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discriminated S-chips!

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senecus
    05-Dec-2009 00:41  
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Good to see that you are not arguing using your imagination......hope that you have learnt something through this sharing.

 
 
 
Peg_li
    05-Dec-2009 00:35  
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good excuse!

 
 
 
senecus
    05-Dec-2009 00:22  
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Supporting evidence of deception and lies that were hiddened in the sheath of glamour and fantasy.

 
 

 
Peg_li
    05-Dec-2009 00:19  
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Ask you one questiong. below topic is relevant to stocks?

really for investors good?



senecus      ( Date: 04-Dec-2009 23:11) Posted:



'I married a China prostitute'

http://www.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne%2BNews/Singapore/Story/A1Story20091203-183811.html


A 64-year-old Singaporean man married a 40-year-old China woman despite knowing her for less than half a year, only to find out one month into their marriage that she is a prostitute.

Mr Chen, who spoke to the local Chinese evening daily Lianhe Wanbao, said that he first met his China wife, Ah Ping, in April this year while dining at Pearl's Centre in Chinatown.

Ah Ping had approached him first and engaged in in conversation. During this time, three men asked her if she provided sex services, but Ah Ping flatly denied so, thus giving Mr Chen a good impression of her.



 

She later told Mr Chen that she was a graduate back in China, and came to Singapore to look for work. They exchanged contact numbers and soon became a couple, meeting often for food and shopping trips.

In September this year, Ah Ping proposed that they get married. She told Mr Chen that they could apply for a flat together once she had gotten her permanent resident status.

Mr Chen, who was divorced two years ago, agreed to the wedding immediately. The couple registered their marriage on October 15.

Soon after they wed, Mr Chen realize that his new wife was almost never at home, and they often fought and argued, "There was once when things got really bad, and she told me that she was a prostitute in Shenzhou (China) and when she came to Singapore, she is still a prostitute."

A former cleaner, Mr Chen told Lianhe Wanbao that he lost his job after sustaining an injury in a car accident on his wedding day.

When he lost his ability to work, his wife's attitude towards him changed completely. "I didn't know that she was a prostitute then. She asked me for money, saying that she plans to set up a stall selling socks."

"Later on, a friend of mine saw her soliciting men, and it was only then that I realized 'selling socks' was just her way of telling me she's going out to sell her body."

Mr Chen said that his China wife also hit him from time to time during their rocky month-long marriage.

Since getting wed, the couple only had sex three times, and the sessions felt like Ah Ping was just obliging her new husband because she had to, Mr Chen said.

She was also drastically different from the caring woman that Mr Chen had thought her to be, and he found himself being kicked and beaten by her when things went wrong.

According to Mr Chen, his China wife was a divorcee as well. She has a 20-year-old son in China.

Because Ah Ping had yet to gain residency status, she had to leave Singapore once her visa is up, and can only return to the country after spending some time in China. When Mr Chen spoke to Lianhe Wanbao, Ah Ping was not in Singapore as she had left the day before.

 
 
senecus
    05-Dec-2009 00:15  
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There are numerous or countless reports of such scandal happening......it is for the forumers' interest that they are aware of the companies they are investing.......especially under this topic...S-chips are discriminated because of these reasons. I have no ill intention against china...just that I felt someone here has misguided the forumers...by clever manipulation of the actual facts.

 
 
 
Peg_li
    05-Dec-2009 00:02  
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I think you or your family might be hurt seriously by something from china, that is why you hate china

so much!that is why you have so deep bias against china!if you still post those things not related stocks

somebody will take care of all these thing!



senecus      ( Date: 04-Dec-2009 23:54) Posted:

China's scandals get worse

Posted by: Bruce Einhorn

More sci-tech scandals in China. I’ve blogged (here and here) about Chen Jin, the Shanghai engineer who has been fired from Shanghai Jiaotong University after being accused of faking what had been acclaimed as China’s first home-developed digital signal processor. In this week’s print edition of BusinessWeek, I have a story that looks at charges and countercharges involving other Chinese academics. The cases are important, but nobody ever died or suffered severe bodily harm from a fake DSP chip. The same can’t be said about the victims of two gruesome cases currently getting headlines in China, cases that dramatically show the severity of the country’s problems with fraud in the world of science and technology.

