I only found it on stock websites, but they were so hard to comprehend. Anyways any help would be appreciated.

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I am in ink cartridge retail business and I am planning to stock some toner cartridge in the store for retail. With limited budget, I can only stock the toner cartridges in better demand on the market. Would you please advice me the popular toner cartridge models in Canadian market? Or where I can find this information?

Thank you.

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Already down 50% – Is the risk great to loose another 50%? – Investments are well diversified in the Canadain market. Should I get out now or is the worst over?

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Stock Market Sentiment

Daily Market Commentary for November 6, 2008 from Millennium-Traders.Com

Buyers remain on the sidelines and even still, they are definitely not looking to take any chance in getting in on these heavy market losses taken by stocks as of yet. (read more)
http://www.millennium-traders.com/news/newscommentary.aspx

Economic data released today:

Jobless Claims:
U.S. Jobless Claims in week of November 1 fell 4K to 481K compared to survey of unchanged; U.S. Continuing Claims for week of October 25 rose by 122K to 3,843,000; U.S. Jobless Claims for week of October 25 Week  revised to 485K from 479K; U.S. Insured Unemployment for week of November 1 highest since 1983.

Productivity and Costs:
U.S. Third Quarter Non-Farm Productivity increased by 1.1 percent compared to consensus of an increase by 0.4 percent; U.S. Third Quarter Unit Labor Costs increased by 3.6 percent compared to consensus of an increase by 3.0 percent.

At the NYSE closing bell on the New York Stock Exchange, here is how the major world indices and major U.S. stock indices ended the session on the world market as well as the emerging markets including the stock market closing bell price:
DOW (Dow Jones Industrial Average) triple digit loss of 443.48 points on the day to end the trading session at 8,695.79
NYSE (New York Stock Exchange) triple digit loss of 344.77 points to end the trading session at 5,667.40
National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ) loss of 72.948 points to end the trading session at 1,608.70
S&P 500 loss of 47.89 points to end the trading session at 904.88
FTSE All-World excluding U.S. loss of 8.58 points to end the trading session at 148.73
FTSE RAFI 1000 triple digit loss of 198.88 points to end the trading session at 3,495.23
BEL 20 (BEL20) loss of 66.56points to end the trading session at 2,132.87
CAC 40 (CAC40) triple digit loss of 230.86 points to end the trading session at 3,387.25
FTSE100 (UKX100) triple digit loss of 258.32 points to end the trading session at 4,272.41
NIKKEI 225 (NIK/O) triple digit loss of 622.10 points to end the trading session at 8,899.14

New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) stock market indicators for the day:
Advanced stock prices 547, declined stock prices 2,658; unchanged stock prices 50; stock prices hitting new highs 3 and stock prices hitting new lows 119. NYSE quotes for volatile stocks and market trends, as well as stock quotes, stock prices and stock symbols of Day Trading Stock Picks on the New York Stock Exchange stock market for Day Trading online and active Day Trading for those who are or would like to be Day Trading for a living: Charles River Laboratories Incorporated (NYSE: CRL) stock price shed 7.03 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $30.00, low on the trading session $25.65 with a closing stock price at $26.87; Amdocs Limited (NYSE: DOX) stock price shed 4.29 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $120.18, low on the trading session $18.16 with a closing stock price at $19.34; FTI Consulting Incorporated (NYSE: FCN) stock price shed 15.07 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $45.50, low on the trading session $37.80 with a closing stock price at $43.11; Vulcan Materials Company (NYSE: VMC) stock price shed 3.20 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $57.07, low on the trading session $50.24 with a closing stock price at $53.10; Goldman Sachs Group Incorporated (NYSE: GS) stock price shed 6.71 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $88.80, low on the trading session $79.41 with a closing stock price at $80.72; Ultrashort Financial ProShares Corporation (NYSE: SKF) stock price gained 15.90 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $146.21, low on the trading session $128.23 with a closing stock price at $143.33; Potash Corporation Saskatchewan (NYSE: POT) stock price shed 7.98 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $85.44, low on the trading session $76.62 with a closing stock price at $78.90; CNOOC Limited (NYSE: CEO) stock price shed 9.27 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $74.90, low on the trading session $68.13 with a closing stock price at $68.79; Proshares Ultrashort (NYSE: EEV) stock price gained 9.50 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $104.40, low on the trading session $90.60 with a closing stock price at $100.90; MEMC Electronic Materials Incorporated (NYSE: WFR) stock price shed 2.09 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $19.56, low on the trading session $17.50 with a closing stock price at $17.74; Canadian Natural Resource Limited (NYSE: CNQ) stock price shed 7.08 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $50.66, low on the trading session $42.73 with a closing stock price at $44.57; Integrys Energy Group Incorporated (NYSE: TEG) stock price shed 4.30 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $46.00, low on the trading session $42.29 with a closing stock price at $43.62; Toyota Motor Corporation (NYSE: TM) stock price shed 13.28 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $71.67, low on the trading session $64.80 with a closing stock price at $67.09; MasterCard Incorporated (NYSE: MA) stock price shed 12.57 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $155.67, low on the trading session $138.55 with a closing stock price at $143.30; CME Group Incorporated (NYSE: CME) stock price shed 22.39 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $288.74, low on the trading session $258.00 with a closing stock price at $259.66.

