Latest Forum Topics / Straits Times Index |
![]() |
STI to cross 3000 boosted by long-term investors
|
|||
AK_Francis
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 14:46
![]() Yells: "Happy go lucky, cheers." |
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
AK foresee, gradual decline with some profit taking or cut loss liao. may be its just a bad guess loh. | ||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
CWQuah
Master |
08-Aug-2008 12:39
|
||
x 1
x 0 Alert Admin |
There will likely be a rally till about 3.45pm today. Longists get out b4 that. Shortists... you've been warned. |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
|
|||
baseerahmed
Master |
08-Aug-2008 12:24
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
or maybe everyone is queuing up at the TOTO booth ! hahaha ! |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
elfinchilde
Elite |
08-Aug-2008 12:16
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
zzz......is anyone else in forex, apart from the regular forex junction thread folks? only biosensors still being played. o/w, even BB got tired after yesterday. Some nursing wounds, others counting profit. haha. |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
AK_Francis
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 11:52
![]() Yells: "Happy go lucky, cheers." |
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
hmm, there is riprica of World Cup Soccer in d Olympics, coupled with other interesting track and field events, thats would draw substantial amount of crowd, esp the angmo, during day time, | ||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
|
|||
aleoleo
Master |
08-Aug-2008 11:43
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
HSI is dropping, that's why STI no power to cheong.... | ||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
singaporegal
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 11:17
![]() Yells: "Female TA nut" |
||
x 1
x 0 Alert Admin |
Volumes are pathetic. I think it is because many are taking the long weekend off and do not want to hold positions. Generally, because of the Olympics, I believe we will see even lower trading volumes this month. SGX will surely suffer. |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
des_khor
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 10:45
![]() Yells: "Tell me who is the God or MFT from this forum??" |
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
First time no ND rally !! | ||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
|
|||
Blastoff
Elite |
08-Aug-2008 10:34
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
Seem like everyone has gone to celebrate National Day! | ||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
AK_Francis
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 10:16
![]() Yells: "Happy go lucky, cheers." |
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
AK think all schools,except U(my daughter morning no class?) n poly, are hving half day owing to they have National Day Observance Ceremony in the morning and lost momentum in study in pm. ha ha. AK misses the NDOC, such a wonderful atmosphere, though needs to sing NA aloud and pledge. |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
CWQuah
Master |
08-Aug-2008 10:10
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
http://info.sgx.com/SGXWeb_ST.nsf/NEWDOCNAME/ST_Trading_Calendar?opendocument&sidenav=Intermediaries Check for trading holidays here. |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
Hulumas
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 10:02
![]() Yells: "INVEST but not TRADE please!" |
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
Watching Television perhaps.
|
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
|
|||
Blastoff
Elite |
08-Aug-2008 09:48
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
Low Volume only around 151.5m.... By the way, is it an official half-day for all since schools are having it???? | ||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
ozone2002
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 08:50
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
anyone heeding the impending mortgage defaults gg to happen in UK as well? Britain's housing bust is bringing down the economy, too LEEDS, England: Down the road from the train station here is a gaping hole. At the height of the property boom, a developer started to build what was to become one of the tallest and most stylish apartment blocks, designed by Philippe Starck. But construction stopped abruptly last month when financing dried up because of the credit crunch. Now the abandoned site stands as a stark symbol of the collapse of Britain's building boom and how the credit market turmoil in the United States has seeped across the Atlantic. It also suggests what lies ahead for a few other European economies where property booms gave now debt-ridden consumers a false sense of wealth and security. In recent weeks, Britons have come to an uncomfortable realization: After 17 years of uninterrupted growth, their economy is moving closer to recession and may well already be in one. Home prices are dropping, sapping consumer confidence, and even though repossessions, bankruptcies and unemployment are still at relative lows, they have started to creep up during the last three months. Just Thursday, figures released by HBOS, the largest mortgage lender in Britain, showed the housing market slump was gathering