company, he'd be heading to jail.
Why doesn't the SEC charge Bernanke and Paulson with telling lies about publicly traded stocks? Some investors surely took these men at their word and bought shares.
Seems to me, our punishment for government officials lying to Congress and the American public ought to be at least as severe as what we dole out to CEOs and CFOs who merely lie to their shareholders. Don't our elected officials have any obligation to tell the truth?
Regards,
S&A Research
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Date Range:8/4/2008 to 8/9/2008
Date Range:8/4/2008 to 8/9/2008
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