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{}{}{}{} Extended Settlement vs Options {}{}{}{}
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keeping a log as it is a major event
niuyear ( Date: 24-Aug-2010 15:24) Posted:
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Hi Pharoah88
This one over already, you are still promoting? LOL!
pharoah88 ( Date: 24-Aug-2010 15:18) Posted:
INVEST FAIR 2010 FREE
Marina Bay Sands Basement 1
21 ~ 22 AUGUST 2010
MRT Promenade Station
SBS 133 [AMK Interchange]
SBS 97
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sOme cOnvert all Life insurance policies to Term Life policies just fOr pure protection at Least Cost.
niuyear ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 12:51) Posted:
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Is is time to RE-look at all my insurance policies? How to get the most out of it? Imagine, each of us paying "YEARS" for few policies and what have we gained from there?
1) LIfe insruance policy - i can only claim when upon death
2) endowment fund - is going to due soon
3) medical - Dunno what i am paying, and , some got riders tagged to policies, some just ,medical/hospitalisation., only to realise i can
only claim from ONE insurance company.
pharoah88 ( Date: 24-Aug-2010 12:00) Posted:
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Bank Depositors and Insurance Policy Holders
are at least pOOrer by 3.1% |
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Tokyo shares slide to 15-month low, yen soars
TOKYO
The Nikkei fell 121.55 points to close at 8,995.14 after hitting a low of 8,983.52 in early trade.
The index is now more than 20-per-cent off this year’s highest level of 11,339.30, reached on April 5, meaning some analysts consider it to have entered bear market territory.
“There is a sense of resignation and we’re all just watching how far stocks fall,” said Mr Kenichi Hirano, operating officer at Tachibana Securities
The greenback fell to a fresh 15-year low against the yen yesterday, sliding to ¥84.60, down from ¥85.17 late on Monday in New York.
Shares of exporters were again hit by the strength of the yen, with Sony dropping 3.72 per cent to ¥2,406 and Canon, which receives most of its revenue from outside Japan, down 0.84 per cent at ¥3,520.
“Investors are dumping these stocks and the impact on the index is large” due to the dominant positions of such companies, a Japanese brokerage manager said.
Mizuho Securities strategist Takafumi Horiuchi said: “The electronics sector, in particular, is hit hardest by the strong yen.”
He added that “investors are speculating there will be a downward revision of earnings forecasts” by Japanese exporters in the future.
For every one-yen rise in the currency’s value against the US dollar, companies can lose tens of billions of yen earned overseas when repatriated, threatening a sector that Japan depends on to offset its weak domestic picture.’
The falls followed disappointment on Monday after Prime Minister Naoto Kan and Bank of Japan governor Masaaki Shirakawa spoke by phone to discuss the impact of the strong yen without addressing possible intervention.
Markets had anticipated stronger government pressure on the central bank to do more to lift the economy, such as further monetary easing, but no proposals were announced following the conversation.
Against the yen, the European single currency briefly hit a more than eight-year low of ¥107.21, before recovering to ¥107.29 in early afternoon trade, still down from ¥107.78 in New York.
There is a sense of resignation and we’re all just watching how far stocks fall.
Mr Kenichi Hirano, operating officer at Tachibana Securities Agencies — Japanese shares yesterday fell below the 9,000- point level for the first time since May last year on worries about the strong yen and the United States economy, with the headline Nikkei index ending down 1.3 per cent.. “We’re entering a bear market now.”
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Wednesday: 25 AUGUST 2010 CLOSING
TOP VOLUME No. 12
25,455,000
S$0.345 +S$0.000
Day Hi S$0.350
Day Lo S$0.340
prIce actIOn
16:52:39 S$0.360 1,000,000 B f S
15:51:04 S$0.345 1,500,000 B f S
09:42:17 S$0.345 1,337,000 B f S
09:04:22 S$0.345 2,000,000 B f S
SUPPORT DEPTH S$0.345 21,963,000 [15,675,000 B f S]
TOTAL 25,455,000 [16,394,000 B f S]
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Wednesday: 25 AUGUST 2010 CLOSING
72,924,000
S$1.580 +S$0.040
Day Hi S$1.590
Day Lo S$1.540
prIce actIOn
16:37:24 S$1.58 5,656,000 BOUGHT frOm SELLER
SUPPORT DEPTH
S$1.56 27,875,000 [14,220,000 B f S]
S$1.58 14,981,000 [8,990,000 B f S]
TOTAL 72,924,000 [36,630,000 B f S]
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Bank Interest Rate is also an underlying factor
influencing the RWS CASINO business
and Genting Singapore share price.
