stock list
includes: MSE Enviro-Tech Corp. (PINKSHEETS: MEVT), Solarfun Power Holdings
Co., Ltd. (NASDAQ: SOLF), LDK Solar Co., Ltd. (NYSE: LDK), First Solar,
Inc. (NASDAQ: FSLR).
MSE Enviro-Tech Corp. (PINKSHEETS: MEVT) should have the attention of
investors and traders this morning. Yesterday, Market Advisor's issued
coverage of MEVT with an Intermediate Term Price of $1.15 a share.
An excerpt from the Report states, "For the U.S. alone in 2005, there were
1, 602,000 fires reported causing 3,675 civilian deaths, 17,975 civilian
injuries, 87 firefighter's deaths and $10.7 billion in property damage.
Large scale forest fires have become national tragedies and as a result
have destroyed billions of dollars of real estate and millions of acres of
forest while contributing to significant environmental damage. Everything
has the potential to burn but doesn't have to. MSE Enviro-Tech is marketing
products that will have a huge impact on future fires and the damage that
they do."
The Report continues, "We continue to rate MSE Enviro-Tech attractive
because: (1) MSE is a likely beneficiary of the exclusive U.S. distribution
rights for Hartindo fire prevention products. (2) MEVT has come off its 52
week high and we feel this presents a low-risk opportunity for investors.
We believe a premium multiple is warranted in light of MEVT's growth
potential."
To read the Market Advisors Report, and for Stock Market Alerts' in-depth
profile of MSE Enviro-Tech, visit
http://www.wallstreetenews.com/HotStocks/MEVT052108/default.aspx
In separate news: An exclusive CBS News report on Monday, titled "Is Fire
Retardant A Harmful Toxin?" stated, "For decades, Americans have depended
on special chemicals to protect them from fire. But now, there are serious
questions about the safety of those chemicals. Two states have already
banned them, and six more are considering it." Furthermore, "In Wyatt
Andrews' exclusive CBS TV report, Linda Birnbaum, a senior toxicologist at
the EPA, stated, 'I am concerned about developing children, concerned about
exposure before you are born.' And Maine state toxicologist Deborah Rice, a
former EPA scientist, added, 'This is concentrating in human beings, just
like PCBs.' Ms.