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Weekend EditionThe Best of The S&A DigestSaturday, November 3, 2007 Of the 15 stocks in Rob's Medical Investor portfolio, only two are down. His service has one of the best track records in the business, period. Rob's newest recommendation is something very few people outside the medical community have ever heard about – an income opportunity that's been called "the biggest government giveaway ever." Click here to read more about it.
You may remember that during the last Wall Street crisis, Merrill woke up in bed with Enron the morning after the tech party. It had helped Enron hide its debts and rig its books. Before that, Merrill invested heavily in Long Term Capital Management, which then blew up and required a several-hundred-billion-dollar government-organized bailout.
And now Merrill must deal with its mortgage hangover. Luckily for Wall Street's bankers, they've got Fed "Tylenol." More easy money is on the way.
So... here's a tip: As the Fed cuts, look for commodities of every stripe to soar, the dollar to fall, and truly outrageous stock market bubbles to form in the countries of our largest trading partners. Will the average American ever figure out the connection between the price of gas – and just about everything else – and the size of Wall Street's write-offs and Congress' budget deficits? Probably not in my lifetime.
The company is spending about $18 billion per year to install passive, optical network connections directly to homes. In short, Verizon is replacing an old, expensive-to-maintain copper network with a vastly more efficient and incredibly long-lived fiber-optic network that's almost costless to maintain. (The company also owns a majority stake in the best American wireless provider, Verizon Wireless.) In the third quarter, revenues were up 6% and operating income reached $4.2 billion, up 20% from last year.
Subscribers who bought the stock at $31 early in 2006, when I recommended it in my newsletter, will earn more than 8% this year in synthetic yield (cash dividend + buyback) alone. So, through Verizon, we're building a national fiber-to-home monopoly, and we're getting paid 8% a year (and growing) during the construction. Sooner or later, Wall Street will wake up to the value of these assets – and we'll be holding a ten-bagger.
Regards,
Porter Stansberry
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Date Range:10/29/2007 to 11/3/2007
Date Range:10/29/2007 to 11/3/2007
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