This iconic brand has a chequered history. Invented in the late 19th century, it was a marketed as a medicine that contained wine and cocaine. When prohibition set in, a non-alcoholic alternative had to be created. Later, the cocaine was replaced by a non-narcotic… Read More
Melvin Pasternak, Ph.D., is an experienced market technician. He designed a course for TD Waterhouse titled "Winning in the Stock Market," which combined intensive technical and fundamental analysis to uncover how to profitably beat the market. Dr. Pasternak was a professor at the Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta, for more than 25 years. In 2006, after retiring, he published his book on candlestick charting, 21 Candlesticks Every Trader Should Know. Due to his trading expertise, he has been interviewed several times by CBC Radio-Canada and the Calgary Herald.
Analyst Articles
It’s one of the rarest metals on the planet… 30 times more rare than gold. It takes anywhere from 7 to 12 million tons of raw ore to produce a single ounce of the metal. In 2009, miners extracted 64 million ounces of gold; stockpiles of this metal grew by just 6 million ounces. And I use the word stockpile figuratively, because unlike other metals there are typically little to no above-ground supplies of this rare and valuable metal. That’s because demand often outpaces supply. In 2008, the world consumed 7.3… Read More
It’s one of the rarest metals on the planet… 30 times more rare than gold. It takes anywhere from 7 to 12 million tons of raw ore to produce a single ounce of the metal. In 2009, miners extracted 64 million ounces of gold; stockpiles of this metal grew by just 6 million ounces. And I use the word stockpile figuratively, because unlike other metals there are typically little to no above-ground supplies of this rare and valuable metal. That’s because demand often outpaces supply. In 2008, the world consumed 7.3 million ounces of the stuff, compared to production of just 7.0 million ounces. We need every ounce available and then some. So why is this metal needed at all when it’s expensive, rare, and hard to mine? Above all, platinum owes its popularity to chemistry. You’ve probably heard of catalytic converters. Internal combustion engines would spew tons of noxious pollutants without these miraculous devices, which convert hydrocarbon exhaust into carbon dioxide and water vapor. Well, platinum group metals (PGMs) are the catalyzing agent — and try as they might, automakers have never found a… Read More
3 Overseas Oil Giants with High Yields
Perhaps the easiest way to profit from higher oil prices is to buy shares of the largest energy firms in the world. These companies are referred to as “integrated” oil and gas firms, which stems from the fact that they are involved in just about every facet of… Read More
Dear Investor, On Sept. 30, 2010, I told you about what could be the biggest profit opportunity of the next few years. The investments I recommended have already started moving: they’re up 25%, 34% and 56% in just four months. Read More
These Contrarian Picks Could Have 50%-70% Upside
I look forward to every earnings season. It’s a time when companies on my watch list may stumble, placing them squarely into value territory. As long as the long-term investment thesis is intact, you’ve got a rare chance to step in when shares are 20%, 30% or even… Read More
This Stock is up 45% and STILL Pays a 7.6% Yield
Inflation fears and rising interest rates are riling the fixed-income market. I’ve got a solution. But before I go into too much detail about this idea, it’s important to see exactly what’s going on. Treasury yields, which can serve as a… Read More
How to Profit from the First Bubble of 2011
Five weeks into 2011, and investors are looking at their first bona fide bubble of 2011. All that money sloshing around global markets, led by the Federal Reserve’s massive easing policy, was bound to start igniting various speculative asset classes. Gold surely looked frothy in 2010, and in 2011, it’s copper that’s looking bubble-icious. You have to take a 15-year look at copper prices to understand just how crazy the current market looks. For a decade up until 2005, copper usually traded for $75 to $100 a pound. That price reflected a nice equilibrium… Read More
Five weeks into 2011, and investors are looking at their first bona fide bubble of 2011. All that money sloshing around global markets, led by the Federal Reserve’s massive easing policy, was bound to start igniting various speculative asset classes. Gold surely looked frothy in 2010, and in 2011, it’s copper that’s looking bubble-icious. You have to take a 15-year look at copper prices to understand just how crazy the current market looks. For a decade up until 2005, copper usually traded for $75 to $100 a pound. That price reflected a nice equilibrium between supply and demand. It was also a period of steadily declining output of copper, as second-tier and third-tier mines were hard-pressed to make money. China changed the whole dynamic. As its economy started to take off during the past decade, demand for copper, which is used in many industrial and construction applications, soared, pushing prices up above the $300 mark in 2006, 2007 and 2008. Although copper prices eventually cooled, China learned its lesson. The next time copper prices took off, China would have ample supplies on hand to draw upon… Read More
When I recommended this stock nearly two years ago it was paying a 14.4% yield. In most cases, yields this high aren’t safe. But this company is different. In short, it borrows money at very low interest rates, invests… Read More
4 Signs the Market may be Headed Down
Another day, another gain. That’s been the story for the S&P 500 lately, which has rallied higher in 12 of the last 15 trading sessions since January 20. As they say, “this bull has legs.” A rising market is surely enjoyable, but the higher it moves, the greater the chance that profit-taking will be just around the corner. That may happen when market strategists begin to talk about stocks becoming expensive when measured by traditional metrics. So here are four items I watch to see if the bull can keep running… 1. Money pouring… Read More
Another day, another gain. That’s been the story for the S&P 500 lately, which has rallied higher in 12 of the last 15 trading sessions since January 20. As they say, “this bull has legs.” A rising market is surely enjoyable, but the higher it moves, the greater the chance that profit-taking will be just around the corner. That may happen when market strategists begin to talk about stocks becoming expensive when measured by traditional metrics. So here are four items I watch to see if the bull can keep running… 1. Money pouring into domestic stock funds — POSITIVE The direction of the stock market is simply a function of supply and demand. When fund managers are given more money to work with, they put it into stocks, pushing share prices up. And they got plenty of firepower last quarter, bringing $45.5 billion, according to Lipper Fund Services. (90% of that went to actively-managed funds and the rest went to exchange-traded funds, or ETFs.) That was more than funds took in for the first three quarters of 2010. And the spigot keeps flowing. In the past two weeks (ended… Read More
Which of These Hot IPOs Will Climb Even Higher?
I’ve been looking at the 2010 initial public offerings (IPOs) that have doubled in value — or more — and found a name poised for even more upside and another one that now looks vastly overvalued. Pricing an IPO… Read More