cadmium posts

Feed

McDonald's Recalls Collectible Shrek Glasses

Reportedly, McDonald's (MCD) is recalling 12 million of its collectible Shrek glasses thanks to cadmium. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) announced the voluntary recall early this morning because the painted design contains cadmium.

What a deal, cadmium poisoning and a collector's glass all for a mere $2 ... those marketing geniuses at McDonald's ... what will they think of next?

Continue reading McDonald's Recalls Collectible Shrek Glasses

Invested in tellurium yet? Check this out

Constantly on the lookout for those things that subtly show potential, my keen eye has spied a possible giant upcoming in the kingdom of the minerals. Enter the humble player tellurium, a mineral byproduct of copper production. This relatively unknown mineral currently is not mined in any commercial sense. It's primarily derived through a recovery process applied to the sludge from copper refining. What is the interest in tellurium and why should you care about it? Well, here's what the State Geologist of Arizona has revealed to me.

According to Jack Lifton at Resource Investor, this fall Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) and Samsung "will introduce flash memory replacements ... that can be used, erased, and used again indefinitely, but, rather than being crystalline silicon technology based, are made from tellurium based glasses composed of germanium, antimony, and tellurium." What could this possibly mean to a sharp-minded investor? It means that there quite possibly resides an untapped multi-mega fortune in copper refining sludge. In 2000, tellurium marketed for just under $4.00 a pound. Last year, the mineral had reached $96 and is currently around $100 a pound.

Additionally, First Solar Inc., (NASDAQ: FSLR) of Phoenix, which went public last fall, is using cadmium tellurium in the production of photovoltaic cells. Its public statement regarding the use of the material is as follows: "Cadmium tellurium ... has the potential to deliver competitive conversion efficiencies with approximately 1% of the semiconductor material used by traditional crystalline silicon solar modules." That's one percent of the current weight and one percent of the current volume. Imagine the solar conversion capacity currently available reduced in size by 10%. Yeah baby, now that's potential!

Some stick-in-the-mud people may still want to turn their noses up at the realities of solar conversion and its future. That's fine with me. I'll just watch someone else get rich while I'm sitting in the sunshine.

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA+73.0012,874.23
NASDAQ+23.852,927.73
S&P 500+9.471,352.11

Last updated: February 13, 2012: 02:04 PM

Hot Stocks

General Electric

19.035+0.16(+0.85)

Alcoa

10.35+0.06(+0.58)

Apple Inc

500.59+7.17(+1.45)

Google Inc 'A'

612.64+6.73(+1.11)

Bank of America

8.285+0.215(+2.66)

Wal-Mart Stores

61.87-0.03(-0.05)

Exxon Mobil Corp

84.38+0.58(+0.69)

Ford

12.575+0.135(+1.09)

Citigroup

33.35+0.425(+1.29)

IBM

192.68+0.26(+0.14)

Yahoo

16.17+0.03(+0.19)

Starbucks

49.13+0.31(+0.64)

Microsoft

30.59+0.095(+0.31)

Home Depot

45.98+0.65(+1.43)

DailyFinance Headlines

AOL Business News

BioHealth Investor Headlines

Sponsored Links

My Portfolios

Track your stocks here!

Find out why more people track their portfolios on AOL Money & Finance then anywhere else.

BloggingStocks Partners

More from AOL Money & Finance

Page Loaded in 1329159847484 ms.