$1.09 vs .82.
A 33% miss in most college level courses is tantamount to failure.
How can analysts' estimates be this consistently so far off?
Conference call should be a hoot. Can't wait to read the transcript.
Only one reason why Anderson would buy shares on the open market.
Another quarterly distribution increase.
Congrats, You nailed it! Great call.
Brilliant, thanks.
Same post as last month.
Guess we'll look for regurge again next month.
Wilma, yabba dabba do! I agree with you. Solomon said this will not move up quickly. 12-18 mo. sounds reasonable.
KYN 6.4% yield. FEN, I like it, but it looks overbought.
Profit?- even Solomon said that's impossible in the near future, but long-term he was very optimistic. He indicated UBRG had to leverage the amount they could borrow to greater than their current 8 mil.
Friday short volume was nearly 40%.
Interesting to see what happens Monday.
very very very (ad nauseum) unlikely.
Few questions-
How many shares did you buy today?
Will you be buying again soon?
Is this "YOUR" rally?
Who exactly are you... and what kind of call is that to make prior to market open?!?
How exactly does one determine shareholder value? When I spoke with Solomon about 7 weeks ago he said "Watch for the Ks and Qs", supposedly forthcoming 4/1ish. What's up with the delay?
Bam! you nailed it.
If anything is predictable it is that equities move in response to perceived growth and earnings... sometimes scratching and clawing, but you don't see stocks flatline in the face of growth.
Pretty pathetic div history
"PATENTS WORTH MILLIONS"... to whom?
Stocks ALWAYS move relative to perceived growth and earnings.
And that was a pretty nice move from 29 bucks. We'll see about the div increase.
Dead?
Coal is forecast to overtake oil as the most used fuel in 2-3 years, then maintain dominance til 2040 according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s Annual Energy Outlook 2013.
The door may be shutting on many aging coal-fired power plants in the U.S., but coal has shown a modest revival in Europe and roaring growth in Africa, Asia and the rest of the developing world as it remains the cheapest and most reliable source of power. Coal already provides 41 percent of the world’s power and that is set to grow significantly, according to the international energy agency.