Latest Posts By richtan - Supreme About richtan |
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07-Oct-2009 11:25 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I had been posting almost everyday the below writeup from OCBC Investment Research: Midas's firm order book of 1.4 billion yuan (S$296 million), more anticipated contract wins in Sept - Nov 2009... will serve to under-gird valuations" |
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07-Oct-2009 11:23 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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From "Lim & Tan securities": We remain positive on Midas given its robust growth prospects, underpinned by its robust order books of RMB1.4bln as well as the robust prospects of its 32.5% owned subsidiary company, also underpinned by solid order books of RMB4.5bln. And this in turn reflects the government’s active efforts to support the railcar industry in China to reduce transportation bottlenecks as well as reduce transportation costs. Rail transportation is much cheaper than air travel and is much safer and causes much less pollution than automotive transportation. The company will be increasing their production capacity by 200% in the next 2 years to cope with the strong order flows. Its PE of 20x remains undemanding compared to its expected growth rate of 40-50%. |
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07-Oct-2009 11:22 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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From OCBC Investment Research: Midas Holdings: Evaluating listing in HK. Maintain BUY. Midas Holdings (Midas) announced today that it is planning a secondary listing of its shares on the Main Board of the Stock Exchange of HongKong. Midas has appointed Credit Suisse (Hong Kong) to assist the group in evaluating and preparing for this listing. Mr Patrick Chew, CEO, says that Midas "is now ready to take Midas towards the next development phase and is optimistic that a listing on both the Singapore and HongKong bourses will allow Midas to tap into a wider investor base, increase liquidity and enhance the stock value". Hong Kong valuations tend to be richer and this could bode well for dual-listed Singapore stocks. Maintain BUY, fair value of S$1.05. (Kelly Chia) |
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07-Oct-2009 10:51 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Midas does not just depend on trains, read extract from below: Life after trains: Over the longer term, management will look into other feasible, promising industries such as aviation to continue its growth. I had been posting almost everyday the below writeup from Kim Eng:
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07-Oct-2009 10:24 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I too fully agree with u. I have this "2 days" rule based on closing price, not intraday high nor low to avoid fakes.
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07-Oct-2009 10:09 | AusGroup / AUSGROUP: 1H09 revenue up 28.8% to reach A$260.5 m Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the annual general meeting of AusGroup Limited (the “Company”) will be held at Anson Rooms 3 & 4, Level 2, M Hotel Singapore, 81 Anson Road, Singapore 079908 on Tuesday, 13 October 2009 at 3.00 p.m. NOTICE OF BOOKS CLOSURE AND DIVIDEND PAYMENT DATES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the share transfer books and register of members of AusGroupLimited (the “Company”) will be closed on 24 October 2009 for the purpose of determining members’ entitlements to the final one-tier tax exempt dividend of 0.64 Singapore cents per ordinary share for the year ended 30 June 2009. Members whose securities accounts with The Central Depository (Pte) Limited are credited with shares at 5.00 p.m. on 23 October 2009 will be entitled to the dividend. The dividend, if approved by members at the Company’s annual general meeting to be held on 13 October 2009, will be paid on 6 November 2009. http://info.sgx.com/webcoranncatth.nsf/VwAttachments/Att_B48A2FE4D2D9D2534825763A0005E914/$file/AusGroup.Notice.Of.AGM.pdf?openelement |
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07-Oct-2009 10:02 | AusGroup / AUSGROUP: 1H09 revenue up 28.8% to reach A$260.5 m Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The below report from CIMB on 30/9/2009 Wednesday Expected to secure A$125m orders from Gorgon in the next six months. Over the next 18 months, management plans to submit A$1bn of bids for the Gorgon project. Some A$60m has already been submitted and another A$420m will be submitted by end-2009. The bids are for fabrication work for the upstream phase (preassembled pipe racks, modules, subsea manifolds and spools). We expect the group to secure A$125m of contracts from the project by 1Q10. To date, the Gorgon project has awarded A$2bn worth of projects to sub-contractors for infrastructure and logistics work and is expected to award another A$10bn in the coming three months. We anticipate further order wins from the Gorgon project for AusGroup from 2H10 when contracts for subsea/LNG plant work are announced. On the lookout for acquisitions. With a strong cash position, we expect management to announce acquisitions in the near term. Potential acquisitions would be similar to MAS: providing similar businesses, enhancing AusGroup’s footprint in East Australia/South-East Asia and achieving the required rate of returns |