JJSeng ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 17:27) Posted:
wah lau!!! why this thread is discussing about interest rate leh ??? |
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Wednesday: 25 AUGUST 2010 CLOSING
TOP VOLUME nO. 13
25,102,000
USD0.300 +USD0.000
Day Hi USD0.305
Day Lo USD0.295
prIce actIOn
16:28:36 USD0.300 1,500,000 B f S
14:14:08 USD0.300 1,010,000 B f S
14:11:07 USD0.300 2,000,000 B f S
SUPPORT DEPTH
USD0.300 21,865,000 accUmUlated
[9,484,000 B f S]
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there is a TWIST here
cannOt cOmpare
BOND COUPON [lOng Term Rate] vs shOrt Term LOAN RATES.
That is WHY ? ? ? ?
I ask about CASH LIQUIDITY in SINGAPORE ? ? ? ?
wIth near ZERO INTEREST RATE, ALL NORMAL BANK DEPOSITORS
would REVERT tO nOn-Fixed-Deposit especially at this time.
HEARD frOm One Auntie about her relative:
sOme RETAIL BORROWERS paying HOUSING LOAN RATE at 1+% only nOw
# # # #
there are a lOt Of GAPS and nOn transparent ? mIssIng InfOrmatIOn ?
iN the fInancIal markets ? dependIng On whO yOu meet and lIsten tO ?
BullishTempo ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 17:16) Posted:
The bond interest rate Temasek and Capitaland are paying to bond buyers is cheaper than interest rate they have to pay if they borrow from banks.
pharoah88 ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 17:12) Posted:
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have TH and C recovered ALL their lOses
impared during the wOrld fInancIal tsUnamI ? ? ? ?
are they jUst patchIng the hOles ? ? ? ?
are SINGAPORE BANKS shOrt Of CASH ? ? ? ?
WHY nOt pass that bUsIness tO SINGAPORE BANKS ? ? ? ?
WHY nOt bOrrOw frOm CPF and pay sUch hIgh Interest Rates tO CPF depOsIts ? ? ? ?
In its latest report, MayBank earned RM38O Million frOm SINGAPORE OPERATIONS.
SINGAPORE BANKS lOst this Market Share tO MAYBANK.
What about Market Shares lOst tO CIMB and RHB ? ? ? ? |
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Why SINGAPORE BANKS pay SINGAPORE BOND HOLDERS 1.15% ?
bUt pay fOreign BOND HOLDERS 4.50% tO 7.50% ?
pharoah88 ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 16:55) Posted:
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SMALLER SALES
When Singapore’s AAA rated Housing & Development Board sold S$500 million of three-year bonds in July it paid a 1.15% coupon, according to Bloomberg data. No Singapore borrower has paid more than 7.5% this year, the data show.
Olam International, the Singapore-based commodities trader, paid 7.5% this month when it sold US$250 million of 10-year bonds, its longest-maturity notes. The bonds traded at 101.13 cents on the dollar to yield 7.338% today, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc prices. Olam declined to comment in an e-mailed response to questions.
While companies can typically borrow larger sums in the U.S. dollar bond market, according to HSBC’s Henderson, they pay slightly less to sell bonds in Singapore. Companies completed 35 U.S. dollar-denominated sales that raised US$500 million or more in Asia excluding Japan this year compared to nine corporate sales of at least $500 million.
* * * * * * * *
Temasek Holdings and CapitaLand led borrowers that raised US$14.1 billion ($19.2 billion) this year, topping the record US$13.2 billion of notes sold in 2001, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The benchmark three-month interbank lending rate was last at 0.55708%, near the lowest since 1987, when data on the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s website starts.
BullishTempo ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 14:04) Posted:
| Singapore bond sales beat record as economy fires |
Tags: Agricultural Bank of China | Capitaland | Dbs Group Holdings | Standard Chartered Plc | Temasek Holdings | VTB Group | WRITTEN BY BLOOMBERG | | WEDNESDAY, 25 AUGUST 2010 13:53 | Singapore bond sales are accelerating as companies on an island vying for the title of world’s fastest-growing economy exploit the lowest funding costs in at least two decades to finance expansion.
