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DBD. Symmetrical triangle pattern and it's been trending higher since October.
When I look at that chart, I get the sense that it will drop back to the 50-day MA some time in the next month or so, at which time it will be somewhere between 42.50 and 43. It appears to be trading in a fairly well-defined channel since the huge dive in Sept. and the bottom in Oct.
BCO. Orderly pullback the past two weeks. Estimates for the upcoming quarter are +138% but -13% for the following quarter. Earnings for the March quarter beat estimates by 40%.
Copper trade losses spark fear of defaults
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (Filed: 18/05/2006)
London Telegraph
The risk of defaults was hanging over the London Metal Exchange last night after a clutch of clients failed to meet margin calls on losing copper trades, leaving brokers struggling frantically to match their books.
The liquidity crunch follows another day of wild gyrations at the exchange, where copper, aluminium, zinc and lead all tumbled on bad US inflation data after failing to conquer new highs.
Copper fell 3.3pc to $8,080 a tonne in late trading. "The hedge books of the banks are seriously underwater on copper, but apart from that there are now brokers in trouble because clients can't meet the margin payments," said a market source.
LME brokers are liable for the margin calls of their clients, who are given 24 hours to stump up the cash. "Some of the wire cable manufacturers and industrial users can't meet payments because of cash flow problems, so the brokers are left holding the bag," he said.
He added that the banks were bleeding heavily because of a mismatch between their short-term and long-term futures contracts.
The market reached fever point late last week with all-time highs across the spectrum of base metals, led by an explosive spike in copper to almost $8,900 a tonne - up 170pc in a year.
Speculation by hedge funds prompted LCH.Clearnet to raise margin calls 71pc to $25,000 per 25-tonne lot earlier this week, after doubling them just eight days earlier.
LCH.Clearnet said that none of its 39 LME members had missed payments, but it is not responsible for monitoring defaults by broker clients. Moreover, many smaller players are outside the Clearnet system.
The LME said all its members were meeting obligations and are in "good standing". "There is no chance of a member defaulting because systemic risk is managed through very sophisticated mechanisms," it said.
WMG. Symmetrical triangle and daily volume flow indicator turned bullish yesterday. A negative is a very high (70) P/E ratio.
Dave, according to businessweek.com, WMG's EPS for the last four quarters are: -1.41, -0.21, 0.46, -0.05, which total -1.21. Where does that 70 number come from? Just curious.
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