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07-Oct-2009 09:53 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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From OCBC Investment Research: Market Pulse Midas and Tat Hong look interesting at current levels. Stocks offering exposure to infrastructural play in the region will continue to outperform as we have seen still healthy investments into building up infrastructures in the region. We believe that present market weakness will be an opportune time to accumulate these stocks. In this space, we continue to like Midas [BUY, fair value estimate of S$1.05 versus current price of $0.81] and Tat Hong [BUY, fair value of S$1.15 and current price of $0.99]. Midas has taken a big hit, down 14.7% from the recent high of S$0.905 when it announced a possible listing in Hong Kong to a recent low of S$0.785. At current levels, and with a large backlog, we continue to re-iterate our BUY rating for the stock. Tat Hong is also poised to be another beneficiary of the infrastructural spending in China and India. We expect the company to see better earnings ahead, supported by contributions from both countries. Refer to our Tat Hong full report today for more details. The stock has also fallen 13.5% from recent high of $1.11 to a recent low of 96 cents. At current level, we are upgrading the stock to a BUY. |
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07-Oct-2009 09:08 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Below is my chart analysis for sharing and exchange pointers. My TA chart is posted to share n exchange pointers with those TA practitioner whom believes in TA. If u are a TA detractor, plse just ignore n refrain from peeping at my chart posting n start making unconstructive comments and plse do not be so childish or lunatic as to abuse the rating system by intentionally rating it as "bad post", this is not cursing but Buddhism beliefs tat intentional bad deeds will accumulate for yourself and possibly your next generation, "bad" karma for your "bad" deeds. If u think it is a bad post, then be constructive and kindly post your TA for sharing. This is only my view n I may be right or wrong, so dyodd and SOBAYOR. |
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07-Oct-2009 00:43 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Read this posting in CNA forum, copy n paste here just for sharing: |
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07-Oct-2009 00:03 | Others / Stocks Correction Mid September to Early October Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Fidelity’s Bolton Predicts ‘Multi-Year’ Bull Market (Update1) By Bernard Lo and Michael Patterson Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Sustainable economic growth and low interest rates worldwide will spur a “multi-year” bull market in equities, led by developing nations, said Fidelity International’s Anthony Bolton. “Low growth means low interest rates, and actually that’s one of the best environments for stock-market investing,” Bolton, president of investments at Fidelity International, which oversees about $141 billion, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television in Hong Kong. “Anything that can show growth in this low-growth environment is going to be bid up by investors. It’s very pro the emerging-market world versus the developed world.” Policy makers in the U.S. and Europe will keep interest rates low for another year even as Australia’s central bank unexpectedly raised rates today, Bolton said. He’s “particularly optimistic” on Chinese stocks because the government will foster sustained economic growth without fueling inflation. Bolton’s view contrasts with New York University Professor Nouriel Roubini and Elliott Wave International Inc.’s Robert Prechter, who have said shares are poised to retreat. Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Bill Gross predicted low economic growth will restrict annual stock returns to 5 percent, while Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said investors have been “irrationally exuberant” about an economic recovery. Stock Rally The MSCI Emerging Markets Index has climbed 62 percent this year on expectations that developing nations will lead a rebound in the global economy from its worst recession since World War II. Emerging-market economies may grow 6 percent next year, compared with 1.8 percent growth in advanced nations, according to HSBC Holdings Plc. The MSCI emerging markets gauge climbed 1.5 percent as of 12:23 p.m. in London as higher commodity prices boosted earnings prospects for producers and HSBC said its purchasing managers’ index for developing economies posted its biggest gain in more than a year. The MSCI World Index of developed nations, up 21 percent this year, gained 0.9 percent today. Bolton, Fidelity’s first fund manager in Europe, said on March 11 that the U.K. equity market was at or near its lowest point. The nation’s benchmark FTSE 100 Index, which tumbled 31 percent in 2008, bottomed on March 3 and has since rallied 45 percent. Bolton dumped his holdings of telecommunications stocks in the first quarter of 2000 at the height of the industry’s bull market. Bolton’s Special Situations Fund beat the FTSE All-Share Index on an annual basis by 6 percentage points from 1979 through 2007, according to Fidelity. Fidelity International is the London-based affiliate of Fidelity Investments, the world’s largest mutual-fund company. To contact the reporter on this story: Bernard Lo in Hong Kong at blo2@bloomberg.net; Michael Patterson in London at mpatterson10@bloomberg.net. Last Updated: October 6, 2009 07:58 EDT