Temasek Holdings and CapitaLand led borrowers that raised US$14.1 billion ($19.2 billion) this year, topping the record US$13.2 billion of notes sold in 2001, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The benchmark three-month interbank lending rate was last at 0.55708%, near the lowest since 1987, when data on the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s website starts. “Singapore is going through an outstanding period of economic growth with most sectors performing well,” Aaron Russell-Davison, head of Asia debt syndicate at Standard Chartered Plc, said in a phone interview from the city-state. “In this context it makes sense that companies are looking to borrow longer-dated money at historically attractive levels.” The economy of Singapore, Asia’s second-smallest country after the Maldives, may be the world’s fastest-growing in 2010 after ballooning demand for goods and services prompted the government to raise forecasts three times since January. Gross domestic product increased 17.9% in the first half, ahead of the trade and industry ministry’s full-year prediction of between 13% and 15% and surpassing India’s expectations of 8.5% growth and China’s of 9.5%. LEISURE VISITORS Companies added about 63,000 jobs in the six months to June 30, according to the Ministry of Manpower, a year after Singapore exited its worst recession since independence in 1965. Monthly tourist arrivals exceeded 1 million for the first time in July after Las Vegas Sands Corp. and Genting Singapore Plc opened the city’s first casino resorts. Property developers, shopping mall operators and hoteliers accounted for about 25% of Singapore’s 112 bond issues this year, Bloomberg data show. CapitaLand, Southeast Asia’s biggest developer, and its units sold $1 billion of bonds this month in maturities ranging from four to 10 years. The company paid a 4.3% coupon when it sold S$350 million of 10-year bonds at par on Aug. 17 compared with 4.4% when it sold $100 million of eight-year notes in 2003, the data show. “Our approach has been to grow the orchard not squeeze the orange,” said Olivier Lim, CapitaLand’s chief financial officer. We “nurture the group’s access to markets and raise money when markets are conducive, not when we need the funds.” LOWER COUPONS Temasek is Singapore’s most prolific borrower this year after it issued notes in British pounds and Singapore dollars with maturities of between 10 and 40 years, according to Bloomberg data. The state-owned investment company is paying a 4.2% coupon for its 40-year notes, 10 basis points less than the 4.3% it paid for 10-year money in 2009. Temasek sells bonds “as public markers of our credit quality,” spokesman Jeffrey Fang said in an e-mailed response to questions. As well as improving capital efficiency and funding flexibility, they “foster the discipline of engaging with both international and Singapore bondholders,” he said. The investment company’s 4.2% notes due 2050 are trading at 104.83 cents on the dollar to yield 3.958%, according to Standard Chartered prices. Sold at par, they traded as high as 109.9 cents on Aug. 18. “With reasonable growth coming back into Asia, locking in a low coupon for the next 10 years is a pretty smart thing to do,” said Sean Henderson, Hong Kong-based head of Asia debt syndication for HSBC Holdings Plc, the No. 3 arranger of Singapore bond sales this year. “Singapore borrowers tend to be rare and very high quality names, so investors have been comfortable about extending durations in order to get a bit of extra yield.” SMALLER SALES When Singapore’s AAA rated Housing & Development Board sold S$500 million of three-year bonds in July it paid a 1.15% coupon, according to Bloomberg data. No Singapore borrower has paid more than 7.5% this year, the data show. Olam International, the Singapore-based commodities trader, paid 7.5% this month when it sold US$250 million of 10-year bonds, its longest-maturity notes. The bonds traded at 101.13 cents on the dollar to yield 7.338% today, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc prices. Olam declined to comment in an e-mailed response to questions. While companies can typically borrow larger sums in the U.S. dollar bond market, according to HSBC’s Henderson, they pay slightly less to sell bonds in Singapore. Companies completed 35 U.S. dollar-denominated sales that raised US$500 million or more in Asia excluding Japan this year compared to nine corporate sales of at least $500 million.
