
That's  why I think he's a sickly moron!...

boyikao3 ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 15:37) Posted:
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niuyear ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 11:50) Posted:
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will ANG MIOS market tank today, then we got to see portugal GDP  1800hrs  liao... PIIGS debt RESURFACE ????????
Macro announcements  this week
Mon 14 Feb:
Tue 15 Feb: China CPI (Jan), 1000hrs Euro-zone GDP, 1800hrs   U.S Empire Manufacturing (Feb), 2130hrs   U.S Advance Retail Sales (Jan), 2130hr
Wed 16 Feb: U.S Housing Starts (Jan), 2130hrs
Thu 17 Feb: S’pore Non-oil Domestic Exports (Jan), Time? ??  S’pore 4Q GDP, Time ? ??  U.S CPI, 2130hrs   U.S Philadelphia Fed Survey, 2300hrs(Feb)
* All above in singapore time and date
Big Pic, Invest in America !!!
NO MORE EQ liao. US can survive on their own even without foreign fund backing... rmb all commodities denote in us currency. Print more $$$, ASIA, MIDDLE EAST AND EUROPE everyday RED RED HOR...
MOST LIKELY INCREASE INTEREST RATE HIKE BY YEAR END ^^
B.Obama latest " white houes  mentor" B. Clinton not G Bush.... Can expect no war if unnecessary !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
niuyear ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 13:38) Posted:
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niuyear ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 13:38) Posted:
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More Stimulus and Print more money
Hulumas ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 13:28) Posted:
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US  credit card usage seems to be picking up -
Positive thinking -  people start to splurge

negative  "                   -  No cash to spend or  jobless,   they go back to using   plastic cards   

