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krisluke
    30-Jun-2011 09:27  
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SINGAPORE, June 30 (Reuters) - Singapore shares are likely to rise on Wednesday after Greece approved austerity measures ensuring it would not default on its debt, providing relief to equity markets in the United States overnight. Singapore Airlines may be in focus after it said on Wednesday it had reached an agreement with Airbus to lease 15 more A330-300 aircraft.

MARKET SNAPSHOT @ 0009 GMT ------------ INSTRUMENT LAST PCT CHG NET CHG S& P 500 < .SPX> 1307.41 0.83% 10.740 USD/JPY 80.68 -0.09% -0.070 10-YR US TSY YLD 3.0989 -- -0.022 SPOT GOLD 1510.29 -0.08% -1.260 US CRUDE 95.2 0.45% 0.430 DOW JONES < .DJI> 12261.42 0.60% 72.73 ASIA ADRS < .BKAS> 136.89 1.05% 1.42 ------------------------------------------------------------ - >

Wall St posts biggest 3-day surge in three months

US 30-year bonds down full point in price

Euro climbs, further gains rest on Greece vote

Gold edges up on Greece vote hopes, Asian buying

Oil jumps 3 pct on U.S. stock draws, Greek vote

Stocks and factors to watch: -- KEPPEL CORP - Keppel Corp, the world's largest oil rig builder, said on Wednesday it has secured two shipbuilding contracts worth about S$140 million ($113 million) from fleet operators in Brazil.

DBS GROUP - DBS, Southeast Asia's largest bank, said on Wednesday it has applied to Singapore's central bank to tap the bilateral currency swap facility between the city-state and China.

CWT LIMITED - Warehouse and logistics services firm CWT Limited said it will acquire 73.81 percent of Switzerland's MRI Trading AG for about $94 million. MRI Trading engages in marketing metals such as copper, gold and zinc.

SINGAPORE EXCHANGE - Singapore Exchange said it will introduce continuous all day trading between 0900-1700 Singapore time (0100-0900 GMT) from August 1, allowing investors to trade pan-Asian securities and respond to regional market movements and news flows.

Singapore's benchmark Straits Times Index < .FTSTI> rose 0.95 percent on Wednesday to 3,079.74 points.

The Dow Jones industrial average < .DJI> climbed 0.6 percent to 12,261.42.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index < .SPX> gained 0.83 percent at 1,307.41.

The Nasdaq Composite Index < .IXIC> was 0.41 percent higher at 2,740.49.
 
 
yummygd
    28-Jun-2011 09:35  
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we should send our government there...sure will get 98 percent employment rate. but of course all over board e pay kena cut 

krisluke      ( Date: 28-Jun-2011 09:31) Posted:

Obama and Unemployment

 



One year after US President’ Obama’s Summer of recovery, US jobless rate remains high

Last year, the White House kicked off its “Summer of Recovery” a publicity initiative promoting US President Barack Obama’s promise that more Americans would be going back to work soon.

But 1 yr later, unemployment remains high, at 9.1%, and underemployment, the number of those working part-time but seeking full-time positions, stands at nearly 16%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

While new home construction increased to an annual rate of 560,000 units, that number falls considerably short of the 1.2 million new houses economists said are required for a sound housing market.

To make matters worse, consumer prices have been rising every month since June last year 25% of homeowners owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth and gross domestic product (GDP) did not grow last quarter at a rate high enough to generate new jobs.

But despite those grim figures, how much, or how little, is the Obama administration’s performance tied to the economy’s still sluggish performance?

Barry Bosworth, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and former presidential adviser, said the administration has done nothing “wrong” per se, and has followed the advice of many policy advisers and economists.

Still, the President has underestimated the Country’s economic problems and now displays very little leadership about what to do, he said recently.

Others argue that the President has inherited a basket-case economy and is trying to make the best of a bad situation.

Still, Mr. Bosworth said it has been a mistake to keep pumping up consumption when the main problem lies in investment and exports.

And despite both Democrats’ and Republicans’ contentions that they know what is best for the economy, neither the White House nor Congress have any effective answers, he said.

