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AGORACOM Small-Cap TV – Today’s Best Press Releases Before The Open (August 17th)

Posted by AGORACOM at 1:53 PM on Friday, August 17th, 2007

Good morning to you all. Please find enclosed a summary of the great small-cap press releases we highlighted on our TV show this morning. If you haven’t seen the show yet, it is a daily, fast-paced, edgy report that we put out at or before the open everyday that strictly reports on the best small-cap press releases of the day in 3-5 minutes. You can watch the show by going to AGORACOM every morning.

Our TV show focuses on content over form so that you can get profitable information into your hands as fast as possible. The same holds true for these blog entries where I simply cut and paste my TV notes for your benefit, without any editing.

As always, don’t forget to visit the AGORACOM Marketplace where we list over 60 great small-cap companies by exchange and industry for your convenience.

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Is Nightingale Informatix (NGH: TSXV) A Triple From Here?

Posted by AGORACOM at 2:29 PM on Thursday, August 16th, 2007

If you’ve been watching AGORACOM TV, then you’ve seen me talk about Nightingale Informatix with great enthusiasm a couple of times over the past couple of weeks thanks to some great contract announcements.

I covered them again today (watch the show) (read my show notes) thanks to a great Q1 that included the following:

  • Revenues of $6.1 million, up 105% over last year
  • Recurring Revenue was $4.0 million – wow!
  • Net loss decreased to $1.8 million vs. $2.3 million last year

I love NGH because – amongst other things – they are a provider of Electronic Medical Records (EMR) and Internet-based Electronic Health Records (EHR) to governments, hospitals, health centers, etc. Given the fact they are replacing the sophisticated paper based records that sit in massive filing cabinets at the back of your doctor’s office, it doesn’t take a genius to figure out this is the future.

Why? Beyond better looking offices, EMR and EHR lead to substantially better health care when any doctor can access your file at any time from anywhere. Today, I still have my doctors faxing my stuff between them. That means they have to call each other, get someone to retrieve my file, find the right report, fax it to the other doctor, who then has to do the reverse to get it into my file. WTF?!?

The future of Nightingale looks nice.

Now, how do we value them? Ask and you shall receive my child. Thanks to the wonderful people over at Wellington Financial (I really don’t know anyone there other than Mark Wilk) we now know that Nightingale – currently trading at .35 – is easily valued at $1.10 per. The target price comes from research out of Clarus Securities.

If you have 60 seconds to invest into a potential triple, then read the following post that neatly summarizes the Clarus report.

And you thought AGORACOM TV was just about my pretty face 🙂

Best,
George

CNBC Commentators Are Yelling At Each Other – It Must Be Bad

Posted by AGORACOM at 1:39 PM on Thursday, August 16th, 2007

[Not Even Erin Could Calm Down the CNBC Boys]

At 2:22 CNBC aired a segment called “Is the Fed responsible”. Discussing the issue were Larry Kudlow, Rick Santelli and Steve Liesman. Within minutes, Kudlow and Santelli were at each others necks, with Santelli yelling and Kudlow stating “I’m trying to teach you something Rick”.

Santelli stopped speaking for the last half of the segment, requiring anchor Erin Burnett to sign off by trying to make everybody friends again.

When the CNBC guys are scrapping it out, it must be bad 🙂

The clip hasn’t made it to the CNBC website yet but I’ll be sure to update as soon as it is available.

Personally, I’ve always liked Santelli and found Kudlow to be a bit of a flag waving ego maniac. Go get him italian stallion!

UPDATE (2:47) : Cramer came on CNBC for his “Stop Trading” segment and started off by saying “Nobody knows the Fed better than Larry Kudlow. What he says is Gospel”.

Well, I guess I would be a flag waving ego maniac too if Cramer said “What AGORACOM says is Gospel”. Good job Larry.

UPDATE #2: Here it is

UPDATE #3:  Here is the Cramer “Larry is Gospel” segment

Best,
George

AGORACOM Small-Cap TV – Today’s Best Press Releases Before The Open

Posted by AGORACOM at 8:46 AM on Thursday, August 16th, 2007

Good morning to you all. Please find enclosed a summary of the great small-cap press releases we highlighted on our TV show this morning. If you haven’t seen the show yet, it is a daily, fast-paced, edgy report that we put out at or before the open everyday that strictly reports on the best small-cap press releases of the day in 3-5 minutes. You can watch the show by going to AGORACOM every morning.

Our TV show focuses on content over form so that you can get profitable information into your hands as fast as possible. The same holds true for these blog entries where I simply cut and paste my TV notes for your benefit, without any editing.

As always, don’t forget to visit the AGORACOM Marketplace where we list over 60 great small-cap companies by exchange and industry for your convenience

(more…)

AGORACOM Small-Cap TV – Today’s Best Press Releases Before The Open

Posted by AGORACOM at 8:48 AM on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

Good morning to you all. Please find enclosed a summary of the great small-cap press releases we highlighted on our TV show this morning. If you haven’t seen the show yet, it is a daily, fast-paced, edgy report that we put out at or before the open everyday that strictly reports on the best small-cap press releases of the day in 3-5 minutes. You can watch the show by going to AGORACOM every morning.

Our TV show focuses on content over form so that you can get profitable information into your hands as fast as possible. The same holds true for these blog entries where I simply cut and paste my TV notes for your benefit, without any editing. (more…)

Grandich Continues To Urge Equity Liquidation, Gold Acquisitions

Posted by AGORACOM at 11:08 PM on Monday, August 13th, 2007

If the market turmoil of late has you nervous, take 15 minutes to listen to our interview with Peter Grandich on the Yahoo Finance Small-Cap Show – a guy that I’ve personally witness call market movements with precision on several occasions in the past. What I really like is the fact he usually makes these calls against the crowd. It’s easy to run with a crowd but running through it takes guts and brains.