pace. The average price of a property fell 8.8 percent in the 12 months through July, the biggest drop since the company started to track prices in 1983. But the Bank of England is caught in a bind. It is unable to lower interest rates to keep the economy growing because, at the same time, inflation looms. It left lending rates unchanged at its meeting on Thursday. As a result, many economists are predicting that the situation will sharply deteriorate over the next six months, leaving Britain to face a longer, more painful downturn than the United States. "The U.S. has seen problems come through earlier and there was more action to lower interest rates than in the U.K., meaning the U.K. will be somewhat slower to recover," said Ian Harnett, managing director at Absolute Strategy Research in London. Voters are blaming Prime Minister Gordon Brown for the economy's ills, giving his Labour Party its worst popularity rating since the early 1980s. Britain's economy is in worse shape than most in Europe, with the exception of Spain and Ireland, because of its heavy reliance on two industries that currently struggle the most: housing and financial services. At the height of the housing boom British banks were trying to outdo one another in their willingness to lend while rivals on the Continent were generally more constrained by regulation. Leeds is among the cities hardest hit. Situated in the middle of the country, near Manchester and Liverpool, with a population of almost 450,000, it boomed in the late 1990s when technology and service companies set up shop here to profit from cheaper rents and proximity to a major university. Demand for offices and apartments gave way to a construction boom that made Leeds Britain's fastest growing city in 2003 and christened the region the "Golden Triangle." Now, many of Leeds's office buildings stand empty and their once trendy glass facades are cluttered with "For Sale" signs. New developments, like the Lumiere project next to the train station, are being canceled as banks withdraw their financing. Another development, the "Kissing Towers," which would have provided 300 new apartments, was shelved last month. North of the city center the picture is even bleaker. Overflowing garbage containers stand in front of boarded-up houses, and the city's charities are bracing for a busy autumn and winter. Gordon Bell, chief executive of the Consumer Credit Counseling Service in Leeds, said calls to his team were already up 20 percent in the past three months and would likely rise further since personal bankruptcies were expected to increase next quarter. Shahz Khuram, a 33-year-old taxi driver is increasingly nervous about his $160,000 mortgage on his two-bedroom apartment. The fixed-rate period ends next year and he will have to refinance. "It's not only the mortgage rates that have gone up," he said. "Everything is more expensive. I have friends who are selling their cars to pay their mortgage." He added, "I'm really working hard now to save some money but it's hard especially with the higher petrol prices." The average interest payment for a mortgage in Britain rose to 5.8 percent from 5.6 percent in the 12 months through May. That seems low, but home prices dropped 4.4 percent in the same period, according to mortgage lender Nationwide Repossessions are creeping up, and even property prices in London have started to fall, with values of homes in the most expensive neighborhoods, including Knightsbridge, down by 1.6 percent in July. |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
ozone2002
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 08:41
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
S'pore banks issued a warning of credit defaults ...may have -ve impact on STI | ||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
aleoleo
Master |
08-Aug-2008 08:37
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
Japan's Nikkei stock average fell 0.8 percent on Friday, led down by exporters such as Canon Inc. Also Toyota posting a profit drop, think nikkei will not turn green for today.... will STI follow once open ? will HSI up ...? will NDP rally happen today ???? who knows ???? only god knows... man.... ![]() |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
ozone2002
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 08:02
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
Last nite, US markets wiped out their gains over the last few days.. STI no NDP rally?.. | ||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
iPunter
Supreme |
08-Aug-2008 07:34
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
Maybe one day the whole world may come to live by Cantonese derivations...
|
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
Eldarchen
Member |
08-Aug-2008 06:34
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
Regardless of what pp say, it seems like funds are pulling out of Singapore and HK. We can see that though the vol is low compared to early this year, the sell has not - it has been consistantly big blocks of sell down. Noble/STE/Cosco/Capitaland and such Local investors are also not big enough to support the market, therefore even with any upside, seems like put is the way to go. Its sad but true....... |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me | |||
trader88.sg
Veteran |
07-Aug-2008 22:28
|
||
x 0
x 0 Alert Admin |
No matter what people say, I still prefer 88. Huat Huat mah! ![]() |
||
Useful To Me Not Useful To Me |