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      <title>Dyman Management &amp; Associates Business Solutions by Wesley Gonzalez</title>
      <link>https://padlet.com/wezleygonzales/dymanwesleygonzalez</link>
      <description></description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2013-11-30 03:05:16 UTC</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>2024-04-10 22:29:04 UTC</lastBuildDate>
      <webMaster>hello@padlet.com</webMaster>
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      <item>
         <title>Dyman
Management Inc. Big Rock Publishing - That Book About Management</title>
         <author>wezleygonzales</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/wezleygonzales/dymanwesleygonzalez/wish/17560267</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>Dyman Management &amp; Associates
Business Solutions</p>
<p>Go ahead we challenge you...spend a few
hours reading Fred's book. You won't want to put it down 'till it's done. A
pocket sized reader with a powerful punch; full of cartoons, great anecdotes
and genuinely helpful information. Fred's humorous take on management is
direct. His suggestions provide managers with real solutions and work throughs
dealing with today's top management challenges.</p>
<p><b>Contents</b></p>

<p>Management - Lord of the Fries</p>

<p>No Secret Ingredient - The Colonel's
Secret Recipe</p>

<p>Know and Understand your Role - Role
Role Role your Boat</p>

<p>Be a Leader - Leader of the Pack</p>

<p>Acquire Management Qualities - Jerry M
"Acquire"</p>

<p>Seek, Hire, Develop and De-Hire Properly
- let me Take You Hire </p>

<p>Build Commitment - Commit, Committer,
Committest</p>

<p>You Can't Treat Everyone Alike - I
Think, therefore, I am</p>

<p>Be Willing to Confront - "Judo -
Gentle way"</p>

<p>Understand The Numbers - 3.14159265</p>

<p>Just Some More Thoughts - Fred Bits</p>
<p><b>All
Business Solutions, Seminars and Special Engagements are tailored to your
company’s needs. Visit our website at</b> <a href="http://www.dymanmgt.com/">http://www.dymanmgt.com/</a></p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2013-11-30 03:05:30 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/wezleygonzales/dymanwesleygonzalez/wish/17560267</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>Here&#39;s Your 20-Second Guide To What Aussie Traders Will Be Talking About This Morning</title>
         <author>wezleygonzales</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/wezleygonzales/dymanwesleygonzalez/wish/18335738</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.businessinsider.com.au/heres-your-20-second-guide-to-what-aussie-traders-will-be-talking-about-this-morning-v6-2013-12">Dyman
Management &amp; Associates Business Solutions</a></p>