First, there’s the scandal surrounding a drugmaker called Qiqihar No. 2 Pharmaceutical Co., based in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang. The government has shut down Qiqihar and banned the sale of its drugs following the discovery that the company had used an industrial material called diglycol as a non-active ingredient in one of its medicines. Diglycol can cause acute kidney failure. Eleven people have been hospitalized after taking the diglycol-tainted medication, and five have died. Another case in the news now, just as frightening, involves a breast enlargement treatment called Ao Mei Ding that’s been on the market in China since 2000 and has led many of the 300,000 Chinese women who have taken it to suffer from painful, bloody or disfigured breasts. According to the China Daily, the government has banned the sale of Ao Mei Ding.

Give the Chinese government credit: it is allowing the media to report on all of these scandals. Amidst all the turmoil, Beijing is trying to present the government as acting responsibly, forcing out officials responsible for allowing all of these misdeeds. “China has stepped up the accountability of officials in a drive to build a clean and efficient government,” declares the People’s Daily. But the scandals aren’t just about a few bad apples. The problems are the direct result of some basic problems in the way business gets done in China today. Consider the case of Ao Mei Ding. The company that makes it is owned by the Fu Hua Group of Shenzhen. What does Fu Hua own in addition to a pharma company? A small chain of hospitals – hospitals where women received Ao Mei Ding. In the U.S., it’s unthinkable for a Pfizer or a GlaxoSmithKline to own hospitals. Not in China. The China Daily also reports that Fu Hua back in the 1990s was a distributor of a similar product made by a Ukrainian company; when that partnership ended Fu Hua started making a version of its own. Foreign companies often complain about Chinese partners that end up becoming competitors by selling a similar product at a much lower price. And there’s the problem of what seems to be extremely lax supervision from government regulators: Ao Mei Ding won approval back in 2000, without thorough testing. And Qiqihar produced several other fakes, according to the People’s Daily. How did this happen? Here’s the People’s Daily, describing the presence of the toxic ingredient diglycol: “The company’s quality inspectors failed to discover the problem.” If China wants to be taken seriously as a place for discoveries of new medical treatments and production of new drugs, we’ll need explanations better than that.


 

 
senecus
    04-Dec-2009 23:54  
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China's scandals get worse

Posted by: Bruce Einhorn

More sci-tech scandals in China. I’ve blogged (here and here) about Chen Jin, the Shanghai engineer who has been fired from Shanghai Jiaotong University after being accused of faking what had been acclaimed as China’s first home-developed digital signal processor. In this week’s print edition of BusinessWeek, I have a story that looks at charges and countercharges involving other Chinese academics. The cases are important, but nobody ever died or suffered severe bodily harm from a fake DSP chip. The same can’t be said about the victims of two gruesome cases currently getting headlines in China, cases that dramatically show the severity of the country’s problems with fraud in the world of science and technology.

First, there’s the scandal surrounding a drugmaker called Qiqihar No. 2 Pharmaceutical Co., based in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang. The government has shut down Qiqihar and banned the sale of its drugs following the discovery that the company had used an industrial material called diglycol as a non-active ingredient in one of its medicines. Diglycol can cause acute kidney failure. Eleven people have been hospitalized after taking the diglycol-tainted medication, and five have died. Another case in the news now, just as frightening, involves a breast enlargement treatment called Ao Mei Ding that’s been on the market in China since 2000 and has led many of the 300,000 Chinese women who have taken it to suffer from painful, bloody or disfigured breasts. According to the China Daily, the government has banned the sale of Ao Mei Ding.

