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FirstWord Pharmaceutical News for Thursday, May 23, 2013
Today in FirstWord:
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| 03:23 AM |
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China factory contraction signals fragile recovery
May 23 - China’s economy shows fresh signs of faltering, with an advance reading of manufacturing output shrinking for the first time in seven months. That may worry trading partners--but not its leaders. 
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| 03:00 AM |
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VNA of Cape Cod Selects SutureSign to Streamline Care Order Processing
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| 03:00 AM |
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eMediaCampaigns! to Put the Summer Spotlight on National Entrepreneurs
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| 03:00 AM |
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Bestselling Author Named Finalist in 2013 International Book Awards
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| 03:00 AM |
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Historic Jail Opens Its Doors to Film Makers Before Renovations
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| 03:00 AM |
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New Music from Niva Burning the Charts
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Reuters on the Road: Ariadne Helps Navigate Start-up Maze
May 23 - Ariadne Capital founder Julie Meyer takes the taxi challenge to explain why she thinks entrepreneurship is the only answer to Britain’s economic future. 
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| 02:11 AM |
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Money: IMF verdict on UK economy 23 May 13
As the International Monetary Fund calls on the Chancellor to ease up on austerity, should the UK consider slowing the pace of cuts? The government wants more nuclear power at less cost to the taxpayer. Can those two ambitions work together? And why this could be a bumper year for apples and pears.
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| 02:00 AM |
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Wealth Strategies: Focusing on 'left behind' sectors
May 23 - Westwood SMid Cap Plus Fund's Ragen Stienke says he is seeing opportunity in sectors that have been left behind, such as producer durables and technology. 
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| 12:07 AM |
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The Goddard Report | Harper Jail System Abuse Suit Settled
Robert Janes - Woman wins suit for unconstitutional prison treatment
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| 12:02 AM |
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Richard Knowles | Canadians Deserve Break at Gas Pump
Tight Federal rules could cost 150 thousand housing jobs
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| 12:00 AM |
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Tech Talk: 05/23
Twitter is beefing up security with optional two-factor authentication where it will send a code to your cell phone that you enter when logging on. The story is today's TECH TALK. (Magid, self-ID) 
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| Wed, May 22, 2013 |
| 11:11 PM |
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CTIA: T-Mobile Takes its Uncarrier Attitude to Work
The newly public company is making a big push to woo the enterprise with new pricing plans and services
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| 10:25 PM |
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Inside the Ring: NSA under Reagan
The National Security Agency, the electronic spy and code-breaking service whose name frequently is mentioned with the words "super-secret," recently declassified details of its history. A former "top-secret"...
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| 10:05 PM |
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Feds open special inspection into N.C. nuclear plant
Federal regulators said Wednesday that they are conducting a special inspection of a nuclear power plant outside North Carolina's capital city that was forced to shut down last week after operators discovered corrosion and cracking in the reactor vessel's covering.
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| 08:40 PM |
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Hong Kong today (2013-05-23)
Hong Kong today
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| 08:40 PM |
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Hong Kong today (2013-05-23)
Hong Kong today
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| 08:37 PM |
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WSJ's What's News, Late Edition, May 22, 2013
Stocks fall Wednesday and Hewlett-Packard's profit falls but guidance beats expectations. 
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| 08:05 PM |
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JLo @ CTIA: Viva Las Vegas!
JLo bought some much-needed sparkle to a lackluster CTIA show as she & Verizon attempt to cater to a growing Latino mobile demographic
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| 07:29 PM |
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New Mesmerizing Video Documents Incredible Moments After Okla....
Iconic shot of first responder Jim Routon discovering his neighbor Hezekiah Darbon, 6, had survived the Oklahoma tornado and scooping him up in his arms.
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| 07:20 PM |
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Hong Kong today (2013-05-23)
Hong Kong today
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| 06:42 PM |
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Fed Talk.....Reversal.....