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06-Oct-2009 21:25 | Others / Stocks Correction Mid September to Early October Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Relax, this is just some correction, not mkt crash nor end of the world yet. Is October correction inevitable?Commentary: Not if you study patterns of crash yearsBy Ethan Anderson GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (MarketWatch) -- Most investors seem braced for a big correction, but in my experience the majority is usually wrong. TRADING STRATEGIES: OCTOBER Will the bull survive? October is best known for spectacular market crashes. At the very least, the month's volatility can spook many investors. But many of our experts say there's good reason to remain in the market, despite whatever jitters you may have. • Karabell: What about the China effect? • Is October correction inevitable? • Time to take a stand on rally • Eliades: March lows may come back • Hennessey: Not as bad as everyone thinks October may be a negative month, but it's usually more in the range of 3% to 5%. The Octobers of 2008 and 1987 were the two biggest October sell-offs of the last 30 years, but each was preceded by a negative September. This year, September was positive. During past October sell-offs, the month didn't represent the first wave of the attack. May and June often paved the way. October then stepped up to wipe out the survivors who believed the worst was over. Again, we did not see major selloffs in May or in June. In fact, this past June marked the fourth consecutive month of gains. If we do sink lower in October, the catalyst can easily be the lack of top-line growth in earnings reports. However, if top-line growth is present, it can be another factor driving the market up in October. To play devil's advocate, I must point out that six months after the market bottomed in 1987, the market was 21% higher. After the 2002 bottom, it was 24% higher. Today, we are 58% higher than we were in March. This is a significant jump. To prepare investments for October, consider diversifying with a prudent amount of truly non-correlated asset classes like Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), commodities such as precious metals, managed futures and inverse funds. If you have already pulled significant assets out of the market and are sitting on the sidelines, get back in but not all at once. Dollar-cost-average back into a diversified portfolio in order to avoid buying in on the worst day of the year, and consider tactical asset allocation programs for a small percentage of your portfolio. On the fixed income side, TIPS is a good way to get some income and inflation protection. The Fidelity Floating Rate Bond Fund /quotes/comstock/10r!ffrhx (FFRHX 9.32, -0.01, -0.11%) still looks attractive. Blackrock Global Allocation /quotes/comstock/10r!mdlox (MDLOX 17.30, -0.25, -1.43%) is a wonderful fund with multiple asset classes. For equities, Tom Soviero and some of the rest of the folks over at Fidelity Leveraged Company Stock Fund /quotes/comstock/10r!flvix (FLVIX 25.65, -1.12, -4.18%) are some of the best in the business, as is the team running the Kinetics Paradigm Fund. /quotes/comstock/10r!wwnpx (WWNPX 19.19, -0.57, -2.89%) Ethan Anderson is a senior portfolio manager with Rehmann , one of the largest accounting, financial services and consulting firms in the Midwest. Anderson sits on Rehmann Financial's Investment Research Committee and has been recognized as a "5 star" portfolio manager by Morningstar Inc
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06-Oct-2009 21:23 | Others / Stocks Correction Mid September to Early October Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Oct. 1, 2009, 12:01 a.m. EDT · Recommend ·