<p>Your morning market update to
welcome the last three weeks of 2013.</p>
<p>- US non-farm payrolls were
stronger than the market expected, printing 203,000 with positive revisions to
some previous month giving the impression that the US economy is really <a href="http://www.sba.gov/community/discussion-boards/dyman-management-associates-business-solutions-special-engagements-fred-dyke-mc-and-5th-degree">starting
to get some economic momentum</a>. But this didn’t seem to bother traders on
the stock market, who took shares sharply higher even though jobs growth
increases the chances of Dectaper at the FOMC meeting next week.</p>
<p>- At the close, the Dow had
rallied 198 points or 1.25% to 16,020, the Nasdaq was 0.74% higher at 4,063 and
the S&amp;P 500 was up a stunning 20 points or 1.12% to 1,805. It is hard to
fathom the positive reaction to strong data given fear of the Fed’s taper but
if we draw a line through the US dollar’s moves (weaker against Aussie and
Euro) as well, it seems traders are working on the premise that any taper is
only going to be small, and rates are staying lower for longer. Equally though,
the big jump in Consumer Credit and Consumer Sentiment might have contributed
to a belief the economy might be able to <a href="http://visual.ly/working-employee-dyman-management-associates-business-solutions">support</a>
stock valuations on its own.</p>
<p>- In Europe, stocks were selling
off just before NFP was released but the rally in US stocks dragged prices
higher. The FTSE closed at 6,552 up 0.83% and the DAX was up 0.96% at 9,172. In
Paris, the CAC rose 0.71% to 4,129, while in Milan the FTSE MIB rose 0.73% to
18,124. In Madrid, stocks were sharply higher than the low of the day but up
just 0.09% on the previous close at 9,401.</p>
<p>- The SPI200 on the ASX has had a
very strong bounce off last week’s low around 5260 and closed up 25 points on
Friday’s close at 5209 bid.</p>
<p>- On global foreign exchange
markets, the reaction seemed back-to-front, with euro rallying strongly to
finish the week above 1.37. GBP lagged the move but still finished higher at
1.6344. Only USDJPY’s reaction of the big 3 made any sense and the dollar
rallied to close at 102.88 looking biased back toward 104 in the next day or
two.</p>
<p>- The Aussie dollar rallied also
and has had a fairly good recovery off support under 90 cents we saw last week.
Trading just above 91 cents, the Aussie looks biased back toward toward 92
cents this week. Data out of China over the weekend that showed a big surge in
exports, which were up 12.7% year-on-year – much higher than expected. The ANZ
reported yesterday that this was “due to better demand from developed
economies, as indicated by improving US ISM and EU PMI. Shipment to the US and
EU rose by 17.7% and 18.4% respectively, from 8.1% and 12.7% in the prior
month.”. This should help Aussie dollar sentiment even though imports were only
up 5.3% year on year – we already know that Port Hedland is running near record
rates and last week’s data showed China’s share of Australian exports at an
all-time high.</p>
<p>- On commodity markets, Nymex
crude closed the week much stronger at $97.82 Bbl for a gain of 5.26%
week-on-week. Gold remains under pressure at $1225 oz and it lost 2% last week,
while Copper was at $3.26 lb. The Ags closed the week very quiet with Corn up
0.3% to 424 bushel, Wheat fell 0.12% to 637 and Soybeans were down 0.11% to 1326.</p>
<p>- Traders will also be wondering
about Bitcoin this morning. Of course, for most traders this is a sideshow to
their usual trading but the fact that the Chinese government banned the banks
from using BTC and then the Chinese website Baidu said it wasn’t accepting BTC
because it was too volatile saw the virtual currency crash below $600 on Friday
night. It is now trading $735 this morning.</p>
<p>The full data calendar for the
week can be found in our Trader Diary post and comes courtesy of Westpac.</p>
<p>On the day though, manufacturing
sales are released in New Zealand, Japanese GDP, money supply and trade balance
are out along with Chinese CPI (which will be important) before German trade
data (Euro supportive?) and Italian Industrial data.</p>
<p>There is nothing material in the
US tonight.</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="https://d20uo2axdbh83k.cloudfront.net/20131213/db9c6e6c428d7df610d5cb730d1390ad.jpg" />
         <pubDate>2013-12-13 02:18:28 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/wezleygonzales/dymanwesleygonzalez/wish/18335738</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>Here&#39;s Your 20-Second Guide To What Aussie Traders Will Be Talking About This Morning</title>
         <author>wezleygonzales</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/wezleygonzales/dymanwesleygonzalez/wish/18335739</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p><a href="http://www.businessinsider.com.au/heres-your-20-second-guide-to-what-aussie-traders-will-be-talking-about-this-morning-v6-2013-12">Dyman
Management &amp; Associates Business Solutions</a></p>

