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Thursday, September 20, 2007

Foreclosure frenzy expected in the next three months


Foreclosure frenzy expected in the next three months

Up to 225,000 subprime borrowers could lose their homes when their mortgage rates jump over the next three months. Those borrowers will have trouble selling, refinancing or qualifying for government programs aimed at combating the problem. The number of borrowers whose payments will increase will mark the second-largest jump ever.

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As many as half of the 450,000 subprime borrowers whose mortgage payments increase in the next three months may lose their homes because they can't sell, refinance or qualify for help from the U.S. government.

``Short of the cavalry riding in over the hill, a lot of these people are just stuck,'' said Christopher Cagan, director of research and analytics at Santa Ana, California-based First American CoreLogic, the risk management unit of the biggest U.S. title insurer.

The number of borrowers whose mortgage payments jump in the next three months will be the second-highest ever for a quarter, according to Credit Suisse Group, Switzerland's second-biggest bank. Twenty-seven percent have already missed a payment, said First American LoanPerformance, which owns the largest database of U.S. mortgages. That makes them ineligible for the Federal Housing Administration bailout proposed last month by President George W. Bush.

There's no lifeline in sight for subprime borrowers, who face an average increase of 26 percent, or $400 a month, according to CoreLogic. Falling prices and a rising inventory of unsold homes make it difficult or impossible to sell or refinance without losing money and government programs aren't designed to aid the most desperate. That leaves foreclosure as the only alternative, and one that will deepen and prolong the worst housing downturn in at least 16 years.

Vanishing Equity

Robert Murray of Middletown, New Jersey, said he didn't pay enough attention when he took out a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage in 2002. This month, his payments ballooned to $1,800 from $1,300. Because he makes about $90,000 a year at his Newark Liberty International Airport maintenance job and hasn't missed a payment, he said he hoped he might be a good candidate to refinance.

Since the value of his home has declined from the $265,000 he owes on two mortgages, Murray's equity has vanished. If Murray were to apply for an FHA-insured refinance, he'd be out of luck.

The FHA bailout program, called FHASecure, requires the borrower to have at least 3 percent equity in the home. Some borrowers can get a second mortgage in addition to the FHA loan to cover the entire value of their houses. Murray borrowed more than his home is now worth, so he would have to write a check of at least $45,000 to close a refinance. He doesn't have the cash.

``I'm way upside down,'' Murray said. ``The payments will kill me now. I don't know what I'm going to do.''

Home Prices

About 48 percent of subprime borrowers wouldn't qualify to refinance into a mortgage that conforms to the underwriting rules established by government-sponsored agencies Fannie Mae in Washington and Freddie Mac in McLean, Virginia, according to a report by New York-based analysts for UBS AG, Switzerland's largest bank.

``There are a number of people who have mortgage debt that's more than the value of their house, and a lot of those people are going to walk away,'' said David Olson, president of Wholesale Access Mortgage Research & Consulting Inc. in Columbia, Maryland. ``That will put more homes on the market, which already has too many.''

The Federal Reserve's half-point benchmark interest rate cut yesterday will have little impact on borrowers whose mortgages are adjusting, said Ed Leamer, director of the UCLA Anderson Forecast in Los Angeles.

``It's not going to alter the housing situation, or clarify defaults and delinquencies,'' Leamer said.

U.S. home prices fell by a record 3.2 percent in the second quarter, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller Index. Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Chicago-based National Association of Realtors, has warned that year-over-year prices will fall for the first time since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

`Painful for People'

It would take 9.6 months to sell off all the existing homes on the market, the longest amount of time in at least eight years, according to the Chicago-based realtors group.

Listings in the Orlando, Florida, area show 26,300 homes for sale, a 20-month supply, said Gary Balanoff, a real estate broker with ReMax Select in Oviedo, Florida.

``I've been in business 23 years, and I've never seen some of the price reductions we have here,'' Balanoff said. ``It's painful for people.''

Investors, too, seem to be looking to Washington for solutions to subprime problems that may never come, said Andrew Laperriere, a Washington-based managing director at research firm International Strategy & Investment Group. The three rallies in the Standard & Poor's 500 since its July 19 peak came after Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac suggested Aug. 8 that they could widen their portfolios, the Federal Reserve lowered its discount rate on Aug. 17, and Bush's establishment of FHASecure on Aug. 31, Laperriere said.