Give the Chinese government credit: it is allowing the media to report on all of these scandals. Amidst all the turmoil, Beijing is trying to present the government as acting responsibly, forcing out officials responsible for allowing all of these misdeeds. “China has stepped up the accountability of officials in a drive to build a clean and efficient government,” declares the People’s Daily. But the scandals aren’t just about a few bad apples. The problems are the direct result of some basic problems in the way business gets done in China today. Consider the case of Ao Mei Ding. The company that makes it is owned by the Fu Hua Group of Shenzhen. What does Fu Hua own in addition to a pharma company? A small chain of hospitals – hospitals where women received Ao Mei Ding. In the U.S., it’s unthinkable for a Pfizer or a GlaxoSmithKline to own hospitals. Not in China. The China Daily also reports that Fu Hua back in the 1990s was a distributor of a similar product made by a Ukrainian company; when that partnership ended Fu Hua started making a version of its own. Foreign companies often complain about Chinese partners that end up becoming competitors by selling a similar product at a much lower price. And there’s the problem of what seems to be extremely lax supervision from government regulators: Ao Mei Ding won approval back in 2000, without thorough testing. And Qiqihar produced several other fakes, according to the People’s Daily. How did this happen? Here’s the People’s Daily, describing the presence of the toxic ingredient diglycol: “The company’s quality inspectors failed to discover the problem.” If China wants to be taken seriously as a place for discoveries of new medical treatments and production of new drugs, we’ll need explanations better than that.

 
 
senecus
    04-Dec-2009 23:44  
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Your advise is not wanted...

 
 
 
Peg_li
    04-Dec-2009 23:41  
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Remind you one more thing, this form is for discussing stocks, not for discussing chinse bad thing.

if you want to insist to post those kind of thing,you open your blog to post, not here.

if you still insist to wear color glasses to see everything from china. still same suggestion, ask your

father whu let born you in chinese family, why not born in japanese family, american family, european

family.since you so hate china, still same suggestion like before, just talk to japanese, american,

european.they can give you money,they are all good!



Peg_li      ( Date: 04-Dec-2009 23:32) Posted:

not denied that fact there are some bad women in singapore as you said, but not all chinese woman are like that,99.999999% of them are good ,diligent and kind, not like you said.if you don't believe, ask your mother ,grandmother. if you still wear color glasses to see chinese woman, you maybe also look down your grandmother or mother, because they are also from china.why don't you ask your father or grandfather why let you born in chinse family? why born in japanese famili, amercian family or european family since you hate china so much from your previous point of you. since you can't romove your bias to everything from china, still same suggestion like before, don't use any product made in china, don't talk anyone related to china including your father, grandfather, your mother, your grandmother( I think they are from china), don't read any news related china, nobody force you read them, nobody force you buy S-chips , you can't have bias to chinese everything because you lost money due to S-chips!



senecus      ( Date: 04-Dec-2009 23:11) Posted:



'I married a China prostitute'

http://www.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne%2BNews/Singapore/Story/A1Story20091203-183811.html


A 64-year-old Singaporean man married a 40-year-old China woman despite knowing her for less than half a year, only to find out one month into their marriage that she is a prostitute.

Mr Chen, who spoke to the local Chinese evening daily Lianhe Wanbao, said that he first met his China wife, Ah Ping, in April this year while dining at Pearl's Centre in Chinatown.

Ah Ping had approached him first and engaged in in conversation. During this time, three men asked her if she provided sex services, but Ah Ping flatly denied so, thus giving Mr Chen a good impression of her.



 

She later told Mr Chen that she was a graduate back in China, and came to Singapore to look for work. They exchanged contact numbers and soon became a couple, meeting often for food and shopping trips.

In September this year, Ah Ping proposed that they get married. She told Mr Chen that they could apply for a flat together once she had gotten her permanent resident status.

Mr Chen, who was divorced two years ago, agreed to the wedding immediately. The couple registered their marriage on October 15.

Soon after they wed, Mr Chen realize that his new wife was almost never at home, and they often fought and argued, "There was once when things got really bad, and she told me that she was a prostitute in Shenzhou (China) and when she came to Singapore, she is still a prostitute."

A former cleaner, Mr Chen told Lianhe Wanbao that he lost his job after sustaining an injury in a car accident on his wedding day.

When he lost his ability to work, his wife's attitude towards him changed completely. "I didn't know that she was a prostitute then. She asked me for money, saying that she plans to set up a stall selling socks."

"Later on, a friend of mine saw her soliciting men, and it was only then that I realized 'selling socks' was just her way of telling me she's going out to sell her body."

Mr Chen said that his China wife also hit him from time to time during their rocky month-long marriage.

Since getting wed, the couple only had sex three times, and the sessions felt like Ah Ping was just obliging her new husband because she had to, Mr Chen said.

She was also drastically different from the caring woman that Mr Chen had thought her to be, and he found himself being kicked and beaten by her when things went wrong.