<p>Your morning market update to
welcome the last three weeks of 2013.</p>
<p>- US non-farm payrolls were
stronger than the market expected, printing 203,000 with positive revisions to
some previous month giving the impression that the US economy is really <a href="http://www.sba.gov/community/discussion-boards/dyman-management-associates-business-solutions-special-engagements-fred-dyke-mc-and-5th-degree">starting
to get some economic momentum</a>. But this didn’t seem to bother traders on
the stock market, who took shares sharply higher even though jobs growth
increases the chances of Dectaper at the FOMC meeting next week.</p>
<p>- At the close, the Dow had
rallied 198 points or 1.25% to 16,020, the Nasdaq was 0.74% higher at 4,063 and
the S&amp;P 500 was up a stunning 20 points or 1.12% to 1,805. It is hard to
fathom the positive reaction to strong data given fear of the Fed’s taper but
if we draw a line through the US dollar’s moves (weaker against Aussie and
Euro) as well, it seems traders are working on the premise that any taper is
only going to be small, and rates are staying lower for longer. Equally though,
the big jump in Consumer Credit and Consumer Sentiment might have contributed
to a belief the economy might be able to <a href="http://visual.ly/working-employee-dyman-management-associates-business-solutions">support</a>
stock valuations on its own.</p>
<p>- In Europe, stocks were selling
off just before NFP was released but the rally in US stocks dragged prices
higher. The FTSE closed at 6,552 up 0.83% and the DAX was up 0.96% at 9,172. In
Paris, the CAC rose 0.71% to 4,129, while in Milan the FTSE MIB rose 0.73% to
18,124. In Madrid, stocks were sharply higher than the low of the day but up
just 0.09% on the previous close at 9,401.</p>
<p>- The SPI200 on the ASX has had a
very strong bounce off last week’s low around 5260 and closed up 25 points on
Friday’s close at 5209 bid.</p>
<p>- On global foreign exchange
markets, the reaction seemed back-to-front, with euro rallying strongly to
finish the week above 1.37. GBP lagged the move but still finished higher at
1.6344. Only USDJPY’s reaction of the big 3 made any sense and the dollar
rallied to close at 102.88 looking biased back toward 104 in the next day or
two.</p>
<p>- The Aussie dollar rallied also
and has had a fairly good recovery off support under 90 cents we saw last week.
Trading just above 91 cents, the Aussie looks biased back toward toward 92
cents this week. Data out of China over the weekend that showed a big surge in
exports, which were up 12.7% year-on-year – much higher than expected. The ANZ
reported yesterday that this was “due to better demand from developed
economies, as indicated by improving US ISM and EU PMI. Shipment to the US and
EU rose by 17.7% and 18.4% respectively, from 8.1% and 12.7% in the prior
month.”. This should help Aussie dollar sentiment even though imports were only
up 5.3% year on year – we already know that Port Hedland is running near record
rates and last week’s data showed China’s share of Australian exports at an
all-time high.</p>
<p>- On commodity markets, Nymex
crude closed the week much stronger at $97.82 Bbl for a gain of 5.26%
week-on-week. Gold remains under pressure at $1225 oz and it lost 2% last week,
while Copper was at $3.26 lb. The Ags closed the week very quiet with Corn up
0.3% to 424 bushel, Wheat fell 0.12% to 637 and Soybeans were down 0.11% to 1326.</p>
<p>- Traders will also be wondering
about Bitcoin this morning. Of course, for most traders this is a sideshow to
their usual trading but the fact that the Chinese government banned the banks
from using BTC and then the Chinese website Baidu said it wasn’t accepting BTC
because it was too volatile saw the virtual currency crash below $600 on Friday
night. It is now trading $735 this morning.</p>
<p>The full data calendar for the
week can be found in our Trader Diary post and comes courtesy of Westpac.</p>
<p>On the day though, manufacturing
sales are released in New Zealand, Japanese GDP, money supply and trade balance
are out along with Chinese CPI (which will be important) before German trade
data (Euro supportive?) and Italian Industrial data.</p>
<p>There is nothing material in the
US tonight.</p>
</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="https://d20uo2axdbh83k.cloudfront.net/20131213/d52ca26ea4af56016a54fc3eb97eabd5.jpg" />
         <pubDate>2013-12-13 02:18:35 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/wezleygonzales/dymanwesleygonzalez/wish/18335739</guid>
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