`No Silver Bullet'

``There is no silver bullet from Washington that will prevent home prices from falling further,'' Laperriere said. ``A lot of people are operating on a mistaken impression.''

The fact that more than a quarter of subprime borrowers default on their adjustable loans before the rates reset makes a political solution less likely, Laperriere said.

``The myth here is that the resets have been the driver of payment delinquencies, but the fact is if the borrower can't afford the teaser rate payments, then they can't afford to ever pay back the loan,'' he said.

FHASecure expands the number of borrowers eligible for FHA- guaranteed loans to include homeowners in default. FHA borrowers take out loans from about 8,500 qualified lenders, paying an added insurance premium. Their monthly payments are guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration, which covers defaults from the pool of insurance payments, using no taxpayer money.

In addition to not missing any payments before their mortgages reset and having at least 3 percent equity in their homes, eligible borrowers must have a job and the income to cover the payments, said Steve O'Halloran, spokesman for the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which oversees the FHA.

Parochial School

FHASecure is expected to help as many as 120,000 borrowers refinance into FHA-backed loans this year, double the number of last year, O'Halloran said.

For now, Murray will struggle to make his monthly payments, foregoing vacations, restaurants and perhaps parochial school for his 5-year-old daughter. He yearns for help from the government.

The Federal Reserve Bank pumped $62 billion into the banking system on Aug. 9 and Aug. 10 in an effort to soothe a credit crisis. Murray said the Fed should do the same for borrowers.

``If they gave us that money, we'd be able to be out of this predicament,'' he said.

Subprime mortgages are available to borrowers with bad or incomplete credit histories. They made up about 20 percent of home loans issued last year and about 11 percent in the first half of this year, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, an industry newsletter.

New Foreclosures

The number of adjustable-rate subprime mortgages rose to 72.5 percent, or $1.26 trillion, of all adjustable-rate loans outstanding in the first quarter, a 17-fold increase over 2001, UBS said.

About 57 percent of mortgage broker customers with adjustable-rate mortgages were unable to refinance into a new loan in August, according to a study by Campbell Communications, a market research firm in Washington.

Adjustable-rate mortgages to subprime borrowers account for 44 percent of all new foreclosures, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association in Washington.

``A lot of the folks who are in trouble are in trouble even before their mortgage rate resets,'' said Bert Ely, a banking consultant in Alexandria, Virginia. ``They can't refinance because they shouldn't have gotten their mortgages in the first place.''

Adjustable-rate mortgages of all kinds worth $139.2 billion, the most ever, are scheduled to reset at higher interest rates in the next three months, according to First American LoanPerformance in San Francisco. Subprime adjustable- rate mortgages make up $84.4 billion of that total.

In the third quarter, $136.7 billion of mortgages were slated for reset, with subprime comprising $87.4 billion.

About 2.91 million subprime borrowers have adjustable-rate mortgages, about 90 percent of which will have reset at higher interest rates by the end of 2008, LoanPerformance said.


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  • Recommended ETFs

     

    Recommended ETFs to spruce up the portfolio

    AGRICULTURE / BREAD BASKET
    Agribusiness ETF - [MOO]
    PowerShares DB Agriculture Fund - [DBA]

    NATURAL RESOURCES
    PowerShares Water Resource Portfolio - [PHO]
    United States Natural Gas Fund, LP - [UNG]
    PowerShares DB Precious Metals Fund - [DBP]
    PowerShares DB Base Metals Fund - [DBB]
    PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund  - [DBC]

    SPECIAL MARKET SECTORS
    Ultra Real Estate ProShares - [URE]
    SPDR S&P Biotech ETF - [XBI]

     

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  • Friday, September 14, 2007

    Investment Ideas: Water Stocks

    Recommended Water Stocks

    - Basin Water (NASDAQ: BWTR) uses an ion exchange system to purify water for utilities, municipalities, and real-estate developers. Their systems purify over 75 million gallons of water a day, and they're contracted with some of the nation's largest utilities.

    - Calgon Carbon (NYSE: CCC). This company is the world's largest manufacturer and supplier of granular activated carbon purification systems. It is also the company that sparked my interest in the water investing revolution.

    - WorldWater and Power (WWAT.OB). This superstar stock has, at certain times, seen gains of up to 1,700% in the last year. WorldWater makes modular water purification systems that are powered exclusively by solar panels.

