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iShares 10-20 Year Treasury Bond ETF T.TLH


Primary Symbol: TLH

The fund seeks to track the investment results of an index composed of U.S. Treasury bonds with remaining maturities between ten and twenty years. The fund seeks to track the investment results of the ICE U.S. Treasury 10-20 Year Bond Index (the Underlying Index), which measures the performance of public obligations of the U.S. Treasury that have a remaining maturity of greater than or equal to ten years and less than twenty years. As of February 28, 2021, there were 18 issues in the Underlying Index.


ARCA:TLH - Post by User

Post by Satman3on Dec 02, 2010 12:08am
293 Views
Post# 17787574

Energy Investing Trends and Themes

Energy Investing Trends and Themes
Excellent article on how we're still at the early stages of the Lithium boom coming, especially to main street (electric cars) and wall street (through speculation and early trading of the commodity). Enjoy!
Energy Investing Trends and Themes
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Wed, Dec 1, 2010
Feature Articles, Lithium Articles
LinkedIn0ShareBy Dave Brown – Exclusive toLithium Investing News
In a recent study by Resource Investing News, three of the top six resources that survey participants invested in over the last year are based in the energysector. The study represents almost 600 individuals and was conducted in November to follow up on previous research conducted earlier in May and toward the end of last year. Interest in both uranium andlithium seemed to decline slightly during the first part of this year according to analysis of previous survey results, indicating that 4.9 percent and 1.3 percent fewer investors had exposure to the respective sectors. The recent results demonstrate an apparent growth over the last 6 months across the energy realms with more than 50 percent of participants invested in uranium, 31 percent invested in lithium, 42 percent invested in oil & gasand 9 percent invested in vanadium

International Energy Themes

Last year, energy developments were strongly determined by a continued global recession and, for the year as a whole, the international economy contracted for the first time since the Second World War, diminishing global energy consumption. World energy consumption decreased 1.1 percent while global GDP fell by 0.6 percent.
This dynamic transition came as the net result of two contrasting trends. Energy consumption growth remained vigorous in several developing countries, specifically in Asia showing growth in excess of 4 percent. Conversely, in the 33 countries belonging to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), consumption declined significantly by 4.7 percent and was almost reset to its 2000 levels. In North America, Europe and CIS, consumptions shrank by 4.5 percent, 5 percent and 8.5 percent respectively due to the slowdown in economic activity. Consuming 18 percent of the world’s total energy production, China became the largest global consumer since its demand surged by 8 percent during 2009. Despite its declining share over time, oil remained the largest energy source, representing 33 percent of global demand. Coal posted a growing role in the world’s energy consumption: in 2009, it accounted for 27 percent of the total.
Securing Future Supply
Many of the same economic themes were important in 2010; however, a general shift away from environmentally sensitive sources was underscored by the oil spill. Policies from the two largest energy consuming nations of both China and the United States seemed to focus on investment in alternative energy sources and critical infrastructural changes. Catalysts providing the context for investment interest include the negative press regarding Gulf of Mexico, a pervasive shift towards nuclear energy in China and India and strong appetite for unconventional sources of natural gas. Patricia Mohr, Vice-President, Economics and Commodity Market Specialist at Scotiabank provided analysis on November 30 of China’s 12th Five-Year Plan, anticipated to be finalized by next March, which will double the role of nuclear energy, implying positive impact for uranium producers and investment industry.
On 10 November 2010, the European Commission released a report to ?more clearly define European energy priorities for the next ten years and create legislative initiatives and proposals within the next 18 months. This communication was also to provide an agenda for a discussion by government leaders at the very first EU Summit on Energy scheduled in early February. Primary focus is expected to be on environmental considerations with lower carbon emission sources playing a critical role in the future.
Concern about energy security; the need to supply inevitable growing energy demands, particularly within the emerging market nations; continued economic malaise; and the threat of climate change all pose major challenges to energy decision makers. Analysis of energy problems requires a comprehension of basic supply and demand data for all fuels in a manner which allows the easy comparison of the contribution that each fuel makes to the economy and their interrelationships through the conversion of one fuel into another. This type of data is critical for the study of energy substitution, energy conservation and forecasting.
Questions about this article? Leave a comment below or contact our editorial team ateditor@resourceinvestingnews.com.
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