So today we had Mr. Bernnake speaking in front of Congress and they were asking the usual ridiculous questions about quantitative easing and how long he intended to keep it going, etc. Would he stop soon? What were the parameters he was using to decide when to stop, and so on. He gave perfect answers. He said if things stay bad he'll continue to flood with cash. If things get really good he'll slow down. Send in the marching bands. Wow! Really? The market eventually sold off. Folks on television saying it was due to the Fed "confusing" people with his remarks. Really???? You think that's why the market sold off? Well folks, the reason the market sold off was because it was brutally overbought with sentiment readings getting well into the red-flag area. The market was simply looking for any excuse to sell as there were basically no buyers left.
Markets sell sometimes, even in a bull environment. Yes, it is important to unwind overbought and to unwind sentiment. The market understands this. It does what it has to when it has to and there's nothing and no news that can take place to stop it. So today was the day the market said uncle for a little while. Nothing to get upset about. Let it fall. The bulls should root for some deeper selling. I know I am, but we shall see just what the bulls are willing to surrender in the days and weeks ahead. Today was not a bearish day bigger picture, but it was a key-reversal day for the short-term. At least it should be. It doesn't change the fact that we're in a powerful bull market. Don't lose sight of the bigger picture. If you're very bullish on the market, root for lower prices for a while.
The moves lower were led by the stocks that have been on high poles. Some real beatings in those stocks. It had to happen at some point folks. You can't stay that overbought on a high pole forever. Stocks like Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. (GMCR), Google Inc. (GOOG), and Priceline Inc. (PCLN) to name just a very few. There were literally hundreds. These stocks have huge volume sticks to go along with the selling meaning they are going to need a decent amount of time to unwind further and recover.
I'm very happy about these reversals as they will allow for entry down the road. The ley today was the size of those candlesticks. Massive off the top with most of them engulfing yesterday's up-stick, and some of them engulfing many day’s worth of up sticks. That's normally bearish for the short-term as big money won't support the retail that tries to buy them back up so they can bounce some but won't likely blast higher for a while to come. Again, this is healthy and necessary. At some point it becomes impossible to even think about getting involved with them. This will let the air out and allow unwinding, which is what they so desperately need.
So now we need to look at the key-index charts to understand where support is sitting. We take a look index by index so let's start with the S&P 500. The 20-day exponential moving average sits at 1631 while key-horizontal support is at 1600. Plenty of down side available if the market wants it. Now we turn our attention to the Dow. The 20-day exponential moving average sits at 15,097 while the 50-day exponential moving average is at 14,785. Finally the leader, the Nasdaq. The place froth goes to live and die at times. There's strong 20-day exponential moving average at 3412 while massive gap support sits at 3370. If the market could move down to these levels it would be a great thing for the bigger picture. We shall see.
One day at a time. Look at this evening’s charts for deeper understanding of today's action.
Peace,
Jack
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| 06:09 PM |
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Fed infighting steps up; HP sigh of relief
May 22 - Summary of business headlines and recap of trading action on Wall Street and across Europe. Conway G. Gittens reports. 
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| 06:05 PM |
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WSJ's Your Money Matters P.M., May 22, 2013
Controversy over health care navigators and the new set of skills every job-seeker should have. WSJ's Mike Gavin reports. 
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| 05:57 PM |
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The grittier side of Cannes -- Marché du Film
Beneath Cannes, far less prestigious films are bought and sold at a different conference. 
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| 05:35 PM |
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Cavuto: Will scandals register in Obama's poll numbers?
Neil talks public perception
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| 05:14 PM |
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BT Hanger, the World’s Best Belt & Tie Hanger Just in Time for Father’s Day
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| 05:12 PM |
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WSJ Tech Briefing, Late Edition, May 22, 2013
Clearwire backs a new Sprint offer and a tough day for technology stocks. Tom Ortuso reports. 
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| 05:05 PM |
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Stemline Therapeutics (STML) Offering Closes
$60 M in proceeds STML, a clinical-stage bio-pharmaceutical company developing oncology therapeutics that target both cancer stem cells (CSCs) and tumor bulk, closed its previously announced underwritten public offering of 4,137,931 shares of its common stock at a public offering price of $14.50 per share. The gross proceeds to Stemline from the public [...]
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