 Okay folks, Larry Pessemental setting in for my good friend David White, so when you want to, not when you have to, something like that, but I love that quote. Anyway, we have the market is bifurcated today. We have the Dow Jones down mainly because of Goldman Sachs being down $12 a share. The Dow Jones being only 30 stocks and of course their price weighted and with the Goldman Sachs being high, that affects the Dow quite a bit. It's up 150 off its bottom. The S&P just cleared the 4,000 level, getting to 4,001 after being low as 39.72 and as we all know, if you listen to TFNN at that 39.48 that we hit on Friday was an exact 61% of the long-term charts, which means the trend is still up until 39.48 is violated. The big news of course is the gold is up $10. We've had a $38, let's try that again, we had a $28 rally in gold today and a 60 cent rally in silver and even copper rallied up about 7 cents and platinum up about $16. So they're hanging in there pretty good. The wheat, corn and beans all got hit pretty hard mainly because the news has turned negative for those on the fundamental basis and so we're keeping a very, very close eye on those for sure. One other market that is very, very interesting is the Treasury notes and Treasury bonds made a slightly lower low than last week and then from that level they've had a very strong rally. We're still down a couple of ticks on the bonds and the notes but they've rallied a full point off the bottom, which is more than $1,000, which is a considerable amount in that interest of those interest-rate-bearing commodities. So those are the main ones that we're looking at to hear today. But the key level folks is that $39.48 in the S&P. The Dow is because of the way it's skewed because of price, being a price value as opposed to the capital value, makes a huge difference. The Russell is up, the Nasdaq is up $80 and the Russell is up $15 right near the highs of the day so there's nothing wrong with the stock market. Only gold and sacks. Let's take a break folks, 877-927-6648. I'll be setting in for David White, so stay tuned. The reality is that navigating financial markets.