According to Mr Chen, his China wife was a divorcee as well. She has a 20-year-old son in China.

Because Ah Ping had yet to gain residency status, she had to leave Singapore once her visa is up, and can only return to the country after spending some time in China. When Mr Chen spoke to Lianhe Wanbao, Ah Ping was not in Singapore as she had left the day before.


 
 
senecus
    04-Dec-2009 23:41  
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Interesting.......you are a from china chinese......Smiley
 

 
Peg_li
    04-Dec-2009 23:32  
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not denied that fact there are some bad women in singapore as you said, but not all chinese woman are like that,99.999999% of them are good ,diligent and kind, not like you said.if you don't believe, ask your mother ,grandmother. if you still wear color glasses to see chinese woman, you maybe also look down your grandmother or mother, because they are also from china.why don't you ask your father or grandfather why let you born in chinse family? why born in japanese famili, amercian family or european family since you hate china so much from your previous point of you. since you can't romove your bias to everything from china, still same suggestion like before, don't use any product made in china, don't talk anyone related to china including your father, grandfather, your mother, your grandmother( I think they are from china), don't read any news related china, nobody force you read them, nobody force you buy S-chips , you can't have bias to chinese everything because you lost money due to S-chips!



senecus      ( Date: 04-Dec-2009 23:11) Posted:



'I married a China prostitute'

http://www.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne%2BNews/Singapore/Story/A1Story20091203-183811.html


A 64-year-old Singaporean man married a 40-year-old China woman despite knowing her for less than half a year, only to find out one month into their marriage that she is a prostitute.

Mr Chen, who spoke to the local Chinese evening daily Lianhe Wanbao, said that he first met his China wife, Ah Ping, in April this year while dining at Pearl's Centre in Chinatown.

Ah Ping had approached him first and engaged in in conversation. During this time, three men asked her if she provided sex services, but Ah Ping flatly denied so, thus giving Mr Chen a good impression of her.



 

She later told Mr Chen that she was a graduate back in China, and came to Singapore to look for work. They exchanged contact numbers and soon became a couple, meeting often for food and shopping trips.

In September this year, Ah Ping proposed that they get married. She told Mr Chen that they could apply for a flat together once she had gotten her permanent resident status.

Mr Chen, who was divorced two years ago, agreed to the wedding immediately. The couple registered their marriage on October 15.

Soon after they wed, Mr Chen realize that his new wife was almost never at home, and they often fought and argued, "There was once when things got really bad, and she told me that she was a prostitute in Shenzhou (China) and when she came to Singapore, she is still a prostitute."

A former cleaner, Mr Chen told Lianhe Wanbao that he lost his job after sustaining an injury in a car accident on his wedding day.

When he lost his ability to work, his wife's attitude towards him changed completely. "I didn't know that she was a prostitute then. She asked me for money, saying that she plans to set up a stall selling socks."

"Later on, a friend of mine saw her soliciting men, and it was only then that I realized 'selling socks' was just her way of telling me she's going out to sell her body."

Mr Chen said that his China wife also hit him from time to time during their rocky month-long marriage.

Since getting wed, the couple only had sex three times, and the sessions felt like Ah Ping was just obliging her new husband because she had to, Mr Chen said.

She was also drastically different from the caring woman that Mr Chen had thought her to be, and he found himself being kicked and beaten by her when things went wrong.

According to Mr Chen, his China wife was a divorcee as well. She has a 20-year-old son in China.

Because Ah Ping had yet to gain residency status, she had to leave Singapore once her visa is up, and can only return to the country after spending some time in China. When Mr Chen spoke to Lianhe Wanbao, Ah Ping was not in Singapore as she had left the day before.

 
 
senecus
    30-Nov-2009 23:57  
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With the current low volume and reputation...S chips have little or no interest to the long term investors...stay out from them...the operators are fierce manipulators...thats all I know and can comment...if really insist on buying...go small and exit fast.

