about 10 months ago - 3 comments
about 11 months ago - 2 comments
Such as stocks and bonds. How would you do this? What would the volume high and low points have to be? Would (security) price matter? What would the parameters have to be to trade Strictly by VOLUME? Thanks.
about 11 months ago - 4 comments
i got james bond qos for ps2 and i want it for ps3 because it has an ausome online multiplayer for a t game
about 11 months ago - 1 comment
The required returns on all stocks are the same, and the required returns on stocks are higher than the required returns on bonds. The required returns on stocks equal the required returns on bonds. A trading strategy in which you buy stocks that have recently fallen in price is likely to provide you with a More >
about 11 months ago - 14 comments
I need to get a good idea of what women are innately attracted to
about 11 months ago - 3 comments
and is it all that easy ,as it is shown in the websites???????atleast for somebody who is a fresher?
about 11 months ago - 1 comment
More specifically, hedge fund companies that invest in mass media/film production studios.
about 11 months ago - 2 comments
about 12 months ago - No comments
SuperSBB(wii) Nights journey of dreams(wii) Spiderman webs of shadows(wii) Midnight club L.A.(psp) ESPN NFL 2K5(xbox) ESPN NBA 2K5(xbox) James bond 007 in agent underfire(GC)
about 1 year ago
i assuming about 3 bux
about 1 year ago
According to many experts 20-50% lower.
about 1 year ago
Very interesting question. I studied economics in college and it doesn’t follow the traditional supply and demand and noticed that a few years ago. I thought it was so interesting when the hurricane Katrina hasn’t even hit land and they were already increasing the price due to lack of supply. In the US i would think it would be around $3.25 per gallon
about 1 year ago
Probably like $2.50, like in Mexico. Or $2.00 if bush hadn’t sabotages or money
about 1 year ago
0 Cents a gallon
about 1 year ago
$1.50 a gallon.
about 1 year ago
I remember thinking to myself in 2001: “I refuse to pay more than $1.50/gallon,” and I would drive to the next intersection to pay $1.49.
I honestly think that if were strictly supply and demand as you say, it should be around $1.85-$2.05. Just my thought.
about 1 year ago
4 dollars
about 1 year ago
I also think your question is interesting. I would guess somewhere in the $2.50 – $3.00 range. Just a quick side note. In 1992, my wife and I were stationed at Ft. Hood in Texas and on vacation in Florida. We stopped in Atlanta to fill up because we found a deal on gas, $0.89 per gallon. We were complaining because all the other stations were 8 – 10 cents per gallon higher. If we only knew then……..
about 1 year ago
I’d say $2.00 since China is keeping the demand high.
about 1 year ago
Eighty five cents a gallon.
about 1 year ago
There is no way to tell this.
We would have to remove all environmentalists blocking immediate drilling. Oil companies would have to be able to drill immediately where they find it.
I would guess that a third of the price is the weak dollar. Include the costs of not enough refineries, more blends than states, etc.
I would say under $2 a gallon.
This assumes all current taxes are in place.
about 1 year ago
i honestly don’t know.
if that was the way it was, america would have been more oil efficient developed along time ago, NO opec, who knows?
about 1 year ago
Companies and foreign countries can drill and refine oil (itself a NONrenewable, -once it’s gone it’s gone- material) as they please, so, in effect, they control the price regardless because it is their manpower and money that gets it out of the ground. If there were valid competition against oil based gas for cars, it would be a different answer I could give you. No competition, no choice, companies rule. Therefore, whatever price they can get from consumers is what they shall get.
about 1 year ago
About a dollar a gallon because it would be a declining industry and we’d already be well on our way to implementing cheaper and more efficient technologies.
And hat’s cheeaper than a dollar a gallon, not the current price. The technology is there. IF we can get the special interests and their political pawns in the GOP out of the way and have a real free market.
Example: how much do you suppose it costs for the electricity to charge an electric car with a range of 200 miles (equivalent to 5-15 gallons of gasoline?
Answer: $4
Think about that the next time some neoconservative starts whining about liberals and their alternative energy–and you’ll see how much their oil-obsessive “energy policy” is costing YOU in cold hard cash.
about 1 year ago
I would figure 3-3.50 per gallon
By the way Crabby_blindguy – does that price include the 7200 dollars every three years to replace those batteries, or the disposal cost for those 24 batteries….