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  • Thursday, September 13, 2007

    Mortgage Liability Issue to Hit Congress

    Mortgage Liability Issue to Hit Congress

    full article

    Banks that package mortgage securities - and the institutional investors who buy them - are fearful that lawmakers could in the future make them legally responsible for fraud committed by lenders.

    As the housing crisis worsens and foreclosures mount, federal predatory lending legislation is moving to the front burner. But industry groups are warning the Democratic-led Congress that imposing such liability would dry up funding for mortgage loans.

    Consumer advocates, meanwhile, say it is the best way to rein in Wall Street's aggressive role in the increasingly complex mortgage market, which boomed in recent years amid lax standards for borrowers with weak, or subprime, credit.

    Ira Rheingold, executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates in Washington, foresees a heated battle on the issue this fall. If companies that package mortgage securities and investors in them knew they could be liable, "they might actually look at the loans that they're buying, which they haven't' been doing," Rheingold said.

    However, it is unrealistic for investors to be expected to check to see whether loans were fraudulently issued, said George Miller, executive director of the American Securitization Forum, which includes buyers and sellers of securities backed by mortgages and other assets. "The investor isn't sitting there when a lender and broker are...at the table," he said.

    The issue of assigning liability is gaining attention as lawsuits stemming from foreclosures rise.

    "Many of those borrowers didn't know what kind of loans they were getting and have a good argument that misrepresentations were made," said Kurt Eggert, a professor at Chapman University's law school.

    Nevertheless, in the majority of states, most borrowers are not able to hold the current owners of their home loans responsible for the actions of the original lender, Eggert said.

    That prevents borrowers, even if they are the victim of predatory loans, from successfully arguing in court to stop foreclosures, consumer groups say.

    Seven states - North Carolina, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Illinois, Massachusetts and Rhode Island - have some level of mortgage liability for investors, according to the Center for Responsible Lending, a Durham, N.C. consumer group. Federal law currently limits that liability to the loans defined as "high-cost" by the government, of which few are made.

    If investors in mortgage-backed bonds face broad, unlimited liability, "the market will dry up," said Scott DeFife, co-head of legislative affairs at the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, which spent $2.6 million lobbying the federal government in the first half of the year.

    Traditionally, banks and thrifts made home loans to borrowers and held them on their books. But residential mortgages have increasingly been packaged into securities, sliced into different levels of risk and then sold to investors in a process called securitization.

    At a hearing earlier this year, Republicans warned against overzealous efforts to create legal responsibilities, citing Georgia's experience as a textbook case. Georgia's 2002 predatory lending law allowed borrowers to seek punitive damages from anyone who bought a loan or a security that included the loan.

    In response, major credit-rating agencies decided they would no longer rate the quality of securities containing Georgia home loans, leading to a mass withdrawal of lenders from the state. Georgia lawmakers subsequently changed their law limiting liability for loan abuses to original lenders.

    House lawmakers, led by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, plan to introduce multifaceted mortgage legislation in the coming weeks. The details are still being worked out, but Frank said in an interview last month that investment banks that package mortgages into securities should have the responsibility to make sure loans are not predatory.

    Rep. Brad Miller, D.-N.C., who plans to co-sponsor a bill with Frank, said the House bill will probably include protections against lawsuits for loans that don't show obvious signs of being predatory. Among those signs, he said, are requirements that borrowers pay penalties if they want to pay off their loans early.

    "What we want to do is end predatory loans, but make sure that we don't regulate lending to death," Miller said.

    full article

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  • Tuesday, September 11, 2007

    Investment Idea: More Coffee in China

    Green Chip International
    By Sam Hopkins

    Coffee Pacifica (CFPC.OB)

    Here's a secret only we westerners who have been to China can tell you: Chinese people are incredibly corny.  Though headlines may tell stories of poisoned toys and political prisoners, the average Zhou looooves Simon and Garfunkel.  One hotel I stayed at for over a week played "The Sound of Silence" on continuous loop in the lobby. 

    Forget Chinese water torture-hearing "Auld Lang Syne" and "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" in bars and emanating from garbage trucks in the middle of summer made me want to confess to crimes I had never committed. 

    "Just make the sugary songs stop!" I thought to myself.

