ciao
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ditropan ha scritto:
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
già sull'aussie$ doppio massimo, però l'oro l'altra volta era più basso.
l'oro è trainato anche dal deprezzamento del dollaro, essendo il dollar index più basso di riflesso è normale che l'oro quoti più in alto ..... in questo scenario il dollaro australiano segue a ruota l'oro. ... o meglio segue al traino dell'oro.
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A. 53
ciao a tutta la banda
Ditro ti ricordo anche in Australia sta per cominciare l'estate che coincide con il flusso turistico (ormai seconda fonte di introiti )per cui non hanno nessun interesse ad andare oltre con il valore della loro moneta
vi lascio di nuovo .....purtroppo le mie tasche sono vuote (o per fortuna)
per cui non opero ,ma vi leggo sempre ciao
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CACAO
DJ Ivory Coast Daily Cocoa Arrivals Seen 25%-50% Down On Avg
(Repeating)
ABIDJAN (Dow Jones)--Daily arrivals of cocoa beans at Ivory Coast's ports
so far this week are down by 25%-50% from the average daily arrivals for the
end of November, shippers said Wednesday.
Arrivals at the southwestern port of San Pedro were an estimated 3,000
metric tons Monday and Tuesday, down 25% on average daily arrivals of around
4,000 tons typical for this time of the year, they said, adding they expected
2,000 tons to arrive at the port Wednesday.
"We had 1,000 tons this morning here in San Pedro and I believe another
1,000 tons will have arrived by the end of the day," a leading shipper told
Dow Jones Newswires.
A source with access to official arrival data said the port had received
about 27,000 tons of beans in the seven days to Nov. 21, including some 5,000
tons bought by the San Pedro-branch of Cipexi, owned by Continaf, of the
Netherlands, and 3,000 tons purchased by Cargill San Pedro.
This compares to 54,132 tons purchased at the ports of Abidjan and San
Pedro in week 47 of last year.
No data were available for the port of Abidjan but shippers there said
arrivals had slumped as compared to last week.
Abidjan handles more than half of Ivory Coast's cocoa exports, consisting
of beans and semi-finished cocoa products. In November 2003 Abidjan shipped
58% of all cocoa exported that month.
"What we need is a price of over 400 (CFA francs per kilogram). That's when
the cocoa will start coming down again," said an Abidjan shipper.
He said he paid on Wednesday 385 CFA francs ($1=XOF501.611) a kilo of beans
delivered at his port warehouse.
Other shippers quoted slightly lower prices of XOF375-XOF380/kg.
-By Vincent t'Sas; Dow Jones Newswires; +225 21244846;
[email protected]
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
FSN44376 ACST COCOA FOOD TOP
2004-11-24 19:15:49 UTC
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ciao banda .................x DITRO e FLEUR
banda ... a domani