Smiley

 
 
 
risktaker
    30-Nov-2009 21:53  
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Cosco = Average however it could be bad if economy didnt recover as expected.
China Milk = Average -> IMO there are something not quite right within the group management. Could turn junk stock by next quarter if things didnt change. Look at its company structure lol its kinda dodgy.
China XLX = Average -> Not in my radar and will not buy this share.
China Hong X = Bad -> With its size and making so little. Junk and makes me wonder do they have the cash sometimes. This baby could go red after Chinese new year.
Synear = Average -> Could be better in coming years, but food product i will stay away. One case of food poisoning could kill this baby off.

 




jasonfaxingliu      ( Date: 30-Nov-2009 20:52) Posted:



Share your view please as I am new !

Cosco? good / bad / average?

China Milk? G B A ?

China XLX? G B A ?

China Hong X? G B A ?

Syner? G B A?

some si fu personal view please, thanks

 
 
jasonfaxingliu
    30-Nov-2009 20:52  
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Share your view please as I am new !

Cosco? good / bad / average?

China Milk? G B A ?

China XLX? G B A ?

China Hong X? G B A ?

Syner? G B A?

some si fu personal view please, thanks
 
 
lookcc
    30-Nov-2009 20:49  
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good advice.
 

 
soloman
    30-Nov-2009 20:39  
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FOREGET THESE KINDS OF STOCKS LAH /............
 
 
Hulumas
    30-Nov-2009 18:02  
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Contel?

tchoonw      ( Date: 30-Nov-2009 17:32) Posted:

so which one u think is next?

risktaker      ( Date: 30-Nov-2009 13:17) Posted:

there are certain S-Chip u can never never touch :) Please do your own research before buying ..... sig


 
 
tchoonw
    30-Nov-2009 17:32  
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so which one u think is next?

risktaker      ( Date: 30-Nov-2009 13:17) Posted:

there are certain S-Chip u can never never touch :) Please do your own research before buying ..... sigh

starlene      ( Date: 27-Nov-2009 12:00) Posted:

Here’s a quick review:

* China Sun Bio-Chem – In February, its auditors, PWC, told the board that they had discovered about 592 million yuan (S$125 million) missing from the company’s bank accounts.

* China Printing & Dyeing - The company’s unit Zhejiang Jianglong Textile Printing & Dyeing had about 1.2 bln yuan in unpaid loans from banks and 800 mln from private lenders. The company’s CEO and wife disappeared and were later arrested on suspicion of fraud and illegal fund raising.

* Oriental Century – the chairman of Oriental Century, a 29.9 per cent associate company of Raffles Education, confessed to the board that he had been falsifying financial performance as well as the company’s bank cash balances since its listing.

* FibreChem Tech - a high-profile S-chip with a ‘who’s who’ list of institutional shareholders, including Newsmith and JF Asset Management, reported “accounting irregularities”.

* Celestial NutriFoods - defaulted on convertible bonds worth $234.6 million.

* FerroChina – dropped a bombshell when it announced that it would default on loans and go bankrupt – just weeks after it announced strong quarterly earnings

* Guangzhao Industrial Forest Biotechnology – three independent directors walked out in March, complaining that they were unable to effectively discharge their duties. The stock had been suspended from trading since Sep 2008.

* Beauty China – founder and chairman Wong Hon Wai pledged his 39 per cent stake to secure credit facilities and later saw his stake cut to about 30 per cent in a series of forced sales. He also tried, but failed, to sell the remaining shares.

* Sino-Environment – chairman and chief executive Sun Jiangrong lost his entire 56% stake when his pledged shares were force-sold upon a loan default. His loss of control triggered an early redemption of $149 million in convertible bonds, which the group defaulted on.

Note: Both Beauty China and Sino-Environment were plunged into financial nonsense when banks demanded repayment on loans made to them, after ownership of both firms changed hands. These loans had been made on condition that there was no ownership change.


Which one is the worst and which one is the best?


 
 
erictkw
    30-Nov-2009 17:24  
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Aiya.... Ok, listen u talk. Smiley

risktaker      ( Date: 30-Nov-2009 16:39) Posted:

ya go step into the bear trap lor



erictkw      ( Date: 30-Nov-2009 16:32) Posted:

Milk Milk can touch? Smiley


 
 
risktaker
    30-Nov-2009 16:39  
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ya go step into the bear trap lor



erictkw      ( Date: 30-Nov-2009 16:32) Posted:

Milk Milk can touch? Smiley

 
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