    But tunes aren't the only saccharine stuff the Chinese consume happily.  Coffee, having made the trip from its original home in Africa over to Europe, the Americas, and now to Asia, is threatening to supplant tea as the Chinese beverage of choice.  In Chinatowns in New York and San Francisco, though, as in many bakeries in China, you're likely to pucker from all the sugar in your cup of Zhou (I just had to use the pun again, sorry).

    One of my most trusted contacts in China sent me this telling photo in April, from his adopted hometown of Xi'an, in the country's central region.  One of the "Four Great Ancient Capitals" of the Middle Kingdom, Xi'an is home to the famous terracotta army of the Emperor of Qin and was capital of thirteen dynasties.

    Now, in one square mile, there are three Starbucks locations.


    There's also a Starbucks on Tiananmen Square, just past the Forbidden City.  Overall, that behemoth has 246 outlets in China, slurping up Chinese competitors and zipping along towards a goal of making China its biggest non-US market.

    Green Chip Stocks' play, Coffee Pacifica (CFPC.OB), is right in the thick of things, making China the target of its own major marketing push as it sources coffee beans from Papua New Guinea, a hop, skip and jump south from China, just north of Australia.

    This May, Chinese coffee farmer Du Yansheng told Reuters News Agency that when he began a coffee business in 1998, "monthly sales were about 10 kilos.  Now our sales are calculated in tons."  Chinese exports are on the rise, shipping to places like Germany and Japan.

    But just as sure as Chinese love random bits of foreign glitz and brand-name merchandise, a new generation of Chinese consumers is getting a taste for coffee from the best producing regions in the world, like Papua New Guinea.

    The same Reuters story confirmed what my tongue found during my month-long stay in China in 2005, reporting the presence of a "soluble coffee packed with sugar and powdered milk - known as Three-in-One - is finding its way into rural areas as well as cities.

    Yuck.

    I insist on being the only person to add anything but bean juice to my cup of coffee, and I predict that more and more Chinese will acquire a sophisticated palate with coffee consumption just as they have broadened into top-shelf liquor, wine, and luxury clothing in recent years.

    As China's coffee culture turns the corner from 3-in-1 to actual flavor, Coffee Pacifica has put itself in a position to savor every new customer in China's booming cafés.

    Regards,
    Sam Hopkins

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  • Investment Idea: Natural Resources & Mining Stocks


    He was right. He was 100%, dead-on right.

    Who?

    Greg McCoach, of course.

    You may remember a letter I sent you a couple of weeks ago, recounting a recent telephone conversation I had with Greg.

    He said (and this was right around the time of the big selloff) that some major market players were buying massive amounts of gold. He also recommended that you begin to bottom-fish quality junior resource stocks.

    Since making that call, gold has rallied big time, almost 10% in a month. Take a look at the 2007 chart for the price of gold:

    Greg thinks precious metals--gold in particular--are about to break out to new highs. And if the markets get slammed again like they did in August, gold and other safe haven investments will shoot to the moon.

    That's why Greg is still recommending shares of the tiny Minnesota company that's sitting on a buffet of precious and base metals.

    A recent press release on the company's drill results confirmed what Greg had expected all along. According to the drill results, "... some of the holes have returned some of the highest grade Total Precious Metal and silver values reported to date."

    I tell you, Greg really knows how to find these hidden gems.

    Ever since Greg started Mining Speculator, members of the service have been enjoying unbelievable profits.

    In fact, Greg's track record has to be one of the best in the business.

    Take a look for yourself.

    His portfolio has 22 open positions. Of those 22, 17 are up and eight have triple-digit returns.

    And his portfolio return? 626% in the past six years.

    One of his biggest winners--a mining stock up 6,060%--is still moving higher. In fact, when it's all said and done, this stock could return 21,900% to his readers.

    You can still jump on this stock while it's cheap... but you have to act now.

    Take a moment to read Greg's free report he has prepared for you on this opportunity.

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  • Investment Idea: Dividend Stocks and ETFs

    Make Millions With 7 Stocks
    By James Early August 30, 2007


    130 Recommendations
     He was wrinkled and spoke softly, but he taught the greatest investment lesson ever told. He was John, my first finance professor. John's lesson was the best investment advice I've ever received.

    What John taught can literally make you a fortune, so pay close attention. You'll also get seven stocks that you may use to begin implementing it yourself.

    Do you know Jack?
    Our quick-but-powerful story starts with two twins: Jack and Jill.

