Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Class action against Morgan, HSBC specifies silver manipulation mechanism
From GATA.org:
Submitted by cpowell on Tue, 2010-12-28 06:31. Section: Daily Dispatches
Submitted by cpowell on Tue, 2010-12-28 06:31. Section: Daily Dispatches
A Chicago law firm yesterday announced another class-action lawsuit against J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and HSBC Holdings PLC complaining of silver market manipulation. Interestingly, the lawsuit cites GATA's silver market manipulation whistleblower Andrew Maguire and U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission member Bart Chilton, and specifies mechanisms by which Morgan and HSBC could manipulate the silver market through the use of silver exchange-traded funds.....read on
The Festive season is over - Gold and Silver continue their relentless climb higher
Thai tourism recovers
In the wake of the GFC and the isolated street clashes in Bangkok Thailand's tourism industry has largely recovered. The deck chairs on Pattaya's beaches are covered in fat Germans and their towels and the water slide parks are full of boisterous Russians and their families. No doubt they are able to travel as both countries still have functioning economies, plus both are escaping a nasty bit of global warming at the moment.
Celtic tomb hailed as great archaeological find
Gold again stands the test of time as mans greatest treasure.....
From thelocal.de:
In a discovery described as a “milestone of archaeology,” scientists have found a 2,600-year-old aristocratic burial site at the Celtic hill fort at Heuneburg in Baden-Württemberg.
The noblewoman's tomb, dating from early Celtic times, measures four metres by five metres, and is exceptionally well-preserved. It contained gold and amber jewellery that makes possible for the first time the precise dating of an early Celtic grave.....read on
From thelocal.de:
In a discovery described as a “milestone of archaeology,” scientists have found a 2,600-year-old aristocratic burial site at the Celtic hill fort at Heuneburg in Baden-Württemberg.
The noblewoman's tomb, dating from early Celtic times, measures four metres by five metres, and is exceptionally well-preserved. It contained gold and amber jewellery that makes possible for the first time the precise dating of an early Celtic grave.....read on
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)