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By Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT |
January 21, 2011
Many analysts talk about demand as the driving force for higher commodity prices. While this is true in some cases, it is a lack of supply or production that usually drives the biggest gains in individual commodities. Uranium is a great example.
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By Karen Roche, Brian Sylvester |
December 22, 2010
Even if devaluing dollars and euros result from further bouts of quantitative easing, even if American and European economies remain in the doldrums, and even if the pace of China's growth slows, he says count on the commodities boom to continue.
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By Karen Roche, Brian Sylvester |
December 2, 2010
Even if the pace of China's growth slows dramatically, count on the commodities boom to continue, says the Adrian Day Asset Management chairman.
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By Justice Litle |
August 2, 2010
Uranium soared from $10 a pound in 2000 to a stunning $136 a pound in 2007 - and then the bottom fell out. After three lean years, could another bull market on the way?