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STI to cross 3000 boosted by long-term investors

 Post Reply 1241-1260 of 69565
 
Peter_Pan
    05-Sep-2013 22:08  
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Tomorrow will be the all-important non-farm payroll. Good news equal good news or Good news equal bad news. How will the drama plays out?Keep watching..
 
 
WanSiTong
    05-Sep-2013 22:04  
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Stocks look to make it a three-day rally

  @CNNMoneyInvest September 5, 2013: 9:48 AM ET
NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

After a two-day rally, U.S. stocks continued to move higher Thursday.



Although the continuing threat of a U.S.-led military strike against Syria has kept investors on edge, the Dow, S& P 500 and the Nasdaq were all up slightly in early trading.
Waiting for the big jobs report. Investors had two bits of labor market data to chew on. The jobs numbers released by payroll processing firm ADP showed hiring continuing at a modest pace.


The Labor Department's initial jobless claims figures also pointed to a steady recovery in the job market, with fewer people filing for unemployment.

But Friday is the big day for the markets. The government releases the August jobs report. Economists surveyed by CNNMoney believe that 185,000 jobs were added last month and that the unemployment rate dipped to 7.3%.

Investors will be watching those numbers closely and will immediately start speculating about whether the jobs report will lead the Federal Reserve to announce plans to begin cutting back on its bond purchase program at its next policy meeting later this month.

Related: Impact of war on stocks and oil

September stock bump: Despite flat trading Tuesday, the major stock indexes added more than 1% during the first two trading days of the month. That's helping to erase some of the losses from a brutal August for stocks. But 2013 has still been a solid year for investors. All three indexes are up between 14% and 21% year-to-date.

Global worries: Syria is sure to dominate discussions at the G-20 conference in Russia, which kicks off Thursday. Investors will be listening closely to assess if and when a military strike may occur. The G-20 summit was meant to focus on the global economy, but the debate over Syria is expected to overshadow the event.

The Governing Council of the European Central Bank and the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England decided to keep their key interest rates unchanged. European markets all moved higher

Earlier in the day, the Bank of Japan struck a more upbeat note on prospects for the world's third-largest economy, saying that the country is on track to beat deflation. Asian markets closed mixed.
 
 
gufeng88
    05-Sep-2013 18:59  
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WanSiTong
    05-Sep-2013 18:06  
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Asian Stocks Rise for Sixth Day on Shippers, Fed Survey

Asian stocks rose for a sixth day, the longest streak of gains in nine months, as shipping lines surged and the Federal Reserve said it saw a moderate recovery in the world?s biggest economy.



Honda Motor Co. (7267) led Japanese carmakers higher, advancing 2.3 percent after Asian auto manufacturers recorded their best-ever month for U.S. sales. Shippers gained from Hong Kong to Tokyo as a measure of cargo prices reached its highest in 21 months. BHP Billiton Ltd., the world?s largest mining company, sank 0.7 percent after metals fell yesterday in London for the sixth time in seven days.

Sept. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Vasu Menon, head of content and research at OCBC Bank Ltd. in Singapore, talks about the outlook for Asia stock markets and his investment strategy. He speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television's " On the Move." (Source: Bloomberg)

Sept. 5 (Bloomberg) -- David Shairp, a London-based global strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management, talks about the economic outlook for emerging markets in Asia, and his investment strategy. He speaks in Hong Kong with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's " First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)



The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.1 percent to 133.30 as of 4:43 p.m. in Hong Kong, with almost two shares rising for each that fell. The measure is on course for its longest winning streak since December.

?The U.S. has one of the best economic momentums and we?re seeing the pickup of activity broadly based for the economy,? David Shairp, a global strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management, told Bloomberg TV in an interview in Hong Kong. ?We are still happy to be overweight equities.?

Americans spending more on cars and housing helped the economy maintain a ?modest to moderate? pace of expansion from early July through late August, even as borrowing costs increased, the Fed said yesterday.

Japan?s Topix rose 0.1 percent. The Bank of Japan maintained its plan to increase the monetary base by as much as 70 trillion yen ($702 billion) a year, while raising its assessment of the nation?s economy and capital spending, the central bank said today at the end of a two-day policy meeting.

Regional Gauges



Hong Kong?s Hang Seng Index (HSI) climbed 1.2 percent. Singapore?s Straits Times Index advanced 0.9 percent. South Korea?s Kospi index added 1 percent, and Taiwan?s Taiex Index gained 1.1 percent. Australia?s S& P/ASX 200 Index slid 0.4 percent. China?s Shanghai Composite was dropped 0.2 percent, while New Zealand?s NZX 50 Index fell 0.1 percent.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index has risen 2.9 percent this year through yesterday, trailing a 16 percent surge on the Standard & Poor?s 500 Index. Benchmark gauges in Hong Kong and Singapore have led declines in developed markets amid concern about China?s slowdown, while the region?s emerging markets suffered outflows as investors dumped riskier assets before the Fed is expected to taper stimulus.

