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As a newbie, I have a question. If the symbol changes does the broker automatically give you the new symbol if you own the old symbol. I know this might seem like a dumb question, but again I am new to this.
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Invest 97 is up about 1000 miles east of Winward Islands. Some development possible over the next couple days. Air Force Reserve Recon scheduling possible flight for tomorrow.
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one thing for sure.......peeps are making money on this no matter what "expert" comes on here and says other wise......it makes no sense Purl Girl, that this one flies on hurricaen activity, and yet TCLL, with record breaking revs, moves so little........each stock has their own DNA and movements......all I can say is penny stocks do not move on fundies....they move with the almighty MMs.......i wish it were that it is simply a matter of supply and demand, but the world of pennies does not move that way......Purl, you just have to accept it and not fight it......you may be right, but being right can also loose you money in a world of corruption..... and in the markets, that's just how it is.....go NSMG (new ticker) someone change the thread title to state the new ticker symbol.
Posts: 525 | From: nashville | Registered: Jun 2005
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The NHC and the models have shifted their forecast track for now Tropical Storm Debby to the West. The weakness that was forecast to develop to the North of Debby is much smaller than the models had depicted.. If Debby can stay on a western enough track, it may bypass a trough that will be coming off the east coast. Here is the NHC discussion.
quote: THE INITIAL MOTION ESTIMATE IS 295/16. ALTHOUGH THE GLOBAL MODELS ARE IN REASONABLE AGREEMENT AND TIGHTLY CLUSTERED THROUGH 48-72H... THE MODEL CONSENSUS HAS SHIFTED WELL TO THE WEST OR LEFT OF THE PREVIOUS TRACK...DUE IN PART TO THE CONTINUED WESTWARD SHIFT OF THE GFS...GFS ENSEMBLE...AND GFDL MODELS. THE BAM MODELS HAVE BEEN ATROCIOUS AT BEST WITH A LARGE RIGHT-OF-TRACK BIAS OVER THE PAST 36 HOURS...SO THEY WERE NOT EVEN CONSIDERED IN THE FORECAST PROCESS. THE GFS AND GFDL MODELS APPEAR TO HAVE BEEN OVERDEVELOPING A WEAK MID- TO UPPER-LEVEL LOW LOCATED ABOUT 550 NMI NORTHWEST OF DEBBY. THIS FEATURE IS SO INDISTINCT AND MUCH SMALLER THAN THE CIRCULATION ENVELOPE OF DEBBY THAT IT IS HARD TO LOCATE IN WATER VAPOR IMAGERY. IN CONTRAST...THE NOGAPS AND UKMET MODELS HAVE BEEN DOWNPLAYING THE UPPER-LOW AND DISSIPATE IT COMPLETELY BY 48 HOURS. GIVEN THAT THE UPPER-LOW AT BEST IS MOVING WESTWARD AT THE SAME SPEED AS DEBBY... ANY NORTHWARD INFLUENCE BY THIS SYSTEM ON DEBBY SHOULD BE LESS THAN DEPICTED BY THE GFS AND GFDL MODELS. THE OFFICIAL FORECAST TRACK WAS SHIFTED WESTWARD...BUT NOT AS FAR WEST AS THE GUNA...GUNS...AND CONU CONSENSUS MODELS. AS MENTIONED IN LAST NIGHT'S DISCUSSION... IF DEBBY DOESN'T REACH 20-25N LATITUDE IN 72-96 HOURS...THEN A SHORTWAVE TROUGH AND FORECAST WEAKNESS IN THE SUBTROPICAL RIDGE WILL BYPASS THE CYCLONE...AS ALLUDED TO BY THE 18Z UKMET MODEL RUN.
quote:A WELL-DEFINED TROPICAL WAVE LOCATED ABOUT 725 MILES EAST OF THE WINDWARD ISLANDS IS MOVING WESTWARD AT 15 TO 20 MPH. THIS SYSTEM CONTINUES TO SHOW SIGNS OF IMPROVING ORGANIZATION...AND CONDITIONS APPEAR FAVORABLE FOR A TROPICAL DEPRESSION TO DEVELOP DURING THE NEXT DAY OR TWO. INTERESTS IN THE SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL LESSER ANTILLES SHOULD CLOSELY MONITOR THE PROGRESS OF THIS SYSTEM.
As of 5 a.m., EDT the center of Tropical Storm Debby was located near 15.9 north, 30.1 west or 330 miles west to southwest of the westernmost Cape Verde Islands. Debby was moving to the west-northwest at a 16 mph with estimated maximum-sustained winds of 45 mph. The central pressure is estimated as being around 1002 millibars or 29.59 inches.
Wednesday morning satellite picture shows a fairly well organized storm moving northeastward. Though there will be slow development of the storm, it is being inhibited by pockets of cooler water and drier air to the north and east of the storm. Also a trough moving through the central Atlantic could lead to an increase in shear and exert this onto Debby, further slowing development. The models still show a northwest track and finally catching a trough late this weekend or early next week, turning Debby more to the north. If Debby misses the first trough, the next trough should grab it and draw it northward still. This second scenario could lead to concerns for Bermuda, but a United States landfall is not likely.
Elsewhere in the tropical Atlantic, we are tracking waves along 51 west, south of 18 north, along 65 west, south of 20 north and along 82 west, south of 18 north. All waves are moving west at an average pace of 6 degrees longitude per day. The tropical wave along 65 west will encounter stronger upper winds that will shear the waves some in the next couple of days. That might create too much shear over the system for possible development. The wave along 51 west is looking more rounded, a sign of some organization. This wave has somewhat more favorable conditions to the west and could become better organized during the next couple of days.
