14.10.13

Most Active Stocks - Less Than $10 - Friday Oct 11, 2013

From: Google Finance

Market Chart












Dow Jones
15,237.11+111.04(0.73%)
1,703.20+10.64(0.63%)
3,791.87+31.12(0.83%)








NYSE MOST ACTIVE 

AA      RAD      JCP 

S      AMD

NASDAQ  MOST ACTIVE

SIRI      ARIA      AMRN

ZNGA     BBRY      LLEN

DRYS     WIN      TWGP



Click to readNew front opens in U.S. budget battle - Republicans oppose move to reopen sequester cuts - Senate leaders attempting to avoid a U.S. debt default remained at loggerheads Sunday and escalated the standoff by reopening the contentious issue of automatic spending cuts, damping hopes that some of Congress’s most canny negotiators would break the impasse. As the search for a way to end the partial federal shutdown and avoid a debt crisis shifted to the Senate, Democrats made plain that one of their top priorities was to diminish the next round of across-the-board spending cuts, known as the sequester, due to take effect early next year.

Click to read - Debt ceiling stock sell-off a buy: Strategists - Any hit the stock market takes between now and the Treasury's Thursday debt ceiling deadline would be a buying opportunity, two market strategists told CNBC on Monday—as a third week begins with no agreements to increase the nation's borrowing limit or end the 14-day government shutdown.

Click to read - China-to-India Price Jump Threatens Growth as World Outlook Dims - Higher food costs from China to India are raising prices for a third of the world’s people, adding to the challenge of sustaining the global economic recovery as the growth outlook dims. Consumer prices in China rose 3.1 percent last month as food costs advanced the most since May 2012, statistics bureau figures showed today in Beijing, while India’s Commerce Ministry said inflation unexpectedly accelerated to a seven-month high. Both gauges increased more than economists had estimated.

Click to read  The U.S. National Spending And Debt - It’s a delicate task to balance the budget, as both sides need to meet in the middle. Just like someone stuck in credit card debt, kicking the can down the road is only a bandage repair. At some point, the credit collector calls and the game is up. In this case, we are our own collection agency watching over our debt. And we have had unpredictable rises in healthcare and military spending, making balancing spending nearly impossible. Maybe Keynes was on to something - we just never expected the intervention to cost so much.

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