National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ) stock market indicators today:
Advanced stock prices 631; declined stock prices 2,249; unchanged stock prices 106; stock prices hitting new highs 5; stock prices hitting new lows 182. NASDAQ quotes, volatile stocks and market trends, as well as stock quotes, stock prices and stock symbols of Day Trading Stock Picks on the NASDAQ stock market for Day Trading online and active Day Trading for those who are or would like to be Day Trading for a living: First Solar Incorporated (NasdaqGS: FSLR) stock price shed 8.10 points on the trading session, high on the trading session $148.76, low on the trading session $135.77 with a closing stock price at $143.60.

Market trends on the American Stock Exchange (AMEX) and stock market indicators for today:
Advanced stock prices 269; declined stock prices 677; unchanged stock prices 68; stock prices hitting new highs 3 and stock prices hitting new lows 27.

Chicago Board of Trade Futures Market activity for the day, at time of this posting for December 2008 Contracts:
E-mini S&P 500 (ES) end of day price 903.00 change -55.00
E-mini NASDAQ-100 (NQ) end of day price 1,241.00 change -65.25
E-mini S&P SmallCap 600 (SMP) end of day price 266.10 change -9.90
$5 DJIA (YM) end of day price 8,680 change -495

World Currencies for the Forex Market, for Forex Trading by active Forex Traders, at time of this posting:
Euro 0.7873 to U.S. Dollars 1.2702
Japanese Yen 97.70 to U.S. Dollars 0.0102
British Pound 0.640 to U.S. Dollars 1.5626
Canadian Dollar 1.1946 to U.S. Dollars 0.8371
Swiss Franc 1.1786 to U.S. Dollars 0.8485

Commodity Markets:
Energy Sector: Light Crude (NYMEX: NYM) shed $4.53 on the day for a closing price of $60.77 a barrel ($US per barrel)
Heating Oil (NYMEX: NYM) shed $0.11 on the day for a closing price of $1.94 a gallon ($US per gallon)
Natural Gas (NYMEX: NYM) shed $0.29 on the day for a closing price of $7.20 per million BTU ($US per mmbtu.)
Unleaded Gas (NYMEX: NYM) shed $0.09 on the day for a closing price of $1.34 a gallon ($US per gallon)

Metals Markets:
Gold Market Price (COMEX: CMX) shed $10.20 on the day for a closing price of $732.20 ($US per Troy ounce)
Silver (COMEX: CMX) shed $0.40 on the day for a closing price of $10.06 ($US per Troy ounce)
Platinum (NYMEX: NYM) shed $41.70 on the day for a closing price of $838.30 ($US per Troy ounce)
Copper (COMEX: CMX) shed $0.09 on the day for a closing price of $1.73 ($US per pound)

Livestock and Meat Markets (cents per lb.):
Lean Hogs (Chicago Mercantile Exchange: CME) gained 0.35 on the day for a closing price of 54.4838
Pork Bellies (Chicago Mercantile Exchange: CME) no change on the day for a closing price of 83.80
Live Cattle (Chicago Mercantile Exchange: CME) shed 0.98 on the day for a closing price of 93.30
Feeder Cattle (Chicago Mercantile Exchange: CME) shed 1.80 on the day for a closing price of 98.98