INTERBANK COSTS The Singapore interbank offered rate that banks charge each other to borrow U.S. dollars was last at 0.31328%, its lowest in at least 23 years. The rate rose to as much as 5.7775% during the global financial crisis as banks hoarded capital after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Borrowers sold US$2.5 billion of bonds in the city in 1999 and issuance ranged between about US$5 billion and US$7 billion a year for much of the last decade,Bloomberg data show. “The regulators in Singapore have been working hard to make this market appealing to both investors and issuers,” said Clifford Lee, head of fixed-income for DBS Group Holdings, the top-ranked underwriter of Singapore dollar bond sales. “There’s no withholding tax and the approval process for foreigners to sell bonds is simple and quick if it’s just an offering to accredited investors,” he said. VTB Group, Russia’s second-largest bank, raised S$400 million from two-year notes this month. It was the only Russian issuer to target Asian investors apart from Moscow-based gas company OAO Gazprom, which sold yen-denominated bonds in 2007. Agricultural Bank of China, China’s biggest lender by customers, sold US$50 million of floating-rate notes through its Singapore unit in April. The lender has offices in the city- state as well as in Hong Kong, London, Tokyo, Seoul, Frankfurt, Sydney and New York, according to its website. “We are seeing an increased maturity and sophistication in the Singapore capital markets,” Standard Chartered’s Russell- Davison said. “2010 is set to be a big year, reflecting the confidence of both issuers and investors.” |
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have TH and C recovered ALL their lOses
impared during the wOrld fInancIal tsUnamI ? ? ? ?
are they jUst patchIng the hOles ? ? ? ?
are SINGAPORE BANKS shOrt Of CASH ? ? ? ?
WHY nOt pass that bUsIness tO SINGAPORE BANKS ? ? ? ?
WHY nOt bOrrOw frOm CPF and pay sUch hIgh Interest Rates tO CPF depOsIts ? ? ? ?
In its latest report, MayBank earned RM38O Million frOm SINGAPORE OPERATIONS.
SINGAPORE BANKS lOst this Market Share tO MAYBANK.
What about Market Shares lOst tO CIMB and RHB ? ? ? ?
pharoah88 ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 17:02) Posted:
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Temasek Holdings and CapitaLand led borrowers that raised US$14.1 billion ($19.2 billion) this year, topping the record US$13.2 billion of notes sold in 2001, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The benchmark three-month interbank lending rate was last at 0.55708%, near the lowest since 1987, when data on the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s website starts.
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Temasek Holdings and CapitaLand led borrowers that raised US$14.1 billion ($19.2 billion) this year, topping the record US$13.2 billion of notes sold in 2001, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The benchmark three-month interbank lending rate was last at 0.55708%, near the lowest since 1987, when data on the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s website starts.
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SMALLER SALES
When Singapore’s AAA rated Housing & Development Board sold S$500 million of three-year bonds in July it paid a 1.15% coupon, according to Bloomberg data. No Singapore borrower has paid more than 7.5% this year, the data show.
Olam International, the Singapore-based commodities trader, paid 7.5% this month when it sold US$250 million of 10-year bonds, its longest-maturity notes. The bonds traded at 101.13 cents on the dollar to yield 7.338% today, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc prices. Olam declined to comment in an e-mailed response to questions.
While companies can typically borrow larger sums in the U.S. dollar bond market, according to HSBC’s Henderson, they pay slightly less to sell bonds in Singapore. Companies completed 35 U.S. dollar-denominated sales that raised US$500 million or more in Asia excluding Japan this year compared to nine corporate sales of at least $500 million.
* * * * * * * *
Temasek Holdings and CapitaLand led borrowers that raised US$14.1 billion ($19.2 billion) this year, topping the record US$13.2 billion of notes sold in 2001, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The benchmark three-month interbank lending rate was last at 0.55708%, near the lowest since 1987, when data on the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s website starts.
BullishTempo ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 14:04) Posted:
| Singapore bond sales beat record as economy fires |
Tags: Agricultural Bank of China | Capitaland | Dbs Group Holdings | Standard Chartered Plc | Temasek Holdings | VTB Group | WRITTEN BY BLOOMBERG | | WEDNESDAY, 25 AUGUST 2010 13:53 | Singapore bond sales are accelerating as companies on an island vying for the title of world’s fastest-growing economy exploit the lowest funding costs in at least two decades to finance expansion.