Are you in the rally, or out of it?Commentary: It's time to make a choiceBy Tom Lydon NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (MarketWatch) -- These days, no matter what the markets do, there are still those naysayers who are sticking to their guns with admirable tenacity. TRADING STRATEGIES: OCTOBER Will the bull survive? October is best known for spectacular market crashes. At the very least, the month's volatility can spook many investors. But many of our experts say there's good reason to remain in the market, despite whatever jitters you may have. • Karabell: What about the China effect? • Is October correction inevitable? • Time to take a stand on rally • Eliades: March lows may come back • Hennessey: Not as bad as everyone thinks Following the bear market of 2000-2002, investors had a similar tone. Everyone said the 2003 rally couldn't continue and that, sooner or later, the markets would go "splat" once again. But that scenario never materialized. Instead, major markets recovered nicely in the last three quarters of 2003 and made those looking for an September/October correction look silly. Will this time be different? Is this rally for suckers? When this recession hit, investors began a mass exodus from the market that ultimately sank the major indexes to their lowest levels in nearly a decade. By 2008, they were practically trampling each other in a race to the exits as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers collapsed and the government stepped in with a massive bailout package designed to prop up what was clearly a critically ill economy. Since the market's low earlier this year, investors have been slowly but surely returning. Despite how many rally doubters remain, some of them already have thrown up the white flag of surrender and taken equity positions. Yet most investors don't believe this recovery is real. Missed opportunityStill, to sit out and pooh-pooh the rally is to miss a major opportunity for gains, as well as a missed opportunity to make up what was lost in their battered portfolios. Investors hiding in the safety of money market funds aren't making anything from those paltry yields. The markets have been steadily improving for much of this year, and all signs say that while the recovery may be a long, slow one, it will still be a recovery. Why? There's $4 trillion on the sidelines, and as that money trickles back in, the rally should continue. Earnings season is just around the corner, and while many corporate forecasts are on the cautious side, their actual numbers could be better than expected Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has said the recession is "very likely over," and the Fed also is keeping interest rates at record lows for now in order to continue the pace of the recovery. While a full recovery in the United States could be months away, there are many areas that have been delivering handsome returns for months. Big gainsIt's important to pick your spots so you don't miss opportunities to participate in potential long-term uptrends. In this recovery, keep an eye on both those areas that are likely to perform well as countries begin to build up again, as well as those areas that were hardest-hit in the recession: Emerging markets: iShares MSCI Emerging Markets /quotes/comstock/13*!eem/quotes/nls/eem (EEM 37.95, +0.10, +0.26%) is up 84.1% off the market low Steel: Market Vectors Steel /quotes/comstock/13*!slx/quotes/nls/slx (SLX 50.31, -2.42, -4.59%) is up nearly 130% since the low Basic materials: iShares Dow Jones U.S. Basic Materials /quotes/comstock/13*!iym/quotes/nls/iym (IYM 52.62, -2.18, -3.98%) is up nearly 90% since the low Banks: Financial Select Sector SPDRs /quotes/comstock/13*!xlf/quotes/nls/xlf (XLF 14.29, +0.01, +0.07%) is up almost 140% since the low Real estate: iShares Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate /quotes/comstock/13*!iyr/quotes/nls/iyr (IYR 40.91, +0.05, +0.12%) is up almost 90% from the low
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06-Oct-2009 21:21 | Others / Stocks Correction Mid September to Early October Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Oct. 1, 2009, 12:01 a.m. EDT · Recommend · No reason to be spooked by October this yearCommentary: But markets should be wary of IranBy Robert Maltbie LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) -- While some might get spooked by an often-volatile October, signs are that the markets are in strong shape. TRADING STRATEGIES: OCTOBER Will the bull survive? October is best known for spectacular market crashes. At the very least, the month's volatility can spook many investors. But many of our experts say there's good reason to remain in the market, despite whatever jitters you may have. • Karabell: What about the China effect? • Is October correction inevitable? • Time to take a stand on rally • Eliades: March lows may come back • Hennessey: Not as bad as everyone thinks As for our neutral indicators, they are "sentiment" indicators showing that volatility and possibly fear have greatly diminished. This is evidenced by the CBOE volatility index /quotes/comstock/20m!i:vix (VIX 28.27, +2.66, +10.39%) which has retreated to 23 from a high of more than 80 a year ago when we were in free fall. Offsetting this is a bullish AAII pundit survey showing investment advisors are bearish, perhaps bracing for "seasonal harshness," by 39% bulls to 45% bears. Big-time mergers by Walt Disney Co. /quotes/comstock/13*!dis/quotes/nls/dis (DIS 27.46, +0.10, +0.37%) , Abbott Labs /quotes/comstock/13*!abt/quotes/nls/abt (ABT 49.47, +0.79, +1.62%) and Dell Inc. /quotes/comstock/15*!dell/quotes/nls/dell (DELL 15.26, +0.12, +0.79%) are starting up again, as these and buybacks have pulsed to nearly $50 billion in September. Meanwhile, money markets have experienced a $54 billion outflow lately.