Other Commodities (cents per bushel):
Corn (Chicago Board of Trade: CBT) shed 12.25 on the day for a closing price of 378.00
Soybeans (Chicago Board of Trade: CBT) gained 2.00 on the day for a closing price of 906.00

Bond Market:
2 year bond gained 4/32 on the day for a closing price of 100 13/32 with a Yield of 1.28, Yield Change -0.07
5 year bond gained 6/32 on the day for a closing price of 101 10/32 with a Yield of 2.46, Yield Change -0.04
10 year bond gained 3/32 on the day for a closing price of 102 15/32 with a Yield of 3.69, Yield Change -0.01
30 year bond shed 9/32 on the day for a closing price of 105 3/32 with a Yield of 4.17, Yield Change -0.00

Thanks for reading
Millennium-Traders.Com
http://www.millennium-traders.com

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Focus your searches to quickly find the best stocks and shares information.

Search engines like MSN and AOL and Google bring billions of web pages to your fingertips in response to any and every search query you type into their search boxes. That’s both the good news and the bad news.

It’s good news because there are probably some web pages out there with just the information you’re looking for. It’s bad news because the search engines will probably also show you another 10,000 pages that don’t have quite the right informartion you want. Wading through those results pages takes time – time that you don’t have to waste if you know how to focus your searches.

Here are three tips that will focus your search queries and therefore focus the results the search engines give you.

1. Type in longer, more specific search queries. Instead of typing ’stock prices’, try typing ‘Canadian gold mining stock prices’. The more words you put into your query, the more information you are giving the search engine, and the better job it can do giving you the results you were looking for.

2. Use double-quote marks (that’s ” and “) to enclose words that you want to match exactly in your search. This is like using lasers to guide missiles – it can take you precisely to the information you want. When you just type words into the search box, the search engines look for those words in any order and will even match documents that don’t have all the words. So if you type in ‘IBM stock price’ the search engine may find a web page that mentions IBM in the first paragraph and mentions the stock price of Ford Motor in the 3rd paragraph – hey, the document had all three words in it! But if you instead type “IBM stock price” (note the double quotes), then the search engine will only find web pages that have exactly those three words, in that exact order and right next to each other.

3. Use specialized search engines that focus on a particular topic area. For instance, for stock market research, www.KeepandShare.com offers specialized stock market search engines at these locations:

http://www.keepandshare.com/htm/stocks_and_shares.php

and

http://www.keepandshare.com/htm/buy_a_share_of_stock.php

You use these custom search engines by going to the page and typing your search into the search box on the page.

These engines use Google’s new ‘Custom Search Engine’ technology to combine the best of Google’s search prowess with some smart editing from KeepandShare – they selected just the top stock-related websites and web-articles. So when you search with these KeepandShare stock market search engines you are guaranteed that all the results will be highly focused and high quality.

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You have no doubt heard of the “Baby Boomers”, those individuals born between 1943 and 1963. Following World War II, Australia’s population grew at record levels. Australia was not alone in this phenomenon. The United States, New Zealand and Canada all experienced Baby Booms at a similar time.

The Baby Boomers are an important phenomenon to understand. They have had dramatic effects on society and will substantially impact the way the stock market performs over the next 20 years. For this reason, it is important to understand some of the background on this interesting group of people.

As mentioned, the Baby Boom was experienced in various countries around the world. Part of the reason for the “Boom” was that these countries were immigrant receivers and immigrants tend to be in their 20’s, the prime childbearing years. At its peak in 1957, the US boom hit 3.7 children per family. Canada hit its peak in 1959 with Canadian women averaging 4 offspring each; that was over 479,000 new births that year alone! Australia’s boom was not quite as big as the Canadian or US booms; however, we still have a disproportionate number of people who are today in their 40’s and 50’s. Following the Baby Boom, we had a Baby Bust. Far fewer children were born during the late sixties, leaving Australia with an asymmetrical population graph.