Temasek Holdings and CapitaLand led borrowers that raised US$14.1 billion ($19.2 billion) this year, topping the record US$13.2 billion of notes sold in 2001, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The benchmark three-month interbank lending rate was last at 0.55708%, near the lowest since 1987, when data on the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s website starts. “Singapore is going through an outstanding period of economic growth with most sectors performing well,” Aaron Russell-Davison, head of Asia debt syndicate at Standard Chartered Plc, said in a phone interview from the city-state. “In this context it makes sense that companies are looking to borrow longer-dated money at historically attractive levels.” The economy of Singapore, Asia’s second-smallest country after the Maldives, may be the world’s fastest-growing in 2010 after ballooning demand for goods and services prompted the government to raise forecasts three times since January. Gross domestic product increased 17.9% in the first half, ahead of the trade and industry ministry’s full-year prediction of between 13% and 15% and surpassing India’s expectations of 8.5% growth and China’s of 9.5%. LEISURE VISITORS Companies added about 63,000 jobs in the six months to June 30, according to the Ministry of Manpower, a year after Singapore exited its worst recession since independence in 1965. Monthly tourist arrivals exceeded 1 million for the first time in July after Las Vegas Sands Corp. and Genting Singapore Plc opened the city’s first casino resorts. Property developers, shopping mall operators and hoteliers accounted for about 25% of Singapore’s 112 bond issues this year, Bloomberg data show. CapitaLand, Southeast Asia’s biggest developer, and its units sold $1 billion of bonds this month in maturities ranging from four to 10 years. The company paid a 4.3% coupon when it sold S$350 million of 10-year bonds at par on Aug. 17 compared with 4.4% when it sold $100 million of eight-year notes in 2003, the data show. “Our approach has been to grow the orchard not squeeze the orange,” said Olivier Lim, CapitaLand’s chief financial officer. We “nurture the group’s access to markets and raise money when markets are conducive, not when we need the funds.” LOWER COUPONS Temasek is Singapore’s most prolific borrower this year after it issued notes in British pounds and Singapore dollars with maturities of between 10 and 40 years, according to Bloomberg data. The state-owned investment company is paying a 4.2% coupon for its 40-year notes, 10 basis points less than the 4.3% it paid for 10-year money in 2009. Temasek sells bonds “as public markers of our credit quality,” spokesman Jeffrey Fang said in an e-mailed response to questions. As well as improving capital efficiency and funding flexibility, they “foster the discipline of engaging with both international and Singapore bondholders,” he said. The investment company’s 4.2% notes due 2050 are trading at 104.83 cents on the dollar to yield 3.958%, according to Standard Chartered prices. Sold at par, they traded as high as 109.9 cents on Aug. 18. “With reasonable growth coming back into Asia, locking in a low coupon for the next 10 years is a pretty smart thing to do,” said Sean Henderson, Hong Kong-based head of Asia debt syndication for HSBC Holdings Plc, the No. 3 arranger of Singapore bond sales this year. “Singapore borrowers tend to be rare and very high quality names, so investors have been comfortable about extending durations in order to get a bit of extra yield.” SMALLER SALES When Singapore’s AAA rated Housing & Development Board sold S$500 million of three-year bonds in July it paid a 1.15% coupon, according to Bloomberg data. No Singapore borrower has paid more than 7.5% this year, the data show. Olam International, the Singapore-based commodities trader, paid 7.5% this month when it sold US$250 million of 10-year bonds, its longest-maturity notes. The bonds traded at 101.13 cents on the dollar to yield 7.338% today, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc prices. Olam declined to comment in an e-mailed response to questions. While companies can typically borrow larger sums in the U.S. dollar bond market, according to HSBC’s Henderson, they pay slightly less to sell bonds in Singapore. Companies completed 35 U.S. dollar-denominated sales that raised US$500 million or more in Asia excluding Japan this year compared to nine corporate sales of at least $500 million.
