ETC Natural Gas (113 lettori)

kuelo

C'e' grosssa crise...
cmq...5h...la mia idea per il brevissimo e' questa....finche ' rimaniamo sopra i 4 va benissimo come correzzione -stop---se sfondano il quadrato blu...allora e' meglio cominciare a dare un 'okkiata:ciao:...a piu' tardissimo...forse:D
 

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ducciopa

Forumer attivo
ma no dai Duccio non puoi aver lasciato giu' un 10% di commissioni!!!!
.....o c e' uno della banca che va avanti e indietro a comprartele direttamente in quel di Milanooooo
E' vero Rob....ti ringrazio
Ho rifatto i conti e avevo sbagliato
Mi sono accorto che il mio pmc (con commissioni) non è più 0,405 ma è 0,376
Niente di che....comunque per me è una bellissimia notizia
Grazie Rob di avermelo fatto notare
 

NEO_99

Forumer storico
PER IL WHEAT

Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Wheat futures fell for a second straight day as rain forecast this week in the U.S. Great Plains may improve prospects for recently planted winter crops.
Areas from Nebraska to northern Texas may get as much as 0.3 inch (0.8 centimeter) of rain tomorrow, and storms may continue on Nov. 12, according to AccuWeather Inc. Most of Kansas, the largest winter-wheat-growing state, Oklahoma and Nebraska have received less than half of the normal amount of rainfall in the past 30 days.
“We are seeing a little better rain in the forecast in the next week and a half for the Plains,” said Rich Nelson, the director of research at Allendale Inc. in McHenry, Illinois. Dry weather “is a problem producers are concerned about, but it’s not a panic situation yet,” he said.
Wheat futures for December delivery dropped 7.25 cents, or 1 percent, to $7.145 bushel at 10:54 a.m. on the Chicago Board of Trade. Before today, prices were up 50 percent since the end of June after drought in Russia and Eastern Europe harmed crops.
About 45 percent of U.S. winter wheat was in good or excellent condition as of Nov. 7, down from 46 percent a week earlier and 63 percent a year earlier, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said Nov. 8. Planting was 95 percent complete.
Futures also fell as concern over European debt provided strength to the dollar, and after the USDA reported yesterday that global wheat stockpiles were in line with analysts’ estimates, said Jamey Kohake, a broker and branch manager at Paragon Investments in Silver Lake, Kansas.
Inventory Outlook
World wheat inventories on May 31 will total 172.51 million metric tons, 1.2 percent less than estimated last month, the USDA said.
The decline was “pretty much already built into the market,” because wheat futures climbed 6.7 percent in the three days before the USDA report, Kohake said. Global inventories are
“comfortable, and there’s still a margin for error if something happens with the weather,” he said.
 

acetrato

Forumer attivo
per il wheat

nov. 10 (bloomberg) -- wheat futures fell for a second straight day as rain forecast this week in the u.s. Great plains may improve prospects for recently planted winter crops.
Areas from nebraska to northern texas may get as much as 0.3 inch (0.8 centimeter) of rain tomorrow, and storms may continue on nov. 12, according to accuweather inc. Most of kansas, the largest winter-wheat-growing state, oklahoma and nebraska have received less than half of the normal amount of rainfall in the past 30 days.
“we are seeing a little better rain in the forecast in the next week and a half for the plains,” said rich nelson, the director of research at allendale inc. In mchenry, illinois. Dry weather “is a problem producers are concerned about, but it’s not a panic situation yet,” he said.
Wheat futures for december delivery dropped 7.25 cents, or 1 percent, to $7.145 bushel at 10:54 a.m. On the chicago board of trade. Before today, prices were up 50 percent since the end of june after drought in russia and eastern europe harmed crops.
About 45 percent of u.s. Winter wheat was in good or excellent condition as of nov. 7, down from 46 percent a week earlier and 63 percent a year earlier, the u.s. Department of agriculture said nov. 8. Planting was 95 percent complete.
Futures also fell as concern over european debt provided strength to the dollar, and after the usda reported yesterday that global wheat stockpiles were in line with analysts’ estimates, said jamey kohake, a broker and branch manager at paragon investments in silver lake, kansas.
Inventory outlook
world wheat inventories on may 31 will total 172.51 million metric tons, 1.2 percent less than estimated last month, the usda said.
The decline was “pretty much already built into the market,” because wheat futures climbed 6.7 percent in the three days before the usda report, kohake said. Global inventories are
“comfortable, and there’s still a margin for error if something happens with the weather,” he said.
la discesa non si ferma azzzz
 

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