


handon ( Date: 18-Aug-2009 23:14) Posted:
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Dow must close above 9200 ... lets c ....
tomorrow another rally day at least ...
my boss said.... not one moment bear.... not one moment cow...
it is long... covered long .... then long Big Time lah....
my boss said only Kua Kua Jiao PEGLI will anyhow comments....
hehe....



no one is any wiser in prediction.. on hindsight, many people will claim credit months later... it is always relative to time ....
one moment bear and one moment bull ,
one week bear and one week bull,
one month bear and one month bull
so as long as you are invested, learn to ride the wave,..
i stay near there, i like the hill, but not the mosquito..
just llike saying i like the bull , but hate the bear...hehehehehe
hope what i heard form expert till now abt coming cirses are all bullshit....even HS Dent ..hope he is wrong this time..
and wrong big big big time....hahahahahaha
louis_leecs ( Date: 18-Aug-2009 22:45) Posted:
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my boss said.... wait no time... boring day....

my boss said Zinc to hit 0.9 end Aug.... now 0.8.... 0.1 to go n 12 days left....
inclusive of non trading days.... hehe....


US manufacturing index posts first growth in a year
Posted: 17 August 2009 2254 hrs
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WASHINGTON: A key US manufacturing survey showed improvement for the first time in a year, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said on Monday in a fresh sign the economy may be emerging from recession.
The Empire State Manufacturing Survey's general business conditions index increased 13 points, to 12.1, its best reading since November 2007, the month before the world's largest economy officially entered recession.
"For the first time in considerably more than a year, the Empire State Manufacturing Survey indicates that conditions for New York manufacturers have improved," the New York Fed said in a statement.
The August reading topped the 3.0 points that analysts had expected and followed a negative 0.55 reading in July. Zero marks the division between growth and contraction.
The last time the index registered growth was in August 2008, at a meagre 2.2 points.
The Empire State survey lent further ammunition to hopes of recovery in the embattled manufacturing sector that could bolster growth in gross domestic product (GDP), a broad measure of economic activity.
"Manufacturing may provide a larger-than-expected boost to third-quarter GDP," said Ryan Sweet of Moody's Economy.com.
"The index is well above its second-quarter average of negative 9.5 and suggests that the manufacturing expansion that began last month is accelerating," Sweet said.
In a surprisingly robust report last week, the Federal Reserve said that manufacturing led a 0.5 percent increase in US industrial production in July, the first rise in industrial output in nine months.
"This month the Empire State index continues to point the way higher with a large rise and with an outsized improvement in the employment sub-index," said Robert Brusca of FAO Economics.
In the Empire State survey, respondents were decidedly more upbeat about conditions in the coming six months.
The future general business conditions index leapt 14 points to 48.2, and the capital expenditures index advanced 16 points to 18.1, its highest level in over a year.
Current employment conditions rose for the sixth consecutive month but remained negative. The index for the number of employees rose 13 points to negative 7.5, the highest level in 10 months.
Analysts, however noted, that manufacturers lacked pricing power amid sluggish demand in the recession-mired economy.
Federal Reserve policymakers, concluding a two-day monetary policy meeting last week, maintained the central bank's near-zero base interest rate while saying that "economic activity is levelling out" amid the steep downturn.
Amid worries that the burgeoning recovery could be stamped out by job insecurity and still-tight credit conditions, the Fed and the US Treasury extended a multibillion-dollar credit program for consumers and businesses into mid-2010.
"The markets for asset-backed securities backed by consumer and business loans and for commercial mortgage-backed securities are still impaired and seem likely to remain so for some time," they said in extending the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) programme that was set to expire on December 31.
Consumers, whose spending drives about two-thirds of US economic growth, have snapped their wallets shut in the face of rising unemployment, falling home values and uncertainty about when the economy will recover from the worst recession since the Great Depression.
A survey published on Monday showed that a majority of Americans believe that a 787-billion-dollar stimulus package passed six months ago with support from President Barack Obama has had no effect or even made the US economy worse.
A USAToday/Gallup poll found that 41 percent of Americans think the spending has made the US economy better, but 57 percent believe it has either made no difference or worsened the recession.
Over three-quarters of those questioned - 78 percent - said they were either "very worried" or "somewhat worried" that money from the economic stimulus was being "wasted." - AFP/de