    As they turn 18, Jack takes a job out of high school and begins investing. From age 18 to 30 -- when he gets married and has his first kid -- Jack socks away five grand a year. Then he stops.

    Jill, meanwhile, goes to college and then medical school. She starts saving at 30 -- the same $5,000 per year.

    Both invest in the stock market, earning a long-term average of 11% a year. But by age 65, the difference in their financial fortunes will shock you:

    Jill, who contributed for 35 years straight, will have $1.9 million. But Jack, who invested for only 12 years, actually has $4.9 million ... thanks to his head start!

    Could you use $4.9 million for your retirement?

    Ignore John's advice? Better like Alpo
    The best time to have started seriously investing will always be "years ago." I sure wish I'd started earlier. But this is reality, and if you don't want to eat canned dog food in your retirement, put the power of compounding to work for you as quickly as possible.

    Fortunately, academic studies have identified the best way to do so: Dividend stocks. Let me get more specific.

    Famed Wharton finance professor Jeremy Siegel -- you've likely seen him on TV or read his books -- found out something very powerful recently: From 1871-2003, a full 97% of the stock market's return came from reinvested dividends -- only 3% was from capital gains on the original principal!

    The case for dividends gets stronger. Dividend stocks have a reputation for safety, but they also have a secret agenda that enriches investors. Rob Arnott, former editor of the Financial Analysts Journal, and Cliff Asness, managing principal at AQR Capital Management uncovered it: Stocks with the highest yields actually show the highest earnings growth over the next decade.

    There's more. Ned Davis research found that from 1972 to 2006, S&P 500 stocks not paying a dividend returned 4.1% annually, while dividend payers returned 10.1%! Can you imagine the difference six extra percent per year would mean for your retirement?

    You can take dividend stocks to the bank
    Why not put that kind of power to work for your own portfolio? We could all use extra money at retirement. Because I believe in practicing what I preach, I own dividend stocks myself. I also find them for subscribers of my Income Investor newsletter.

    I've screened for seven starting-point stocks below. I must be clear: The stocks below are not my formal recommendations, but for do-it-yourselfers, they should be solid starting points for further research.

    To find these stocks, I used Capital IQ, an institutional investment-analysis software package, to screen for stocks yielding more than 3%, with market caps greater than $1 billion (to provide stability), and with payouts less than 80% of free cash flow (more cushion means a company's better able to pay its dividend consistently). Strong operational returns are a must -- they provide a cushion against rough times, as well as fuel for the good times -- so I set a return on equity (ROE) floor of 10%.

    Name    Yield   Market Cap (mm)    ROE
     
    AT&T (T)  3.7%  $243,288    11.8%
     
    Verizon (VZ)  3.9%  $121,994    12.9%
     
    Pfizer (PFE)  4.7%  $170,130    13.8%
     
    Royal Dutch Shell (RDS-A)
        3.9%  $240,425    25.5%
     
    Altria (NYSE: MO)
        4.0%  $145,385    41.7%
     
    Unilever (NYSE: UL)
        3.1%  $93,003    34.4%
     
    Dow Chemical (DOW)
        4.0%  $40,300    20.2%


    Let's make you a fortune for you
    Want to end up like Jack -- an almost-slacker turned multimillionaire at retirement? You can start with two actions:

    Start saving as much as humanly possible, to harness the power of compounding.
    Heed the findings of academics and diversify your investments to include dividend stocks -- the very best dividend stocks.
    Here's why quality matters: If Jack had managed just two percentage points better returns than Jill (let's say that instead of 11% for both, Jill earns 10% and Jack earns 12%), Jack's outperformance would leave him the envy of Jill's medical-school class: $7.1 million at age 65 vs. just $1.5 million for Jill! Two little percentage points mean millions of dollars down the road.

    Your next move
    Dividend stocks might not seem that different now, but they can make a big difference down the road. You've got seven starting points above. I'd also like to offer you a free guest pass to my Income Investor service. We've done the research to find the very best dividend payers. The service is currently besting the market by more than four percentage points.

    Also check out these great High Yield dividend ETFs:

     

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  • Deliver Better Products through Strategic Product Management


    The Tactical Trap:

    How to Deliver Better Products through More Strategic Product Management


    September 13, 2007 @ 11:00 a.m. Eastern / 8:00 a.m. Pacific
    Duration: 60 minutes

    Register:

    Product managers struggle to keep up with all the tasks, information,
    meetings and reporting required to sustain even a single product at a
    single company. If you are a product manager juggling numerous products
    internally and/or with partners the job may be all but impossible.

