abis beli bumi di 6300 cuman untung 1 pt langsung dibantai 5500

untung hr ini beli triple di 5500 hehhe

Pemain Mini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:                                
udahlah...lupakan KEDUA SAHAM BUTUT  itu....
 udah dibilang TIDAK AKAN NAEK...masih aja  NGETEK....huahauhauahua.........
  
    ----- Original Message ----- 
   From:    Bettina    Tan 
   To: obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com    
   Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2008 8:50    AM
   Subject: Re: [obrolan-bandar] BUY INCO @    3400 ANTM @ 1650? is it 
possible? time will tell
   

      Betul.. kesempatan untuk beli dengan harga lebih murah.. :-) tapi kenapa  
  LME kenapa stagnan ya pak..?

   
On 7/24/08, TH    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>    wrote:                                 
 
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a4UeL2qoDeVc
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aXn_zqsR68Xg
Ini      berita yg lbh baru, nikel jatuh harganya pak.      

     On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 5:58 AM, John Sun <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
                                        
       Nickel        Gains in London as Stockpiles Decline to Eight-Month Low 
       By Chanyaporn Chanjaroen
       July 21 (Bloomberg) -- Nickel rebounded from a two-year low in London    
    as stockpiles of the metal used in stainless steel declined to the        
smallest in eight months, indicating supply is slowing. 
       Inventories tracked by the London Metal Exchange dropped 6 percent this  
      month to 43,728 metric tons, the lowest since Nov. 23. BHP Billiton Ltd.  
      this month shut its Kalgoorlie refinery in Western Australia through June 
       2009, cutting sales of the metal by 25,000 tons, or about 57 percent of  
      existing LME stockpiles. 
       ``You probably started to see the impact from supply disruption in       
 Western Australia,'' Max Layton, an analyst at Macquarie Ltd. in London, said  
      today by phone. ``It may be short- lived and overall we see a small       
 surplus this year.'' 
       Nickel for delivery in three months increased $150, or 0.7 percent, to   
     $20,550 a ton as of 4:55 p.m. London time. The contract closed July 18 at  
      $20,400 a ton, the lowest since June 28, 2006. 
       The metal is headed for a second consecutive annual drop, after last     
   year's 21 percent decline as stainless-steel mills resorted to products      
  containing less nickel. Prices may have to fall to about $15,000 a ton to     
   lure back consumers, Charles Cooper, an analyst at Evolution Securities 
Ltd.,        said today. 
       Boliden AB, the second-largest producer of zinc in Europe, said        
production at the Tara zinc and lead mine in Ireland will decline        
``slightly'' in the next six to nine months, extending a drop from the        
first half. 
       The mine produced an equivalent of 104,019 tons of zinc metal during     
   January to June, down 7 percent from a year ago, the Stockholm-based        
company said today in an earnings statement. Lead output fell 11 percent        
to 13,765 tons. 
       Mine Closures 
       Zinc prices have slumped 22 percent this year and lead 20 percent,       
 making mines unprofitable. Tech Cominco Ltd., owner of the world's largest     
   zinc mine, said July 15 it would close its Lennard Shelf Pillara mine in     
   Western Australia next month, earlier than planned. 
       Lead jumped $65, or 3.3 percent, to $2,035 a ton and zinc added $20, or  
      1.1 percent, to $1,840. 
       Stockpiles of copper monitored by the exchange have increased 5 percent  
      this month to 128,725 tons, the highest since March 12. As inventories    
    have been held by ``only a few market participants,'' availability is       
 limited, Norddeutsche Affinerie AG, Europe's largest copper refiner, said      
  today in an e-mailed newsletter. 
       Copper for immediate delivery traded at a premium of $241 a ton above    
    the benchmark price on July 17, the highest since August 2005 and        
indicating a shortage of nearby futures contracts. The spread was $234 a        
ton today. Borrowing fees for futures for tomorrow delivery were $35 a ton      
  a day. 
       Lost Output 
       Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd., the nation's biggest producer of the       
 lightweight metal, said it may lose 30,000 tons of output after it trimmed     
   some capacity at two ventures in Shanxi province because of a power        
shortage. 
       Shanxi Huaze Aluminum & Power Co. suspended 25 percent of its        
280,000-ton annual capacity as of July 18, and Shanxi Huasheng Aluminum        
Co. stopped 22 percent of its 220,000-ton capacity, Chalco, as the company      
  is known, said in a statement late that day. 
       Aluminum stockpiles on the LME added 4,975 tons, or 0.4 percent, to      
  1.12 million tons, the highest since May 12, 2004. The contract rose $7 to    
    $3,040 a ton. 
       Tin increased $75 to $23,500. 
       To contact the reporter on this story: Chanyaporn Chanjaroen in London 
at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Last Updated:        July 21, 2008 12:01 EDT        
 
       
       -----        Original Message ----
From: Vincent Chase <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com
Sent:        Wednesday, July 23, 2008 4:47:30 PM
Subject: [obrolan-bandar] BUY INCO        @ 3400 ANTM @ 1650? is it possible? 
time will tell

              

       





 







     
     






   

 
     
                                       

       

Kirim email ke