Sean Brodrick - The natural resources analyst for MoneyandMarkets.com, and he trots the globe to bring you the best in gold, silver, oil and other commodity stocks.

Latest Post on Global Wealth Report Blog — Gold and More

by Sean Brodrick on March 11, 2009

in General

Just a reminder that I’ve moved my blog over to the Uncommon Wisdom website.  You can read my latest post, which is about gold and my appearance on CNBC today, by pointing your web browser here: blogs.uncommonwisdomdaily.com/red-hot-energy-and-gold

Remember to update your links and RSS feeds.  See you over at Uncommon Wisdom.  And I’ve got a new column coming out there on Friday — about the Pharaoh’s Treasure!


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{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

1 tom horn April 1, 2009 at 11:40 AM

Hello Sean:

RW and SM subscriber here. You probably come closest to all the writers over there at hitting the problem on the head. You don’t yet have the end in view but I can give you a clue.

Any way a good post on M & M today. Most people cannot handle the truth…let alone understand it.

People have short memories and do not ready their history books. “His-story” tells us how it will end up…so don’t sweat it. Chapter 18 of the last book paints a vivid picture of the end of this present system…..it is not at all how Paulson and Gaithner image.

The Fed is not Federal at all, let alone constitutional. Look it up for yourself. It is a cartel of private bankers. and the constitution specifically gives only the Treasury the right to coin money. But every writer at M & M is afraid to say this publically. so why are we paying interest on debt created out of thin air and loaned to the very institution for which the constitution gives the authority to print. The central bankers like the SP court justices are probably musing right now by saying, “What constitution?” But that okay…I can see the finish line and it is not the winner they are parlaying.

If you have the nerve check out, without stereotype-casting, the following two sites.

http://www.gods-kingdom-ministries.org/weblog/WebPosting.cfm?LogID=1495

http://www.gods-kingdom-ministries.org/

Kindly,

Tom

Reply

2 Sean Brodrick April 1, 2009 at 11:44 AM

Tom, thanks for writing in. I don’t publish to this blog anymore. My new blog is over at UncommonWisdomDaily.com. Check it out at: http://blogs.uncommonwisdomdaily.com/red-hot-energy-and-gold/

Reply

3 Johnathan Vrozos April 8, 2009 at 9:43 AM

I personally know some Russian oligarchs. Don’t tell them that there wealth has NOT BEEN AFFECTED. They are down tremendously!!!

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4 Gold For Cash October 7, 2010 at 4:30 PM

The above concept is true.This is where you can share your business opportunities or ideas with other community members.
Thanks
*******TIM******
Gold For Cash

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5 Max Green March 19, 2012 at 9:00 AM

Small cap stocks always out perform large cap, because so many small cap stocks go under along the way. The statistics are flawed. The data looks only at the small and large cap stocks that are still in business after a time period. Naturally if you could find and count the ones that failed, the the average market value of the small cap stocks would be much smaller.

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6 Max Green March 19, 2012 at 9:09 AM

The statistics on small and large cap stocks is badly flawed in my opinion. Many more small cap stocks fail completely during any one time period. The statistics look only at a group of surviving small cap and large cap stocks at the end of a time period. Since it is nearly impossible to find the companies that no longer exist, it is much more difficult to include them in the study. So they are left out, even though the average market value of that group would be much lower. The failed companies would have zero value of course. Try to find information on a failed small cap company without any employees. The challenge remains, how do you pick out the small cap companies that will survive.

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