    Attend this educational eSeminar sponsored by Telelogic to learn how
    even the most harried product managers can take a more strategic
    approach to product delivery. You'll hear how to break free of the
    "tactical trap": an all-consuming focus on daily execution that leaves
    little or no room for the strategic planning that can help make your
    products more relevant - and profitable.

    You will hear from Alyssa Dver, Author of "Software Product Management
    Essentials", who will examine how and why product managers need to be
    more creative and strategically focused. She'll uncover some typical
    traps that Product Managers fall into and give you tips to avoid them -
    or how to get out if its too late! Specific benchmarks and exercises
    will be provided so participants can leave and immediately assess and
    improve their own performance as a product manager or manager of PMs.

    Attendees will hear:
    *Why it is so difficult to break away from tactical product management
    *Best practices in developing a strategic approach to your products
    *What you can do today to improve the performance of both you and your
    products
    *What pitfalls to avoid when developing product management strategy
    *How to get buy-in for a more strategic approach

    Whether you currently are a product manager, manage them, or are
    thinking about becoming one, you must attend this important event.
    Register now to guarantee your spot.

    Featured Speakers:
    Alyssa Dver, Chief Consultant - Type @ Consulting
    Michael Lester, Product Marketing Manager - Telelogic
    Michael Krieger, VP, Market Experts Group - Ziff Davis Enterprise

    Register:

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  • Investment Idea: Better Battery Technology

    The Bulls Are Back in Town
    By Nick Hodge

    Advanced Battery Technologies Inc. (ABAT.OB)
    Arise Technologies Corp. (APV.V)

    more info

    Amid waning fuel prices and mortgage-induced market turbulence, it seems the world had forgotten about one of its most pressing issues, an impending energy crisis.

    But with a good market day last Friday--leading in to a holiday weekend--and fairly decent days on Tuesday and Wednesday, the well-known troubles from before the correction once again began to rear their profitable heads.

    For starters, crude oil on the NYMEX quickly climbed to a high of 77.43--less than $1.35 shy of its all-time intraday high, set just over one month ago on August 1.

    Immediately, oil market "analysts" began to offer their conjectures on the conjuncture.

    One theory was that the threat of terrorist attacks on Westerners with interests in Nigeria was driving prices up. Another cited the escalating violence between Syria and Israel. A third named a predicted drop in U.S. oil and gas reserves coupled with slowed refinery output as the cause. And, finally, the last reason I heard mentioned was an upcoming OPEC meeting in Vienna where they're expected to announce--surprise, surprise--that they will not increase output quotas.

    And while all those assertions may have some validity, I would submit that there isn't really any new information there. When is the last time there wasn't a terrorist threat in Nigeria or conflict between Israel and its neighbors? Has there been a U.S. oil and gas supply surplus anytime this year? And I don't recall any recent OPEC output increases either.

    Here's my take. The market--pre-housing slump--was pretty hunky-dory. The Dow was breaking records, the S&P was up, and there was hardly a bear to be found. But when the sub-prime troubles hit and the resultant credit woes manifested themselves, everyone's attention was turned.

    As market after market began to tumble, institutional investors quickly pulled their funds in an effort to hedge against what they thought would be prolonged market mayhem. But, as it turned out, stocks rebounded more quickly than anyone imagined they would.

    So now, with the attention off a depressing downturn, the market is searching for something to focus on. And it didn't take long. How could it?

    The energy crisis never went away . . . it was simply ignored for a few weeks. And now, with the focus regained, it's off to the races--especially for green investors.

    Because oil prices hovering this high serves only as fuel for the renewables fire. And that's what is happening right now.
    Just take a look at the performance of a few alternative and renewable energy plays over the past five days.

    Advanced Battery Technologies Inc. (ABAT.OB) has been flying.

    And Arise Technologies Corp. (APV.V) has gained over 44% in the last week.

    Not to mention very solid performances from stalwarts in the solar sector and other sectors like geothermal, energy efficiency and wind.

    The Heat Is On

    There was also a slew of other news reported today that assisted in shining a spotlight on green industries.