Speculation the Federal Open Market Committee will dial down purchases at its Sept. 17-18 meeting has roiled markets, pushing up U.S. bond yields and contributing to the worst rout in the currencies of developing nations in five years.

Syria Resolution



The prospect of U.S. military strikes against Syria is also adding volatility as investors gauge whether oil flows from the region will be disrupted. A resolution authorizing limited action is set to be considered by the full U.S. Senate as soon as next week after it was approved by the foreign relations panel. S& P 500 futures fell 0.1 percent.

The Asia-Pacific benchmark traded yesterday at 13 times estimated earnings, compared with 15 times for the S& P 500 and 13.8 for the Stoxx Europe 600 Index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

China?s Shanghai Composite Index declined 6.5 percent this year. Slower growth this year was a conscious choice by the government to allow it to adjust the nation?s economic structure, President Xi Jinping said Sept. 3.

Honda gained 2.3 percent to 3,760 yen. Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd. climbed 1.2 percent to 2,577 yen. Toyota Motor Corp. added 0.3 percent to 6,250 yen. Honda?s U.S. deliveries jumped 27 percent last month, topping analysts? estimates, and Fuji Heavy?s Subaru sales surged 45 percent. Toyota outsold Ford Motor Co. for a second month in a row, with a 23 percent increase that beat projections.

Shipping Surge



Shipping stocks advanced as freight rates increased amid signs the global economy is improving. Chinese services and manufacturing gauges this week confirmed the world?s second-biggest economy is strengthening following a two-quarter slowdown, and a euro-area manufacturing index increased more than strategists had forecast.

The Baltic Dry Index of commodity shipping prices rose 4 percent yesterday to 1,215, its highest level since January 2012, according to the Baltic Exchange in London, a publisher of costs on more than 50 trade routes.

Pacific Basin Shipping Ltd., Hong Kong?s biggest dry-bulk carrier, surged 9.5 percent to HK$5.17. China Shipping Development Co. jumped 6.7 percent to HK$4.33, the highest in about six months. Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd., the Tokyo-based operator of container ships, rose 3 percent to 239 yen.

China Construction Bank Corp. (939), the mainland?s second-biggest lender, gained 1.4 percent to HK$5.93 and was the most actively traded stock by volume for a second day, rebounding from yesterday?s loss on Bank of America Corp.?s sale of shares in the company.

Resources Shares



Miners dropped as a gauge of metal prices in London fell yesterday. BHP Billiton lost 0.7 percent to A$35.28 in Sydney. Rio Tinto Group (RIO), the world?s second-biggest mining company, slipped 0.6 percent to A$61.19. Jiangxi Copper Co., China?s largest producer of the metal, fell 0.8 percent to HK$15.62 in Hong Kong.
 
 
Shirleyfong88888
    05-Sep-2013 17:00  
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👍

teeth53      ( Date: 05-Sep-2013 12:49) Posted:



SINGAPORE, Sept 5 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Falling Asian currencies have triggered a sell-off in bonds and equities. Some investors now fear a repeat of a 1997-style crisis. Yet while a new Breakingviews' interactive risk map shows no economy in the Asia-Pacific region is entirely sober, it is India that has become most addicted to cheap money.

Graphic: Who in Asia has most to fear from the Fed? http://link.reuters.com/xen62v

The risk map ranks the region's economies according to eight vulnerabilities by measuring the deterioration since just before the onset of the global financial crisis. The most pressing concern for investors is the region's worsening trade balance.

India and Indonesia, whose current accounts are in deficit, have predictably suffered big drops in their currencies. But the analysis reveals that trade surpluses of Thailand, Hong Kong and Malaysia have narrowed even more since the second half of 2007.
However, this is partly because Thailand and Malaysia have boosted domestic investment, which lifts imports. A shrinking trade surplus won't cause a crisis if countries can still sell debt and equity to foreigners. This is where India's diminishing net wealth makes it uniquely handicapped.
India was a debtor nation even in 2007, and since then, foreigners have acquired another 8 percentage points of GDP in net claims on Indian assets. Understandably, they aren't keen on more. By contrast, all other Asia-Pacific nations have increased net wealth since 2007.

For Singapore and China, where GDP growth has weakened even more than it has in India, a bigger headache is the outsized expansion in private sector credit. Additionally, China's real exchange rate has shot up the most in Asia, making exports less competitive - though that is part of an intended shift toward domestic consumption. Malaysian and Indonesian companies are grappling with a margin squeeze: The two commodity-producing economies have witnessed the biggest rise in their real cost of capital. The Philippines has the opposite problem: Falling inflation-adjusted returns for savers. This should worry Manila, which is basking in the warm glow of 7.5 percent growth. India has repressed savers for years in the hope that an interest-rate subsidy for borrowers would help keep growth rates high. The misadventure saw the banking system run out of resources.