Best,
George

eBay’s “Kijiji” Ranks As My Worst Web 2.0 Name

Posted by AGORACOM at 10:49 PM on Monday, August 13th, 2007

As if competing trying to compete with Craigslist (free classified ads) wasn’t already a near impossible task, eBay decided to saddle itself with a near impossible name to remember/spell/pronounce/relate to. It is akin to deciding to climb Mt Everest with a cube of lard on your back.

Is it any surprise the launch has been anything but a hit? All the money, consultants and research in the world doesn’t guarantee success … but it should guarantee protection from self-inflicted brandicide. Had to get this off my chest.

Best,
George

p.s. eBay owns 25% of Craigslist. Go figure.

Will The New Google Finance Canada Follow Yahoo and AOL By Adding A “Small-Cap Centre”?

Posted by AGORACOM at 1:05 PM on Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Great news for Canadian investors as Google has announced the launch of Google Finance Canada, a localized version of the original Google Finance. The Canadian version provides some good information at a glance, including top movers and shakers (and losers) by marketcap, price, dollar volume, etc.

According to , Dion Loy, the move seems to have been predicated by the fact that Canadians – despite their small population – are the second largest users of Google Finance. He goes on to add:

“…a Canadian myself, I’m excited to see Canadian financial information presented in the familiar easy to use Google Finance format.

THE MISSING ELEMENT

The missing element here is that both the news feeds and video feeds focus overwhelmingly on large/mega-cap news. In order to capture the true nature of Canadian investors, I believe Google Finance Canada needs to follow suit with Yahoo Finance Canada and AOL Finance Canada by providing a small-cap centre (CDN spelling). This is especially true in an environment in which TSX Venture stocks are posting spectacular gains thanks to a bullish metals and minerals resources market.

Dion, as the exclusive provider to small-cap content to both the Yahoo and AOL Small-Cap Centres, as well as, every Blackberry device on the planet, we’d love to speak with you about incorporating a small-cap feed(s) of information.

In the meantime, hats off to Google for recognizing the independence of Canadian investors and equities.

Regards,
George

Blackrock Fund – We Are In A Natural Resources “Supercycle”

Posted by AGORACOM at 3:46 PM on Tuesday, July 31st, 2007

While stock markets around the world tremble in the wake of the fallout from the sub-prime loan market, Europe’s #1 ranked natural resources fund managers says you ain’t seen nothing yet.

Evy Hambro manages BlackRock’s $10 billion World Mining Fund and says – despite the gains in natural resources such as gold, copper, nickel and others over the past couple of years – says sky-high metal prices will defy the sceptics for years to come in an interview with the Telegraph.

Likewise, Graham Birch, who oversees the global resources team in BlackRock’s London office stated “the markets are in a commodity super cycle” in an interview with the Int’l Herald Tribune earlier this month.

As you can imagine, Blackrock points to demand out of China and India as a major contributor to rising prices. However, where they differ from most is the call that we are in the very early stages of this bullish cycle and that prices will climb and stay higher for many years to come.

I strongly agree and have stated on several occasions that minerals and metals are the place to be for the very long term. Unlike the bull run in the mid-90’s that was driven primarily by the possibility of repeating Bre-X’s 30,000,000 oz discovery – and crashed when it turned out to be a scam – this run is being fueled by very real demand.

To add fuel to the fire, the severe depression in minerals and metals from 1995 – 2003 meant that veeeerrrrry little money went into exploration. As such, supply is significantly trailing the freight train demand coming out of Asia and other developing regions.

Want more fuel? Despite the billions that are now flooding into exploration in an effort to play catch-up, boring but necessary components of the exploration process can’t keep up and are putting the brakes on any effort to catch up to demand. Specifically, Evy Hambro points to an acute shortage of tires, trucks and power generators.

“Rio Tinto has warned that it is now forced to wait for up to two years for delivery of essentials like power generators which, until recently, were available in half the time. Tires, which used to be delivered within three months, take two years too. The waiting list for grinding mills can be more than three and a half years.”

Throw in the fact that the US Dollar is in free-fall and the real estate market is facing “home price depreciation at levels not seen since the Great Depression” (Conference Call – Countrywide Financial – the largest U.S. mortgage underwriter. July 25th 2007) and it may be more accurate to say we are in the midst of a perfect bullish storm for metals commodities.

Regards,
George

IMF Sees Global Growth at 5.2% For 2007 and 2008. Good News For Small-Cap Resource Companies

Posted by AGORACOM at 10:57 AM on Sunday, July 29th, 2007

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has revised its global growth projections for 2007 and 2008 thanks to strong expansion from developing nations – with the bulk coming out of Asia and India, as well as, contributions from Russia.  This is great news for small-cap resource companies that are exploring for and even producing the minerals, metals, oil and other natural resources necessary to sustain their growth.  The complete entry on the IMF site is available here .  Hat tip to Paul Kedrosky for pointing it out.

Having said that, the IMF does state that “the overall balance of risks to the global growth outlook remains tilted modestly to the downside” due in part to sky-rocketing oil prices that, if not contained, can put the brakes on growth.

Finally, the IMF also has some concerns about market risk due to the deteriorating credit picture.  Though they do believe risks will be largely containted, I strongly suggest reading the story in its entirety.

Regards,
George