INTERBANK COSTS The Singapore interbank offered rate that banks charge each other to borrow U.S. dollars was last at 0.31328%, its lowest in at least 23 years. The rate rose to as much as 5.7775% during the global financial crisis as banks hoarded capital after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Borrowers sold US$2.5 billion of bonds in the city in 1999 and issuance ranged between about US$5 billion and US$7 billion a year for much of the last decade,Bloomberg data show. “The regulators in Singapore have been working hard to make this market appealing to both investors and issuers,” said Clifford Lee, head of fixed-income for DBS Group Holdings, the top-ranked underwriter of Singapore dollar bond sales. “There’s no withholding tax and the approval process for foreigners to sell bonds is simple and quick if it’s just an offering to accredited investors,” he said. VTB Group, Russia’s second-largest bank, raised S$400 million from two-year notes this month. It was the only Russian issuer to target Asian investors apart from Moscow-based gas company OAO Gazprom, which sold yen-denominated bonds in 2007. Agricultural Bank of China, China’s biggest lender by customers, sold US$50 million of floating-rate notes through its Singapore unit in April. The lender has offices in the city- state as well as in Hong Kong, London, Tokyo, Seoul, Frankfurt, Sydney and New York, according to its website. “We are seeing an increased maturity and sophistication in the Singapore capital markets,” Standard Chartered’s Russell- Davison said. “2010 is set to be a big year, reflecting the confidence of both issuers and investors.” |
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Wednesday: 25 AUGUST 2010
prIce actIOn
16:28:36 USD0.300 1,500,000 B f S
14:14:08 USD0.300 1,010,000 B f S
14:11:07 USD0.300 2,000,000 B f S
SUPPORT DEPTH
USD0.300 21,315,000 accUmUlated
[9,484,000 B f S]
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BONSAI vs BODHI TREE
MERITOCRACY vs PHILANTHROPY
MERCENARY vs NOBILITY
nOte 1: MERITOCRACY leads tO MERCENARY
nOte 2: PHILANTHROPY leads tO NOBILITY
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can SINGAPOREAN BEAT the CHINESE ?
can BONSAI BEAT the BODHI TREE ?
can MERITOCRACY BEAT PHILANTHROPY ?
can MERCENARY BEAT NOBILITY ?
nOte 1: MERITOCRACY leads tO MERCENARY
nOte 2: PHILANTHROPY leads tO NOBILITY
artng25 ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 16:14) Posted:
| They will still find some way to squeeze you
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every SINGAPOREAN owns
STRADDLER SOLAR CAR
nO mOre bUses and MRT
nO mOre FARES cOllectIOn eXcUses
FREE and EASY
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RidIng On thIs InnOvatION
sIngapOre can achIeve wOrld's 1st
STRADDLER SOLAR CAR
whIch dOes nOt Use rOad SPACE
[because it Uses Only aIr SPACE]
wIth fUll eXemptIOn On
- rOad tax
- COE
- ERP
- impOrt dUty
- parkIng fee
pharoah88 ( Date: 24-Aug-2010 14:00) Posted:
STRADDLER AVANT-GARDE r01
- 30% lOwer rUnning cOst
- 30% lOwer FARES
- SOLAR powered
- GREEN graded [EXHAUST FREE]
- fUll flexIbIlIty
- dOes nOt Occupy any rOad space
- absOlutely nO TRAFFIC JAM fOr STRADDLER
- nO lOng TRANSFER WALKING DISTANCE
******** RELEASE all the ROADS taken UP by EXISTING MRT and BUSES ********
avant·-garde (ə vänt′gärd′, ä′-, a′-; Fr ȧ vän gȧrd′)
noun
the leaders in new or unconventional movements, esp. in the arts; vanguard
Origin: Fr, lit., advance guard
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CHINA LEADERS ?
CLEMENTLY ?
INTEGRITY ?
TRUTHFULLY ?
INNOCENTLY ?
HONESTLY ?
DECENTLY ?
ALLERGIC TO WEALTH ?
nOt mOney face ?
UNgreedy ?
UNselfish ?
selflessly ?
HOLY ?
nObelly ?
PURELY ?
CLEANLY ?
WHOLE-HEARTEDLY ?
CARINGLY ?
PROFESSIONALLY ?
PHILANTHROPICALLY ?
pharoah88 ( Date: 25-Aug-2010 15:47) Posted:
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CHINA AUTHORITY
jUst eXtIngUIshes
aLL Its OppOrtUnItIes
tO create lUcratIc IncOmes
wIth lame eXcuses
pharoah88 ( Date: 24-Aug-2010 14:27) Posted:
UNBELIEVABLE
CHINA AUTHORITY
OPENLY RELEASE
INGENEOUS STRADDLER
NOBEL INNOVATION |
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CHINA AUTHORITY
jUst eXtIngUIshes
aLL Its OppOrtUnItIes
tO create lUcratIc IncOmes
wIth lame eXcuses
pharoah88 ( Date: 24-Aug-2010 14:27) Posted:
UNBELIEVABLE
CHINA AUTHORITY
OPENLY RELEASE
INGENEOUS STRADDLER
NOBEL INNOVATION |
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