
S-chips performance still very bad,some even fall despite other shares up today!when is spring for S-chips?
Hi dealer0168,
Copy from your posting in another thread:
China
Getting Set - A Young Bull
China's economy will gain more momentum in 2H09. (as per UOB news.
richtan ( Date: 14-Jul-2009 14:14) Posted:
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dealer0168 Veteran |
Posted: 10-Jul-2009 12:19 Contact dealer0168 * Quote this Post! |
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China Getting Set – A Young Bull |
el7888 ( Date: 12-Jul-2009 07:07) Posted:
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This bloomberg report shows more negative than positive. Though it said china economic growth 'may' accelerate on credit boom, but, this is because their banks lend too easily? Thats why people start to investment and buy property etc etc and the China Banks are told to curb the lending........
So, what are we looking at now? more upside for china stocks as this thread's title say 10 to 20% grow for S chips?? or , what signal are we getting?
Quite confusing.
By Bloomberg News
July 14 (Bloomberg) -- China’s economy may have expanded 7.8 percent in the second quarter as record lending and surging investment drove a rebound from the weakest growth in almost a decade, a survey shows.
The median forecast of 20 economists in a Bloomberg News survey compares with a 6.1 percent expansion in the previous three months from a year earlier. The government will announce gross domestic product in Beijing on July 16.
China’s 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package and the scrapping of lending restrictions for banks powered a revival in the world’s third-largest economy, countering a collapse in exports. Investment in factories, property and roads surged 34 percent in the first six months of 2009 from a year earlier, the fastest pace in five years, the survey showed.
“China will be the first among major economies to confirm an economic recovery,” said Tao Dong, chief Asia economist at Credit Suisse Group AG in Hong Kong. Policy makers will use bill sales, instructions to banks, and loan regulations to “fine- tune” monetary policy, Tao said.
A rebound in GDP would snap a two-year run of progressively slower growth. The Shanghai Composite Index has climbed 80 percent from last year’s low, with PetroChina Co. and Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. contributing the biggest shares of the gain, as money floods the economy.
China’s slowdown deepened after government efforts from 2007 to cool the economy and the property market by raising interest rates and adding loan restrictions were exacerbated by the global financial crisis.
Maintaining Stability
Premier Wen Jiabao wants faster growth to create jobs and maintain social stability ahead of the 60th anniversary of Communist Party rule in October. Ethnic riots in Urumqi in the northwestern Xinjiang province on July 5 left at least 184 people dead, highlighting the potential for disorder.
“The outlook for exports and the job market remains grim, so Beijing won’t step on the brake until they’re assured of social stability,” Tao said.
Wen cautioned this month that a recovery is not yet on solid ground, citing falling profits and fiscal revenue, unemployment and weak global demand.
The central bank has kept interest rates and reserve requirements for lenders unchanged this year after cuts in 2008. It has stalled the yuan’s gains against the dollar for a year to help exporters.
‘Fragile’ Recovery
“China’s economic rebound is still fragile, so any drastic change to macroeconomic policies would be a spring frost that freezes the green shoots,” said Fan Jianping, head of the economic forecast department of the State Information Center, an affiliate of the nation’s top economic planning agency.
Record lending may inflate bubbles in stocks and property and add to bad-debt risks. The central bank pledged yesterday to do more to “guide” loan growth after previously urging more lending to small and medium-sized businesses.
Two government bill sales failed last week on speculation that the credit boom will spark inflation. That risk is not immediate. Consumer prices may have fallen 1.3 percent in June from a year earlier, the fifth monthly decline, with producer prices dropping a record 7.4 percent, the survey showed.
Industrial-output growth may have quickened to 9.5 percent in June, the fastest pace in nine months after eliminating seasonal distortions in January and February, the survey showed. Retail sales rose 15.3 percent from a year earlier, according to the economists’ forecasts.
New loans tripled to 7.37 trillion yuan in the six months through June from a year earlier, overshooting the central bank’s minimum target for the whole year by 47 percent.
