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Post by walnut on Nov 17, 2013 12:01:21 GMT -5
I wouldn't trust their accounting for individual companies returns any more than I would knowingly eat any of their melamine laced food products.
Mexico might be the new China, and beat China in the US, from what I have been reading. Sound crazy? 10 years ago I never would have guessed that the US oil production would exceed Saudi oil production, which is just happening right now.
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Post by jacksrbtr on Nov 17, 2013 15:49:25 GMT -5
Betting against China is fun. Those people got no scruples, and that will eventually do them in. Nothing ever done for the common good, or for the other guy. They will eat all their green grass and then they will die off. The Chinese are buying resource and strategic interests all around the world. If what you say is true, first they will eat all others' green grass and those countries will die off.
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Post by clinton on Nov 18, 2013 7:32:03 GMT -5
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Post by clinton on Nov 19, 2013 7:13:03 GMT -5
China’s spot steel markets continued to weaken on Tuesday November 19 as slack demand and ample supply put further downwards pressure on flats and longs prices
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Post by clinton on Nov 19, 2013 22:24:28 GMT -5
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Post by clinton on Nov 21, 2013 8:57:17 GMT -5
China Fires Shot Across Petrodollar Bow: Shanghai Futures Exchange May Price Crude Oil Futures In Yuan Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2013 - 08:23 With the US shale revolution set to make America the largest exporter of crude, however briefly, the influence of Saudi oil is rapidly declining. This has been felt most recently in the cold shoulder the US gave Saudi Arabia and Qatar first over the Syrian debacle, and subsequently in its overtures to break the ice with Iran over the stern objections of Israel and the Saudi lobby (for a good example of this the most recent soundbites by Prince bin Talal ). But despite the shifting commodity winds and the superficial political jawboning, the reality is that nothing threatens the US dollar's hegemony in what many claim is the biggest pillar of the currency's reserve status - the petrodollar, which literally makes the USD the only currency in which energy-strapped countries can transact in to purchase energy. This may be changing soon following news that the Shanghai Futures Exchange could price its crude oil futures contract in yuan, its chairman said on Thursday, adding that the bourse is speeding up preparatory work to secure regulatory approvals.
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Post by clinton on Dec 11, 2013 9:09:36 GMT -5
what's APT stand for?
Chinese APT producers start maintenance amid tight liquidity December 11, 2013 - 09:20 GMT Location: Shanghai
KEYWORDS: China , APT
Some Chinese APT producers have started annual maintenance works, ahead of the usual schedule before the Chinese New Year, amid an ailing market due to tight liquidity.
In the Jiangxi province, for example, small producers have halted production, according to market sources. “The market is not good so we just decided to stop production and start break for the year,” a major APT producer said. Usually, most Chinese APT producers conduct maintenance around two to four weeks before the lunar New Year and then go on a holiday for the biggest festival of the year, market participants pointed. The Chinese New Year break is expected to begin January 30
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Post by huh on Dec 11, 2013 9:11:38 GMT -5
"Against Phemale Toddlers"?
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Post by huh on Dec 11, 2013 9:14:55 GMT -5
Related to tungsten processing?: Ammonium Paratungstate (APT), an intermediate compound in production of the pure metal
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Post by clinton on Dec 11, 2013 9:21:41 GMT -5
Related to tungsten processing?: Ammonium Paratungstate (APT), an intermediate compound in production of the pure metal Thanks,
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Post by clinton on Dec 20, 2013 7:13:46 GMT -5
Attachments:
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Post by clinton on Dec 23, 2013 9:11:18 GMT -5
China’s spot steel markets weakened on Monday December 23 as sluggish demand and a weak billet performance sapped sentiment, driving prices down.
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Post by clinton on Dec 24, 2013 7:10:38 GMT -5
China’s domestic steel markets were mixed on Tuesday December 24 as flats were stable amid cautious sentiment, while longs prices continued to fall on slow sales.
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Post by clinton on Dec 24, 2013 11:16:25 GMT -5
China’s manganese ore imports fell by nearly a quarter in November as trade slowed amid subdued purchasing interest on unfavourable import material prices.
Manganese ore and concentrate imports totalled 1,499,888 tonnes in November, down 23.2% from the previous month, according to the latest figure from Chinese customs
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Post by clinton on Dec 24, 2013 11:17:20 GMT -5
A summary of China’s ferro-alloys imports in November.
FERRO-ALLOYS Chrome ore Month total: 970,138 tonnes On month: -2.6%
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Post by clinton on Dec 24, 2013 11:18:14 GMT -5
China’s iron ore imports surged 14.8% month-on-month to reach a record high in November, according to data released by Chinese customs on Monday December 23. Volumes of the steelmaking raw material unloaded at Chinese ports reached 77.48 million tonnes, up from 67.83 million tonnes in October. Arrivals from the top three suppliers all increased, with shipments from Australia rising 10.2% on the month to 39.61 million tonnes, while China acquired 15.38 million tonnes from Brazil, up 20.9% over the same period
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Post by clinton on Dec 26, 2013 8:09:25 GMT -5
China’s spot steel markets were largely unchanged on Thursday December 26, as slack seasonal demand slowed sales to a standstill, with only rebar prices in the east of the country seeing further falls.
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Post by clinton on Dec 27, 2013 7:53:07 GMT -5
CHINA STEEL WRAP: Prices down on the week December 27, 2013 - 09:53 GMT Location: Shanghai
China’s spot steel markets lost ground this week as tight cashflow and weak demand softened sentiment.
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Post by clinton on Dec 30, 2013 9:24:26 GMT -5
China’s spot rebar prices fell on Monday December 30 amid a quiet market and tumbling steel futures while those for hot rolled coil held steady.
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Post by clinton on Dec 31, 2013 7:07:37 GMT -5
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