Robert Maltbie is a CFA and principal of Millennium Asset Management, a California-based registered investment advisor that provides investment management services to high net worth investors. He is also Managing Director of Singular Research, an alternative independent research provider focused on small cap stocks for institutional investors. See his Web site at www.stockjock.com.
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06-Oct-2009 14:47 | Others / Most - S-Chip get ready to get 10-20% Price Hike Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Daryl Guppy: Alphabet soup out of character in China
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06-Oct-2009 10:00 | Others / DOW Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Oct. 1, 2009, 12:01 a.m. EDT · Recommend · No reason to be spooked by October this yearCommentary: But markets should be wary of IranBy Robert Maltbie LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) -- While some might get spooked by an often-volatile October, signs are that the markets are in strong shape. TRADING STRATEGIES: OCTOBER Will the bull survive? October is best known for spectacular market crashes. At the very least, the month's volatility can spook many investors. But many of our experts say there's good reason to remain in the market, despite whatever jitters you may have. • Karabell: What about the China effect? • Is October correction inevitable? • Time to take a stand on rally • Eliades: March lows may come back • Hennessey: Not as bad as everyone thinks As for our neutral indicators, they are "sentiment" indicators showing that volatility and possibly fear have greatly diminished. This is evidenced by the CBOE volatility index /quotes/comstock/20m!i:vix (VIX 28.27, +2.66, +10.39%) which has retreated to 23 from a high of more than 80 a year ago when we were in free fall. Offsetting this is a bullish AAII pundit survey showing investment advisors are bearish, perhaps bracing for "seasonal harshness," by 39% bulls to 45% bears. Big-time mergers by Walt Disney Co. /quotes/comstock/13*!dis/quotes/nls/dis (DIS 27.46, +0.10, +0.37%) , Abbott Labs /quotes/comstock/13*!abt/quotes/nls/abt (ABT 49.47, +0.79, +1.62%) and Dell Inc. /quotes/comstock/15*!dell/quotes/nls/dell (DELL 15.26, +0.12, +0.79%) are starting up again, as these and buybacks have pulsed to nearly $50 billion in September. Meanwhile, money markets have experienced a $54 billion outflow lately.