--Li Yanping. Editors: Paul Panckhurst, Margo Towie.
To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Li Yanping in Beijing at +86-10-6649-7568 or yli16@bloomberg.net Last Updated: July 13, 2009 12:00 EDT
Thinking about it. Sometime it is safer to buy stocks with value above 0.50. Most China stocks are below that value.
Andrew ( Date: 12-Jul-2009 00:51) Posted:
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Yet another S-stock get into problem China Merchant P....ask for a SUS and mentioned it will last for no longer than 30days!!
Must be quite serious......
Get Ready For The New China Bull Market:
by Tony Sagami on July 4, 2009 at 8:30 AM
http://www.uncommonwisdomdaily.com/?p=929
Hi Bintang,
Thanks for welcoming me back n it is my pleasure to share.
Still testing waters, but if jaws/pests surfaced n I still get taunted or flame, I will still have to ignore it n no choice
but to withdraw into my cocoon again as I have to abide by admin's reminder not to reply to such taunt/flame.
Bintang ( Date: 08-Jul-2009 09:24) Posted:
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I had mentioned tat I had decided to quit posting till those forumers tat brazenly instigate buy/sell calls, posts rumours, half-truths, emotional posts tat incite greed and fear are banned by admin.
My stand still holds but just excuse me for once, to reappear to give support to el7888 for taking the initiative to petition admin to remove such pests for the betterment of the forum and not degrade the forum and to safeguard newbies and gullible forumers from falling prey to such undignified postings.
el7888, include me in the petition.
Bye for now till such pests are removed and totally banned, including their ip address and hope they dun reappear using another nick, a leopard can never remove its stripes.
I will still quit if they reappear should I resume once they are banned.
I will definitely resume my postings and sharing once such pests are removed forever.
Bya again for now.
el7888 ( Date: 08-Jul-2009 04:46) Posted:
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Very basic calculation...
Year 2006 Earning 1000 10% increment
Year 2007 Earning 1100 10% increment
Year 2008 Earning 1210 10% increment
Year 2009 Earning 1331 ??? increment
Earning mulitply by 1 billion people is 1.331 Trillion...difference 33.1%...hmmm...is it probable? Where did the money come from...???
Emm maybe bc headcount too many at China......... (my guess)
Another reason maybe they will earn more oversea. At China they are not well pay. (My opinion)
senecus ( Date: 07-Jul-2009 21:15) Posted:
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By Bloomberg News
July 7 (Bloomberg) -- China’s economic growth may have accelerated to as much as 7.5 percent in the second quarter on surging fixed-asset investment and loans, said Zhang Jianhua, head of the central bank’s research bureau.
“Despite a global economic contraction and some uncertainties over growth in domestic demand, China’s economic recovery will continue,” Zhang said. His comments were in an edition of the central bank’s China Finance magazine, published this month.
China’s economy may expand 8 percent in the third quarter and 9 percent in the final three months of the year, driven by government spending and growth in money supply, he said.
A 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package is reviving the world’s third-biggest economy after exports collapsed and growth slowed to the weakest pace in almost a decade. President Hu Jintao said in Rome yesterday that the economy “has stabilized.”
Gross domestic product rose 6.1 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier.
China’s GDP climbed 13 percent in 2007 and 9 percent last year. Zhang sees annual expansions of about 8 percent from 2010 as the global economy grows at a weaker pace than before the financial crisis, curtailing export demand. Overcapacity in Chinese industries may also limit investment, he said.
Policy makers don’t need to make ‘drastic” adjustments to monetary policy, Zhang said, adding that some “fine-tuning” is necessary to prevent asset bubbles, bad-loan risks and a return to high inflation.
China may face a greater inflationary risk in the first half of next year, Zhang said.
so sure ? I would say ... another no show then u can call it
Bintang ( Date: 06-Jul-2009 21:25) Posted:
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newtothis ( Date: 06-Jul-2009 13:12) Posted:
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