    Here are just a few of the impressive headlines, some of which stemmed from the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum being held this week in Sydney:

    Business to Push Carbon Pricing at APEC
    India's Largest Utility to Add 1,000 MW of Renewable Energy Capacity
    Bush Supports APEC Climate Change Pact
    Beijing Calls for $265B Investment in Renewable Energy
    With all this buzz surrounding the industry, it's no wonder it's soaring higher. And, if you're smart, you can get in now while there are still a few good bargains left over from the recent correction.

    It's going to be gangbusters from here on out.

    In fact, Green Chip's latest recommendation--issued just today--is already up over 28%.

    Make sure you don't miss another day of this action . . . become a member of Green Chip Stocks today. You can take advantage of our special offer by clicking here.

    Until next time,

    more info

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  • Marketing: 5 "BIG" ideas for Your New Product Launch

    Here's a little secret...

    If you breakdown nearly any successful product or service - there
    are 5 "BIG" ideas behind it (or sometimes combinations of several).

    I've just released a brand new video detailing all 5 ways to come
    up with your own BIG idea or hook for your product.

    click here

    Frankly, it's more critical than ever to have a big idea or
    else the marketplace sees you as a "me-too" product. Unless,
    you have a differentiation point (with one of these 5 ways) it
    leaves to compete on price.

    I strongly suggest you check it out because these 5 ways to
    formulate a big idea or hook have been the foundation for my
    8-figure business.

    Here's that link again:

    click here

    All the best,

    Yanik Silver
    InternetLifestyle.com


    P.S. If you missed the video detailing the model for my own
    information empire - the "Oil Well" model. Check it out here:

    click here

     

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  • Monday, September 10, 2007

    Investments: Coffeee Pacifica

    New Green Chip Recommendation
    By Jeff Siegel


    Alright folks, I have a new recommendation for you.

    Click here , or cut and paste the following URL into your browser:

    Learn more about Coffee Pacifica.

     

     

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  • 4 Ways Social Networks Can Benefit Your Business

    4 Ways Social Networks Can Benefit Your Business

    The most obvious way, perhaps, is getting workers involved
    and excited. But the advantages don't stop there, and we have
    MySpace to thank for that.
    full story

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  • Marketing: What's the "Oil Well" model?

    Over the last 12 months I've held two SOLD-OUT $5,000.00
    per person & $10,000.00 per person workshops with just me
    teaching everything I know about information marketing.
    (Remember, I've sold just about everything online from $17
    ebooks to $20k 'MasterMind' programs!)

    One of the concepts I taught that really got lots of
    attendees excited was my "Oil Well" model for information
    marketers.

    click here
    Listen, if you're selling any sort of information online
    than you've no doubt seen the typical "funnel" most people
    teach. You know what I'm talking about - bring people in
    with a low front-end product and then keep moving them up
    the funnel to more expensive stuff?

    Well let me tell you this "Oil Well" model takes that just
    turns it on its head!

    In fact, I created a 21 minute video outlining the whole
    thing...check it out here:

    Don't worry - you don't need to jump through any hoops
    there or leave your name or email to watch the whole thing.
    It's good stuff - I promise.

    All the best,
    Yanik Silver
    BizAnalyst Network
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  • victor7@bizanalyst.net has sent you a message.

    The following email has been sent to you by victor7@bizanalyst.net

    US PROBE INTO SCAMS ON ELDERLY REVEALED
    By Jeremy Grant in WashingtonPublished: September 10 2007 05:05 | Last updated: September 10 2007 05:05
    US regulators will on Monday present results of a year-long inquiry into investment scams that are fleecing retirees out of their life savings.
    The Securities and Exchange Commission will report on the growing phenomenon of "free lunch" seminars that financial advisers offer to older people.
    This article can be found at:
    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/4dfa5688-5f23-11dc-837c-0000779fd2ac,_i_email=y.html
    "FT" and "Financial Times" are trademarks of The Financial Times.
    Copyright The Financial Times Ltd 2007

    Monday, September 03, 2007

    Clean Energy & Water Stocks

    The new wave of tech stock are here! Yet they will touch every part of the economy and consumer lives. Get in early and bulk up your portfoliowith these index ETFs:
    PZD - CleanTech Portfolio
    PIO - Global Water Portfolio

    If you prefer individual stock, stay tuned. We'll keep you on the cutting edge of the top companies for your portfolio.

    BizAnalyst