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Weekend EditionThe Best of The S&A DigestSaturday, November 17, 2007 That's disastrous for price-competitive Canadian exporters – like the lumber and forest product industry, for example. We sent 12% Letter editor Tom Dyson up to Canada last week to poke around. Nothing creates outstanding investment values better than a 100-year currency storm...
Merritt must be one of the ugliest towns I've ever been to. It's surrounded by beautiful forests and snowy mountains, but the town itself looks like a sprawling trailer park in a dust bowl. Tumbleweeds blew down the streets. It would have been a good setting for a spaghetti Western.
In the center of town, there is a sawmill the size of three city blocks. A huge pile of logs occupied more than half the space. 'Excess supply,' I thought to myself...
Click here to read more about what he found.
What might explain Goldman's curious immunity from a big mortgage-related charge against its book value? We've learned the firm is setting aside more than $16 billion for this year's bonus pool. But... how big would the bonus pool be if Goldman were to take a big ($5 billion to $10 billion) write-off before the end of the year? We don't know exactly, but we would venture to guess: several billion dollars less.
This fund is currently in Tom Dyson's 12% Letter portfolio, in addition to selected high-yielding natural gas trusts. Learn more about them here.
Meanwhile, low-yielding currencies – like the yen, up 3.4% last week – are soaring. Steve's currency trade is working perfectly. As we've said before, don't bet against Steve when it comes to macro calls.
Berkshire also added to its U.S. Bancorp, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America positions and bought 3.6 million more shares of Dow Jones. Berkshire sold shares of railroad operators Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific, but maintained its position in Burlington Northern Santa Fe.
Regards,
Porter Stansberry
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Date Range:11/12/2007 to 11/17/2007
Date Range:11/12/2007 to 11/17/2007
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