The Baby Bust group, born between 1964 and 1976 are a much smaller group than their predecessors and are commonly referred to as Generation X.

Baby Boomers are a very significant and important group. It is not that, individually, they are any different than any other group who preceded them, it’s just that there are so many of them. Due to their large numbers, Baby Boomers have had a significant impact on our society, making substantial changes as they grew. They have changed the economy, driven housing and other markets and transformed social attitudes and lifestyles.

In Australia and North America today, the fastest growing industries, apart from technology, are financial management, leisure activities and health care. It is very easy to see why. Boomers have been working all their adult lives, usually for someone else. They have raised their children and are now focusing on their retirement. They have had a magnificent time. They have not endured wars, or a depression like their parents and grandparents. They have enjoyed fantastic luxuries such as cars, world holidays and computers. They have been at the forefront of the age of discovery.

Unfortunately, the majority have not prepared themselves financially for their retirements, believing instead that like their parents, they would enjoy a comfortable pension from their employers and/or government. The stark realities are now coming to light. Everybody, especially the Boomers, must take responsibility for their financial futures. Our government will simply not be in a position to provide adequate pension incomes for a growing number of retirees. Today, for every person who is retired, there are four people working, providing income to the government. By 2025, there will be only 2 people working for every retiree. What’s more, the Boomers, as they start to retire, will live longer than any group before them, well into their 70’s and 80’s on average. As a result, it is up to each of us as individuals to take responsibility of our own personal financial planning.

The Australian government has made substantial improvements and preparations for the growing populations. They have introduced a compulsory superannuation scheme which all employers and employees must participate in and which is gradually rising in required contributions, but it will be too little, too late. The key to investment growth is time, a luxury many Boomers no longer possess.

Consider this fact, that at a return of 8% per annum, net of tax, an investment of $30,000 would require over 15 years to triple in value, not even considering the effects of inflation. Most investment strategies commonly promoted to the public boast returns of 4% to 10% per annum. We often see managed funds, superannuation schemes, bank term deposits and property investments offering such results. Many people consider these returns appropriate and even good! Unfortunately, many members of the public require a much greater return on their investments to adequately improve their financial positions before they retire (if they can ever afford to!).

In future issues we will explore ways of generating high returns and how to self manage your own super.

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I guess I should of said they are not worth anything as the stock is at 0 value

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Product Description
Part I introduces an overview of business and management by discussing the economic environment, the forms of business ownership and basic concepts of management. Part II consists of six chapters: four that discuss the four principles of management – planning, organizing, motivation and evaluation – followed by two chapters on leadership and communication. The spheres of management are outlined in the eight chapters of Part III, which cover the main functional areas within business: marketing; research and development; production; financial reporting; financial management; investments; human resources; labour relations; and information systems. This section is concluded with a chapter on small business. Part IV discusses the environment of business and includes chapters on business and society, business and government, and international business.

BUY NOW: The Canadian Manager: Effectiveness in Action

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I use Yahoo Finance to obtain information to stock my rule, but the site has no detailed financial information on Canadian stocks, but stock prices Geschichte.Was is the best financial website where I can simply look up information Full financial on both U.S. and Canadian stocks?

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Product DescriptionThis digital document is an article in the Journal of Empirical Finance, published by Wiley in 2007. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon. com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can do it with any web browser. Description: We are studying the role of crafts in restoring price parity for the trading of shares in several markets. Watch Using a sample of stocks in the TSX and the NYSE, NASDAQ, AMEX, however, there is a convergence of market prices Maker (a) only when the citations of both markets and (b) and local order flow. Estimates of traditional models of error correction show that the price supports change in the two markets towards gender differences in response to the proposed price, which means that the observation of the cross-market rates to restore parity. Including the order flow in an extended model of error correction, we find that a gradual approach is the price when the trade are on the market that was moving with the best price, and reduces the importance of citations in the process of price convergence. Cross-sectional analysis shows that the significance of order flow in each market is declining in size and measures to increase liquidity. Our results indicate an important and hitherto unexamined in the promotion of handicrafts in the convergence of market prices.

BUY NOW: The role of trades in price convergence: A study of dual-listed Canadian stocks

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