Robert Maltbie is a CFA and principal of Millennium Asset Management, a California-based registered investment advisor that provides investment management services to high net worth investors. He is also Managing Director of Singular Research, an alternative independent research provider focused on small cap stocks for institutional investors. See his Web site at www.stockjock.com. |
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06-Oct-2009 09:58 | Others / DOW Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Oct. 1, 2009, 12:01 a.m. EDT · Recommend ·
Are you in the rally, or out of it?Commentary: It's time to make a choiceBy Tom Lydon NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (MarketWatch) -- These days, no matter what the markets do, there are still those naysayers who are sticking to their guns with admirable tenacity. TRADING STRATEGIES: OCTOBER Will the bull survive? October is best known for spectacular market crashes. At the very least, the month's volatility can spook many investors. But many of our experts say there's good reason to remain in the market, despite whatever jitters you may have. • Karabell: What about the China effect? • Is October correction inevitable? • Time to take a stand on rally • Eliades: March lows may come back • Hennessey: Not as bad as everyone thinks Following the bear market of 2000-2002, investors had a similar tone. Everyone said the 2003 rally couldn't continue and that, sooner or later, the markets would go "splat" once again. But that scenario never materialized. Instead, major markets recovered nicely in the last three quarters of 2003 and made those looking for an September/October correction look silly. Will this time be different? Is this rally for suckers? When this recession hit, investors began a mass exodus from the market that ultimately sank the major indexes to their lowest levels in nearly a decade. By 2008, they were practically trampling each other in a race to the exits as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers collapsed and the government stepped in with a massive bailout package designed to prop up what was clearly a critically ill economy. Since the market's low earlier this year, investors have been slowly but surely returning. Despite how many rally doubters remain, some of them already have thrown up the white flag of surrender and taken equity positions. Yet most investors don't believe this recovery is real. Missed opportunityStill, to sit out and pooh-pooh the rally is to miss a major opportunity for gains, as well as a missed opportunity to make up what was lost in their battered portfolios. Investors hiding in the safety of money market funds aren't making anything from those paltry yields. The markets have been steadily improving for much of this year, and all signs say that while the recovery may be a long, slow one, it will still be a recovery. Why? There's $4 trillion on the sidelines, and as that money trickles back in, the rally should continue. Earnings season is just around the corner, and while many corporate forecasts are on the cautious side, their actual numbers could be better than expected Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has said the recession is "very likely over," and the Fed also is keeping interest rates at record lows for now in order to continue the pace of the recovery. While a full recovery in the United States could be months away, there are many areas that have been delivering handsome returns for months. Big gainsIt's important to pick your spots so you don't miss opportunities to participate in potential long-term uptrends. In this recovery, keep an eye on both those areas that are likely to perform well as countries begin to build up again, as well as those areas that were hardest-hit in the recession: Emerging markets: iShares MSCI Emerging Markets /quotes/comstock/13*!eem/quotes/nls/eem (EEM 37.95, +0.10, +0.26%) is up 84.1% off the market low Steel: Market Vectors Steel /quotes/comstock/13*!slx/quotes/nls/slx (SLX 50.31, -2.42, -4.59%) is up nearly 130% since the low Basic materials: iShares Dow Jones U.S. Basic Materials /quotes/comstock/13*!iym/quotes/nls/iym (IYM 52.62, -2.18, -3.98%) is up nearly 90% since the low Banks: Financial Select Sector SPDRs /quotes/comstock/13*!xlf/quotes/nls/xlf (XLF 14.29, +0.01, +0.07%) is up almost 140% since the low Real estate: iShares Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate /quotes/comstock/13*!iyr/quotes/nls/iyr (IYR 40.91, +0.05, +0.12%) is up almost 90% from the low |
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06-Oct-2009 09:57 | Others / DOW Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Oct. 1, 2009, 12:01 a.m. EDT · Recommend ·
