Will Yahoo! adopt Microsoft's bid?
If you assume they will, would you be willing to plunk down discretionary funds for the remaining 9% or so you could carry between today's price and the $31 offer?Answers: Maybe, it's terrifically positive
but the risk of get surrounded by yahoo right now versus the amount of gain after merger in fact go through is so much highly developed for so little gain.
i wouldn't get surrounded by Yahoo today
To begin beside this is more a hostile takeover than it is an proposal. MSFT and YHOO have be in consultation for a long while.
The Justice Department has already said they will lift a look.
MSFT is still under some court supervision.
I wouldn't touch it. There are far better things out nearby at the moment.
yes i think so
Is the price of silver the chief it's going to obtain?
I have greatly of silver. And could use the money. Is silver the highest it's going to acquire right now, or should I linger?Answers: I think it will be in motion higher.
Silver could go and get much higher..and after again...it could get lower..precious metals are a crapshoot....
For a more detailed analysis of silver
Go to : low-cost-stock-recommendations
.com
Click on the "Precious Metals" Button on the Navigation Bar
the fundementals of the silver marketplace are great. it will go high in the 5 year permanent status. see financialsense.com for more information.
What is a "Large Cap" fund?
Answers: Market capitalization is the total dollar value of all outstanding shares of stock for a particular company. It's calculated by multiplying the number of shares times the current market price. This term is often referred to as market cap.
A "Large Cap" fund is a mutual fund that invests in large cap stocks.
There is no one authorative set of guidelines for distinguishing small caps from large caps. Definitions can vary - but a good rule of thumb is:
Small Cap: Less than $1 billion
Mid Cap: $1 to $5 billion
Large Cap: Over $5 billion
Some "Investment Pros" define large caps as anything w/ a market cap of $10 billion or higher.
It's a mutual fund that invests only in stocks with a large market capitalization -- i.e., the biggest companies, like General Electric. For example, any S&P 500 index fund is large-cap.
Where to draw the line varies but typically the cutpoint is something like a stock market value of $5 billion or more.