krisluke ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 11:44) Posted:
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HK feng shui master loses appeal in Nina Wang case
19 minutes ago
(AP:HONG KONG) A feng shui master pursued " a thoroughly dishonest case" in trying to claim late Hong Kong developer Nina Wang's multibillion-dollar estate with a forged will, a court said Monday in turning away his appeal.
By persisting in the case, fortune teller Tony Chan Chun-chuen " abused the process of the court," High Court Judge Anthony Rogers said, as he read out the appeal panel's ruling to a packed courtroom.
Wang died of cancer in 2007 at age 69. The fortune held through her private Chinachem Group has been estimated at around $100 billion Hong Kong dollars (US$12.8 billion), the ruling said.
The court had ruled in February 2010 in favor of an earlier will that left Wang's estate to a charity she and her late husband founded.
The dispute fascinated Hong Kongers with its juicy revelations of Chan's affair with Wang, who was nicknamed " Little Sweetie" for her girlish outfits and pigtail hairdo.
Chan's appeal argued the judge was " morally offended" by the romance and let his personal views color his ruling that the second will was forged.
Chan said during the trial last year that he and Wang were in love, sharing a passion for cooking, travel, model helicopters and feng shui _ the Chinese art of arranging objects and choosing dates to improve luck.
The trial judge, however, described the 51-year-old former bartender as an opportunist who knew how to ingratiate himself with others.
Wang's brother, Kung Yan-sum, said he was " very, very happy" with the ruling.
" The court has spoken very clearly," he said, as he held up a copy of the ruling at a news conference.
// lunchtime gossips...
China Trade Surplus $6.5 Billion, Less Than Expected
China's trade surplus fell more than expected in January for the second straight month, supporting the government's case that it is doing enough to spur domestic demand without speeding up currency appreciation.
A weaker surplus in the past would have caused concern, but China has been trying to shift its economy towards greater reliance on consumption and less on exports, in part to address critics who say that its success has come at the expense of other countries.
Although two consecutive months of declining trade inflows hardly mark a definitive change, they do provide an important symbolic lift to China ahead of a G20 meeting this week of finance ministers from the world's biggest developed and developing economies.
China exports grew 37.7 percent in January from a year earlier, and imports rose 51 percent, state television said on Monday. That left the country with a trade surplus of $6.5 billion, compared with $13.1 billion in December.
The median forecast of economists polled by Reuters last week was for exports to rise 22.4 percent in January and imports to grow 28 percent, resulting in a trade surplus of $10.7 billion.
Along with serving as a signal of economic rebalancing, the smaller trade surplus also means that less money is rushing into China, easing the upward pressure on prices that has pushed inflation to its fastest in more than two years.
China will report its January inflation data tomorrow. Analysts polled by Reuters had expected prices to rise 5.3 percent in the year to January, a 30-month high, but traders said on Monday that the increase was likely to be 4.9 percent, because adjustments of the consumer price index will have reduced the weight given to fast-rising food prices.
// source from: Can Not Be Correct newsmedia (CNBC).
Hulumas ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 12:56) Posted:
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krisluke ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 12:44) Posted:
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China Jan. Trade Surplus At US$6.5 Bln, Consensus US$11.3 Bln: Reports
Chinese Jan. Exports Rise 37.7% On Year, Consensus 22.5%: Reports
China Jan. Imports Up 51% Annually, Consensus 27%: Report
// any econ students here? //
iPunter ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 09:37) Posted:
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Humulas, read this one... equity market fun, exciting and unpredictable always
  * Dollar firmer, further gains possible this week
  * Yen bounces off 3-week low on Japanese corporate bids
  * Aussie dollar cautious ahead of Chinese data
  By Ian Chua and Hideyuki Sano
  SYDNEY/TOKYO, Feb 14 (Reuters) - The euro teetered at a key technical level against the dollar on Monday, with a break of that support seen likely to deepen its decline as markets turn cautious ahead of a slew of events this week.
  Among them, fund-raising by Italy and Spain in the bond market will be closely watched, especially after Portuguese government bond yields recently jumped to euro-era highs, renewing worries about the funding costs of highly indebted euro zone countries.
  The yen bounced back from a three-week low on buying by Japanese companies, though traders say it looks increasingly under pressure on charts.
  The euro slipped 0.2 percent from late U.S. levels to $1.3526, struggling to recover above its 100-day moving average at $1.3542, although it managed to stay above a three-week low of $1.3497 hit late last week.
  A break of the widely perceived pivotal level of $1.35 could quickly see a test of $1.3483, a level representing a 38.2 percent retracement of its Jan. 10-Feb. 2 rally.
  " But the next level in the $1.33s will hold it. I can't see anything between the U.S. and Europe which would drive it below that at this point without some significant deterioration in conditions in Europe," said Gregg Gibbs, a strategist at RBS.
  Some traders also said the euro is being helped by persistent speculation of buying by Asian central banks.
  " On one hand you have rising credit spreads in the euro zone, but on the other hand many traders see some buying," said Katsunori Kitakura, chief dealer at Chuo Mitsui Trust and Banking.
  With the euro on the back foot, the dollar was not far from its highest level in three weeks against a basket of six major currencies. The dollar index stood at 78.347, compared with the high of 78.697 hit on Friday.
  Versus the yen, the greenback slipped 0.3 percent to 83.16 yen as Japanese exporters took advantage of its rise last week to a three-week high of 83.68 yen.
  Upbeat U.S. data had helped shore up the dollar in the past few sessions as investors covered short positions
  " We're seeing a better trend for the dollar as U.S. economic numbers are improving," said Gibbs at RBS. A raft of U.S. data is due this week including retail sales and consumer prices.
  Also helping dollar/yen is the fact that the U.S. 10-year real yield has reached 2.4 percent, the highest within the G10, while Japan's real 10-year sovereign yield is a more modest 1.2 percent, BNP Paribas analysts said.
  Data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed speculators raised bets against the dollar to the highest level since October for the week to Feb. 8, meaning there could be scope for further dollar gains if markets cut short positions.
  Japanese investors may sell the dollar from coupon payments on U.S. Treasuries on Feb. 15 and Japanese firms' repatriation ahead of the financial year-end on March 31 could cap the dollar, at least in Asian trade, traders say.
  But the dollar looks increasingly firm on charts, having broken clearly above various moving averages, including its 21- and 55-day averages, in the past few sessions, with the next possible target seen at its December resistance around 84.50 yen.
  " If the dollar/yen rate breaks above 84.50 yen, that would change the whole sentiment of the market," a trader at a Japanese bank said.
  Also closely watched this week is a batch of Chinese data including inflation scheduled for release on Tuesday. Analysts polled by Reuters expect inflation to have accelerated to 5.3 percent from 4.6 percent.
  A stronger-than-expected reading could fuel worries that China will have to lift interest rates more aggressively, raising the risk of slower growth.
  This could put the Australian dollar under pressure.
  But as Shanghai shares gained on speculation about softer inflation data, the Aussie gained 0.35 percent to $1.0058. (Additional reporting by Masayuki Kitano in Singapore and Reuters FX analysts Krishna Kumar in Sydney and Rick Lloyd in Singapore Editing by Michael Watson)

Hulumas ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 11:38) Posted:
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krisluke ( Date: 14-Feb-2011 11:32) Posted:
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