What about the China effect?Commentary: Nation's influence on U.S. earnings may feed the bullBy Zachary Karabell NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- October memories may be inspiring for baseball, but more often than not, they're haunting for Wall Street. TRADING STRATEGIES: OCTOBER Will the bull survive? October is best known for spectacular market crashes. At the very least, the month's volatility can spook many investors. But many of our experts say there's good reason to remain in the market, despite whatever jitters you may have. • Karabell: What about the China effect? • Is October correction inevitable? • Time to take a stand on rally • Eliades: March lows may come back • Hennessey: Not as bad as everyone thinks In fact, many, many companies have shown surprising profitability because of their ability to trim costs and cut labor. Take Starbucks Corp. /quotes/comstock/15*!sbux/quotes/nls/sbux (SBUX 20.01, +0.04, +0.20%) , which has been ruthless -- effectively ruthless, but still -- in eliminating stores in order to bolster crumbling margins. China feeding world economyYet, one trend seems clear: global growth outside of the United States and outside of Europe. More to the point, global growth driven by China has been central to economic activity worldwide and has been a magnet for countries such as Australia and Brazil and for companies that supply Chinese demand. This has been evident in industrial names, ranging from Honeywell International Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!hon/quotes/nls/hon (HON 37.15, +0.75, +2.06%) to Caterpillar Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!cat/quotes/nls/cat (CAT 49.25, -0.20, -0.40%) , for base metal companies that supply the inputs such as Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!fcx/quotes/nls/fcx (FCX 65.30, -0.10, -0.15%) and Vale SA /quotes/comstock/13*!vale/quotes/nls/vale (VALE 22.36, +0.06, +0.27%) , and for high-tech companies such as Intel Corp. /quotes/comstock/15*!intc/quotes/nls/intc (INTC 18.88, -0.02, -0.11%) and Cisco Systems Inc. /quotes/comstock/15*!csco/quotes/nls/csco (CSCO 23.14, +0.05, +0.22%) The same is true for consumer companies operating in China and service Chinese consumers, including such American stalwarts such as Yum Brands Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!yum/quotes/nls/yum (YUM 33.13, -0.63, -1.87%) , the owner of Kentucky Fried Chicken, as well as Avon Products Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!avp/quotes/nls/avp (AVP 32.62, -1.34, -3.95%) , and Nike Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!nke/quotes/nls/nke (NKE 62.64, +0.14, +0.22%) Too many investors, however, continue to view the China growth story as a growth story happening in China. They then look for Chinese companies in which to invest. Given how well some of those have done in the past six months, it's hard to call that a mistake. Just look at the performance of the FXI iShares FTSE/Xinhua China 25 /quotes/comstock/13*!fxi/quotes/nls/fxi (FXI 39.65, -.00, -0.01%) , the largest China-focused exchange traded fund. Only part of equationBut Chinese companies are only part of the equation, and unless the China effect is integrated into mainstream investing, investors are likely to miss a vital driver in the earnings story of the S&P 500 in the year ahead. At the beginning of the decade, foreign business accounted for about 30% of the revenue of the S&P 500; this year, foreign business will make up 50%, give or take. And that understates the importance, since there still are a considerable number of companies that derive almost all their business from the United States -- especially utilities, some financials and banks, and many health-care corporations. On the other end are tech giants ranging from Intel to Microsoft Corp. /quotes/comstock/15*!msft/quotes/nls/msft (MSFT 24.80, -0.08, -0.32%) , industrials companies galore, material and oil companies, many of which generate 60% or 70% of their business overseas. China demand acts as a catalyst and a source of cash flow for companies worldwide, and that factors intimately into the earnings picture of many businesses that are otherwise thought of as American. That includes companies like Avon and Caterpillar, Archer Daniels Midland Co. /quotes/comstock/13*!adm/quotes/nls/adm (ADM 28.86, -0.36, -1.23%) and Dell Inc. /quotes/comstock/15*!dell/quotes/nls/dell (DELL 15.26, +0.12, +0.79%) Others on that long and growing list are mainstays Procter & Gamble /quotes/comstock/13*!pg/quotes/nls/pg (PG 57.92, +1.30, +2.30%) , IBM Corp. /quotes/comstock/13*!ibm/quotes/nls/ibm (IBM 117.94, +0.04, +0.03%) , McDonald's Corp. /quotes/comstock/13*!mcd/quotes/nls/mcd (MCD 56.61, -0.13, -0.23%) and Coca-Cola Co. /quotes/comstock/13*!ko/quotes/nls/ko (KO 53.05, -0.07, -0.13%) U.S. economy can lagThe China effect means the earnings picture for company after company may be much brighter than any analysis of the domestic American economy would suggest. In short, stocks can rally in the face of a chronically weak U.S. economy and not become overly expensive. Corporations can generate very healthy profit, because of a still-underestimated strength in foreign and especially China-driven earnings. China-driven includes companies that directly benefit from Chinese demand. But it also includes companies and countries not normally associated with that nation, such as Brazil, Australia and export businesses in Japan and Korea that are blossoming in part because of China. In essence, global equities can be propelled by the China effect. That means the United States' momentum-driven market may prove to be justified by earnings next year that are considerably in excess of the expected $60 to $70 for the S&P 500 because of the China effect. As the connection between the domestic American economy and U.S.