Rising public debt is mainly a problem for Japan and Australia. Rightly or wrongly, though, the sovereign debt issued by developed countries is perceived as safe. Malaysia is not in the same league, and it is pruning petrol and diesel subsidies to control its growing public debt problem.
Unlike in 1997, most Asian countries have relatively straightforward choices. Malaysia can introduce a goods and services tax to control the 14 percentage point increase in its sovereign-debt-to-GDP ratio since 2007. Indonesia can raise interest rates to tame 9 percent inflation. The main problem is India, with its cocktail of slumping growth, high inflation, a creaking banking system, reckless fiscal policies and political uncertainty. Other Asian nations can't take rising U.S. interest  rates lightly, but they are far from a crisis.

< ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
SIGN UP FOR BREAKINGVIEWS EMAIL ALERTS:
www.breakingviews.com/TOPNewsSubscription

 
 
hlfoo2010
    05-Sep-2013 16:06  
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中 天 新 聞

20130905  上 銬 、 綑 綁 !   又 有 台 籍 漁 船 遭 菲 扣 押

 

 
hlfoo2010
    05-Sep-2013 15:25  
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Surgery discovery for high blood pressure British scientists have discovered breakthrough surgery which could revolutionise the treatment of... 15 minutes ago

Surgery discovery for high blood pressure

http://au.news.yahoo.com/video/national/watch/18798348/surgery-discovery-for-high-blood-pressure/

 
 
 
hlfoo2010
    05-Sep-2013 15:19  
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Octavia
    05-Sep-2013 15:01  
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US President Barack Obama cleared the first hurdle  in his race to win domestic congressional backing for strikes to punish Syria's alleged use of chemical weapons.The US Congress could vote as early as next week to authorise action.
 
 
teeth53
    05-Sep-2013 12:49  
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SINGAPORE, Sept 5 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Falling Asian currencies have triggered a sell-off in bonds and equities. Some investors now fear a repeat of a 1997-style crisis. Yet while a new Breakingviews' interactive risk map shows no economy in the Asia-Pacific region is entirely sober, it is India that has become most addicted to cheap money.

Graphic: Who in Asia has most to fear from the Fed? http://link.reuters.com/xen62v

The risk map ranks the region's economies according to eight vulnerabilities by measuring the deterioration since just before the onset of the global financial crisis. The most pressing concern for investors is the region's worsening trade balance.

India and Indonesia, whose current accounts are in deficit, have predictably suffered big drops in their currencies. But the analysis reveals that trade surpluses of Thailand, Hong Kong and Malaysia have narrowed even more since the second half of 2007.
However, this is partly because Thailand and Malaysia have boosted domestic investment, which lifts imports. A shrinking trade surplus won't cause a crisis if countries can still sell debt and equity to foreigners. This is where India's diminishing net wealth makes it uniquely handicapped.
India was a debtor nation even in 2007, and since then, foreigners have acquired another 8 percentage points of GDP in net claims on Indian assets. Understandably, they aren't keen on more. By contrast, all other Asia-Pacific nations have increased net wealth since 2007.

For Singapore and China, where GDP growth has weakened even more than it has in India, a bigger headache is the outsized expansion in private sector credit. Additionally, China's real exchange rate has shot up the most in Asia, making exports less competitive - though that is part of an intended shift toward domestic consumption. Malaysian and Indonesian companies are grappling with a margin squeeze: The two commodity-producing economies have witnessed the biggest rise in their real cost of capital. The Philippines has the opposite problem: Falling inflation-adjusted returns for savers. This should worry Manila, which is basking in the warm glow of 7.5 percent growth. India has repressed savers for years in the hope that an interest-rate subsidy for borrowers would help keep growth rates high. The misadventure saw the banking system run out of resources.

Rising public debt is mainly a problem for Japan and Australia. Rightly or wrongly, though, the sovereign debt issued by developed countries is perceived as safe. Malaysia is not in the same league, and it is pruning petrol and diesel subsidies to control its growing public debt problem.
Unlike in 1997, most Asian countries have relatively straightforward choices. Malaysia can introduce a goods and services tax to control the 14 percentage point increase in its sovereign-debt-to-GDP ratio since 2007. Indonesia can raise interest rates to tame 9 percent inflation. The main problem is India, with its cocktail of slumping growth, high inflation, a creaking banking system, reckless fiscal policies and political uncertainty. Other Asian nations can't take rising U.S. interest  rates lightly, but they are far from a crisis.

< ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
SIGN UP FOR BREAKINGVIEWS EMAIL ALERTS:
www.breakingviews.com/TOPNewsSubscription
 

 
handongni
    05-Sep-2013 12:08  
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September to March period is statistically a good time for trading. 
 
 
ipoh12
    05-Sep-2013 11:05  
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dont be caught, rebound is weak.

http://misimpleinvest.blogspot.sg/

 

aputako      ( Date: 05-Sep-2013 10:50) Posted:

It will be a roller coaster ride during this period of time. Sit tight and be nimble.

 
 
aputako
    05-Sep-2013 10:50  
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It will be a roller coaster ride during this period of time. Sit tight and be nimble.
 
 
WanSiTong
    05-Sep-2013 08:37  
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Straits Times ST: key resistance at 3065.
Trading Central | 2013-09-04 07:07:00


Update on supports and resistances.

Pivot: 3065

Our preference: Short positions below 3065 with targets @ 2990 & 2930 in extension.

Alternative scenario: Above 3065 look for further upside with 3130 & 3210 as targets.

Comment: as long as 3065 is resistance, likely decline to 2990.

Key levels
3210
3130
3065
3015.42  last
2990
2930
2855

 
 
KepoChicken
    05-Sep-2013 07:33  
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" LIKE !!!"

WanSiTong      ( Date: 05-Sep-2013 06:08) Posted:



Hope STI today also green! Huat Arhh !

World Markets

North and South American markets finished higher today with shares in U.S. leading the region. The S& P 500 is up 0.81% while Mexico's IPC is up 0.59% and Brazil's Bovespa is up 0.18%.


North and South American Indexes

  Index Country Change % Change Level Last Update
  Dow Jones Industrial Average United States +96.91 +0.65% 14,930.87 4:32pm ET
  S& P 500 Index United States +13.31 +0.81% 1,653.08 4:32pm ET
  Brazil Bovespa Stock Index Brazil +90.66 +0.18% 51,716.16 4:16pm ET
  Canada S& P/TSX 60 Canada +0.72 +0.10% 734.52 4:20pm ET
  Santiago Index IPSA Chile +4.07 +0.13% 3,073.20 4:17pm ET
  IPC Mexico +232.02 +0.59% 39,773.53 4:06pm ET



 

 
WanSiTong
    05-Sep-2013 06:08  
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Hope STI today also green! Huat Arhh !

World Markets

North and South American markets finished higher today with shares in U.S. leading the region. The S& P 500 is up 0.81% while Mexico's IPC is up 0.59% and Brazil's Bovespa is up 0.18%.


North and South American Indexes

  Index Country Change % Change Level Last Update
  Dow Jones Industrial Average United States +96.91 +0.65% 14,930.87 4:32pm ET
  S& P 500 Index United States +13.31 +0.81% 1,653.08 4:32pm ET
  Brazil Bovespa Stock Index Brazil +90.66 +0.18% 51,716.16 4:16pm ET
  Canada S& P/TSX 60 Canada +0.72 +0.10% 734.52 4:20pm ET
  Santiago Index IPSA Chile +4.07 +0.13% 3,073.20 4:17pm ET
  IPC Mexico +232.02 +0.59% 39,773.53 4:06pm ET


 
 
gufeng88
    04-Sep-2013 18:59  
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evahsu
    04-Sep-2013 16:44  
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how come STI down so much in percentage term? :(
 
 
WanSiTong
    04-Sep-2013 14:23  
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World Markets

Asian markets are higher today as Chinese and Hong Kong shares show gains. The Shanghai Composite is up 0.12% while the Hang Seng is up 0.14%. The Nikkei up0.54%

Asian Indexes

  Index Country Change % Change Level Last Update
  Australia ASX All Ordinaries Australia -23.30 -0.45% 5,165.60 1:59am ET
  Shanghai SE Composite Index China +2.49 +0.12% 2,125.61 2:04am ET
  Hang Seng Hong Kong -32.01 -0.14% 22,362.57 2:04am ET
  Mumbai Sensex India +348.57 +1.91% 18,583.23 2:04am ET
  Nikkei 225 Japan +64.05 +0.46% 14,042.49 1:59am ET
  Taiwan TSEC 50 Index Taiwan -4.93 -0.06% 8,083.44 1:33am ET
 
 
hlfoo2010
    04-Sep-2013 14:16  
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Ariel Castro (C), 53, breaks down while talking about the child that he fathered with Amada Berry as he addresses the court while seated between attorneys Craig Weintraub (L) and Jaye Schlachet in the courtroom in Cleveland, Ohio August 1, 2013. REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk

 

Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro found hanged in jail

    US cell (  not Malaysia cell)
 
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