Posts: 268 | From: New York | Registered: Mar 2005
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Tropical Storm Debby Strengthens in Atlantic
MIAMI (Aug. 23) - Tropical Storm Debby continued to gain strength Wednesday off the coast of Cape Verde in the eastern Atlantic, forecasters said.
A satellite image shows Tropical Storm Debby just off the coast of Africa at 9 PM on Tuesday.
More Coverage: Worst Is Yet to Come, Hurricane Chief Says
At 5 a.m. EDT, the storm was centered 385 miles west northwest of the southernmost Cape Verde and was moving toward the west-northwest at speeds of near 16 mph. This general direction was expected to continue for the next 24 hours, the National Hurricane Center said.
The storm had maximum sustained winds near 45 mph, with slow strengthening forecast for the next 24 hours.
Cape Verde is 350 miles off the African coast.
"We are forecasting it to become a hurricane in about four days, but we do see some factors that could prevent that," said Richard Pasch, hurricane specialist. "However, it is well out over the Atlantic. There's not an indication that it will threaten land."
It is the fourth named storm of the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season.
The most likely long-range track had the storm moving over the open Atlantic Ocean for the next five days in the direction of Bermuda, a British territory 560 miles off the coast of North Carolina.
On that track it would not threaten the oil-producing gulf coast, where the record-breaking 2005 hurricane season caused havoc, or the Southeastern U.S.
The current season has been quiet so far, with only three tropical storms -- Alberto, Beryl and Chris. The Atlantic hurricane season officially runs from June 1 to November 30.
Last year produced a record 28 tropical storms and hurricanes. Katrina devastated New Orleans and killed more than 1,300 people along the Gulf coast.
Hurricane forecasters had warned the season could become more active in the near future. The period from mid-August to late October is usually the busiest.
Posts: 268 | From: New York | Registered: Mar 2005
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The weather channel says that Debby could be a hurricane with in 72 hours... It is heading west-northwest at 20mph slowly building strenth.
-------------------- “Money itself isn't lost or made, it's simply transferred from one perception to another." Posts: 540 | Registered: Mar 2006
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Down 27% today, I think $.24 is a pretty good entry point here. This dumped on the 10-Q from the upper 40's to this range and then went back up for 40. Next sniff of a storm and this should go back up 50% or more IMO.
-------------------- I may be wrong, but I don't think so.... Posts: 837 | From: Madison, WI | Registered: Sep 2005
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CHICAGO, IL, Sep 07, 2006 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX) -- National Storm Management, Inc. (PINKSHEETS: NSMG), an expanding national construction company providing storm restoration services, announced today that it has appointed Scott Knoll as its chief financial officer (CFO). Mr. Knoll succeeds outgoing CFO Mark Noffke, who recently left the company to pursue other interests. Mr. Knoll comes to National Storm Management from WhittmanHart, Inc., a leading provider of business and technology services. During his tenure at WhittmanHart, Mr. Knoll played a critical role in various financial positions for the company, most recently serving as CFO, and working closely with its visionary CEO Bob Bernard since 1992.
"Scott is a seasoned veteran with extensive experience in building successful finance and operational teams for both public and private companies," said Terry Kiefer, chief executive officer, National Storm Management. "We are very excited to have someone of his caliber and expertise on board as we work towards our next phase of development."
"National Storm Management has a solid vision for the future with a growth plan that is achievable and measurable," said Scott Knoll. "I look forward to working closely with Terry Kiefer and the rest of the National Storm Management team to achieve both our short and long-term objectives."
Prior to WhittmanHart, Mr. Knoll spent nine years working in real estate, most notably serving as a portfolio analyst for JMB Realty. He holds a B.S. in Accounting from the University of Illinois and is also a CPA.
As part of National Storm's growth plan, and to further the company's goal of having trades in its stock quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board, the company expects to file a Form SB-2 with the Securities and Exchange Commission later this month. In a related move, the company withdrew its registration statement on Form 10-SB. "By filing an SB2 we can simultaneously get to the bulletin board and register shares that we need to sustain the financial growth of the company," said Knoll. "Management believes that this will work to the company's advantage in raising capital and increasing liquidity and shareholder value."
About National Storm Management, Inc.
National Storm Management (PINKSHEETS: NSMG) is an expanding national construction company headquartered in Glen Ellyn, Illinois and providing storm restoration services in eight states. Its operating affiliates include: ABC Exteriors (Illinois and Indiana); Pinnacle Roofing (Florida, Mississippi and Louisiana); MSM Builders and Remodelers (Missouri); WRS, Inc. (Minnesota); and First Class Roofing and Siding (Ohio). The company and its affiliates are recognized by all major insurance companies such as State Farm, Allstate, Farmers and others for storm related claims. The company is a member of the National Roofing Contractors Association (NRCA) and the Better Business Bureau. More information is available at www.nationalstorm.com.
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I think that the NHC is purposely giving us erroneous information about Florence's forecast in order to load up on ECCI, NSMG, & WEGI at these levels, and tommorow morning they will announce that Florence will go due west for a US east coast landfall as a CAT3 storm.
It's not like they are ever held accountable for their constant inaccurate forecasts that they post on their website concerning these storms.
Posts: 2554 | Registered: Nov 2005
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Well, down 27%, and you all laughed at me in the other thread when I predicted not 1 MAJOR hurricane (Cat 3 or above) would hit the U.S. this year. Anybody still doubt my prediction? BET ON IT.
-------------------- Stick with Repo's plan in '07 - FRPT/DKAM! Posts: 6379 | From: PA | Registered: Dec 2004
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