11.10.13

Most Active Stocks - Less Than $10 - Thursday Oct 10, 2013

From: Google Finance

Market Chart












15,126.07+323.09(2.18%)
1,692.56+36.16(2.18%)
3,760.75+82.97(2.26%)




NYSE MOST ACTIVE 

AA      RAD      NOK 

ALU      JCP      RF

AMD

NASDAQ  MOST ACTIVE

SIRI      ARIA      BBRY 

CMLS     DRYS      BRCD   

FREE     ZNGA      HBAN   

NEWL     ONNN

Click to readBlackBerry co-founders considering bid for company - BlackBerry Ltd co-founders Mike Lazaridis and Douglas Fregin are considering a bid to buy the struggling smartphone maker, according to a securities filing on Thursday, raising the prospect of an alternative to a $4.7 billion offer led by its top shareholder. The filing did not indicate whether the pair was planning to join or to present an alternative to a tentative $9-a-share bid by a group led by Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. Fairfax, which is headed by financier Prem Watsa, has not yet identified other members of the group.

Click to read - U.S. soon to overtake Russia as top oil producer - The United States will become the world's largest oil producer next year - overtaking Russia - thanks to its shale oil boom which has transformed the global energy landscape, the West's energy watchdog said on Friday. The prediction comes only days after estimates by the U.S. government showed the United States, the world's largest oil consumer, has ceded its ranking as top global oil importer to China, thanks to the shale revolution cutting import needs.

Click to read - Google launches new HP Chromebook for $279 - Google has partnered again with Hewlett-Packard to build a new Chromebook computer that costs $279 and is available Tuesday. "At $279, it's the same high-design laptop that pretty much anyone can buy," said Caesar Sengupta, Google product management director. "At $279, this is an incredible laptop."

Click to read  The Basics Of Short Selling - Short selling is a relatively advanced strategy best suited for sophisticated investors or traders who are familiar with the risks of shorting and the regulations involved. The average investor may be better served by using put options to hedge downside risk or to speculate on a decline because of the limited risk involved. But for those who know how to use it effectively, short selling can be a potent weapon in one’s investing arsenal.

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