-listed companies continues to weaken -- a trend well established before the financial meltdown and accelerated because of it -- it's quite possible we will see stocks become ever-more detached from traditional tethers such as domestic GDP growth, industrial production and retail sales. The summer rally is a harbinger. Yes, momentum has been fueling these rallies, and yes, there is a rising risk of a significant stall or pullback. But there is also an earnings picture driven by the world outside the U.S. and by China that should prove to be much stronger in the comings months and years. If that is true, companies geared to that -- and there are more every day -- are bargains at current prices. Zachary Karabell is president of River Twice www.rivertwice.com and the author of "Superfusion: How China and America Became One Economy and Why the World's Prosperity Depends On It," out shortly from Simon & Schuster. |
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06-Oct-2009 09:55 | Others / DOW Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Relax, this is just some correction, not mkt crash nor end of the world yet. Is October correction inevitable?Commentary: Not if you study patterns of crash yearsBy Ethan Anderson GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (MarketWatch) -- Most investors seem braced for a big correction, but in my experience the majority is usually wrong. TRADING STRATEGIES: OCTOBER Will the bull survive? October is best known for spectacular market crashes. At the very least, the month's volatility can spook many investors. But many of our experts say there's good reason to remain in the market, despite whatever jitters you may have. • Karabell: What about the China effect? • Is October correction inevitable? • Time to take a stand on rally • Eliades: March lows may come back • Hennessey: Not as bad as everyone thinks October may be a negative month, but it's usually more in the range of 3% to 5%. The Octobers of 2008 and 1987 were the two biggest October sell-offs of the last 30 years, but each was preceded by a negative September. This year, September was positive. During past October sell-offs, the month didn't represent the first wave of the attack. May and June often paved the way. October then stepped up to wipe out the survivors who believed the worst was over. Again, we did not see major selloffs in May or in June. In fact, this past June marked the fourth consecutive month of gains. If we do sink lower in October, the catalyst can easily be the lack of top-line growth in earnings reports. However, if top-line growth is present, it can be another factor driving the market up in October. To play devil's advocate, I must point out that six months after the market bottomed in 1987, the market was 21% higher. After the 2002 bottom, it was 24% higher. Today, we are 58% higher than we were in March. This is a significant jump. To prepare investments for October, consider diversifying with a prudent amount of truly non-correlated asset classes like Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), commodities such as precious metals, managed futures and inverse funds. If you have already pulled significant assets out of the market and are sitting on the sidelines, get back in but not all at once. Dollar-cost-average back into a diversified portfolio in order to avoid buying in on the worst day of the year, and consider tactical asset allocation programs for a small percentage of your portfolio. On the fixed income side, TIPS is a good way to get some income and inflation protection. The Fidelity Floating Rate Bond Fund /quotes/comstock/10r!ffrhx (FFRHX 9.32, -0.01, -0.11%) still looks attractive. Blackrock Global Allocation /quotes/comstock/10r!mdlox (MDLOX 17.30, -0.25, -1.43%) is a wonderful fund with multiple asset classes. For equities, Tom Soviero and some of the rest of the folks over at Fidelity Leveraged Company Stock Fund /quotes/comstock/10r!flvix (FLVIX 25.65, -1.12, -4.18%) are some of the best in the business, as is the team running the Kinetics Paradigm Fund. /quotes/comstock/10r!wwnpx (WWNPX 19.19, -0.57, -2.89%) Ethan Anderson is a senior portfolio manager with Rehmann , one of the largest accounting, financial services and consulting firms in the Midwest. Anderson sits on Rehmann Financial's Investment Research Committee and has been recognized as a "5 star" portfolio manager by Morningstar Inc
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06-Oct-2009 09:46 | Midas / Midas Go to Message | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The gap down is not just peculiar to MIdas, noticed there are also gap down in STI n many other counters on tat day.
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