23.10.13

Most Active Stocks - Less Than $10 - Tuesday Oct 22, 2013

From: Google Finance

Market Chart












Dow Jones
15,392.20-7.45(-0.05%)
1,744.66+0.16(0.01%)
3,920.05+5.77(0.15%)








NYSE MOST ACTIVE 

JCP      AMD      RF

NBG      NOK      AA

NASDAQ  MOST ACTIVE

 TLAB      SIRI      DRYS

AMRN     ARIA      ZNGA

RSOL     HBAN    



Click to read - 2014 ‘Year of the Boom!’ Bet on the bulls now - Yes, folks, 2014 really is the “Year of the Boom.” That’s the hot, breathless, engraved- invitation-to-the-party thrust of Matthew Boesler’s Business Insider column, “Here comes the final melt-up for the one percenters,” a fascinating summary of 2014 market predictions made by the great Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist over at Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Research. Yes, 2014 is his big “Year of the Boom.”

Click to read - Murky jobs picture likely to keep Fed on hold - The Fed is expected to keep easing at full throttle well into next year, after September's tepid jobs report showed the impact of a painfully slow growing economy on employment. The economy added 148,000 nonfarm payrolls, compared with expectations for 180,000, and a revised 193,000 in August. The jobless rate fell to 7.2 percent, from 7.3 percent.

Click to read - Adapt To A Bear Market - Witnessing a bear market for stocks doesn't have to be about suffering and loss, even though some cash losses may be unavoidable. Instead, investors should always try to see what is presented to them as an opportunity - a chance to learn about how markets respond to the events surrounding a bear market or any other extended period of dull returns. Read on to learn about how to weather a downturn.

Click to read  Don’t Kill Fannie and Freddie - The two giant providers of cash for mortgages now back almost 9 out of 10 home loans. Fannie, founded during the New Deal as a federal agency and then converted into a shareholder-owned government-sponsored enterprise in 1968, had its most profitable year in 2012. Together, the entities paid the U.S. Treasury $66.3 billion in dividends on July 1 -- a sum that extended the debt-ceiling deadline by a month.