 
 
krisluke
    28-Jun-2011 09:33  
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GOP, Democrats seem to harden stance on debt

By JIM KUHNHENN
Associated Press

(AP:WASHINGTON) President Barack Obama plunged into deadlocked negotiations to cut government deficits and raise the nation's debt limit Monday, and the White House expressed confidence a " significant" deal with Republicans could be reached. But both sides only seemed to harden their positions as the day wore on, the administration insisting on higher taxes as part of the package but Republican leaders flatly rejecting the idea.

Obama and Vice President Joe Biden met with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., for about 30 minutes at the White House, and then met with Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky for about an hour in the early evening.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama reported after the morning session that " everyone in the room believes that a significant deal remains possible." But Carney also affirmed that Obama would only go for a deficit-reduction plan that included both spending cuts and increased tax revenue, an approach that Republicans say would never get through Congress.

Said Carney: " It's the only way to get it done if you want to do it right."

Obama and the vice president spent more time with McConnell than they did with Reid, an indication of the differences they still need to bridge. McConnell also was seen speaking with White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley moments before his meeting with Obama and Biden.

" The meeting concluded but they will continue to talk," McConnell spokesman Don Stewart said afterward.

Hours earlier McConnell reaffirmed Republican opposition to more tax hikes in a speech from the Senate floor.

" It's time Washington take the hit," he said, " not the taxpayers."

McConnell said any tax increase or new spending would be counterproductive to economic recovery, and he pointed out that Democrats had been unable to pass tax increases on the wealthy when they controlled both chambers of Congress last year.

" Let's move past tax hikes, talk about what's actually possible, and let's talk about what has and hasn't worked over the past two years," said the Kentucky Republican.

Reid said, " I hope my Republican colleagues will put the economy ahead of politics." Speaking on the Senate floor, he said, " I hope they'll join us to create jobs and set aside their desire to please the tea party and defeat President Obama."

At issue is not just the staggering national debt but a showdown on the federal borrowing limit that carries enormous risks.

Absent an agreement that cuts long-term deficits, Republicans say they will not vote to increase the nation's borrowing, which will exceed its $14.3 trillion limit on Aug. 2. The administration has warned that if Congress does not raise the debt ceiling, it could mean the first U.S. financial default in history and send economic shockwaves around the world.

To meet government obligations, a two-year increase in the debt ceiling would have to be about $2.4 trillion. Republicans are insisting on deficit reduction of a similar amount over 10 years.

So far the financial markets remain unrattled by the impasse, and some say it might take a massive market upheaval to move Congress to pass an increase in the debt ceiling. That's what it took in 2008 for Congress to approve the financial bailout known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program. Politically, raising the debt ceiling is considered a more difficult vote than the bank bailout plan.

Failure to raise the ceiling " would do serious damage," Said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics whose views are frequently cited by the Obama administration. " It will unhinge the already very fragile collective psyche."

Zandi said a deficit reduction plan that includes some tax increases would be " more credible and more appropriate from an economic perspective."

But he said that if Republicans are being asked to give up their deep-seated opposition to tax increases, then Obama needs to abandon a major campaign promise, such as his demand that the wealthy give up their Bush-era tax cuts.

" The president needs to take a chance himself, and do something that shows he's willing to give up something that's very large to move this forward," Zandi said in an interview.

The president stepped up his personal involvement in negotiations after bipartisan talks led by Biden stalled last week. Republican lawmakers abandoned the negotiations, saying the issues still on the table had to be addressed by the president.

Obama already has met privately with House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and with House Democrats.

Until Friday, Biden had held a series of meeting over several weeks with bipartisan teams from the House and Senate, focusing on areas where the two sides were amenable to cuts until the dispute over taxes caused Republicans to walk out.

Carney rejected suggestions that Obama should have become more involved earlier. " If you honestly believe that the public is out there wondering why the president wasn't in every one of these meetings, you know, I think that's nuts."

The White House is pushing for some tax increases on the wealthy or the elimination of tax breaks for big companies and wealthy individuals as part of a deficit-cutting plan. During the Biden-led negotiations, Democrats proposed about $400 billion in additional tax revenue, including ending subsidies to oil and gas companies, an idea that has failed previously in the Senate.

The administration also would tax private equity or hedge fund managers at higher income tax rates instead of lower capital gains rates, change the depreciation formula on corporate jets and limit itemized deductions for wealthy taxpayers. It also has called for repealing a tax benefit for an inventory accounting practice used by many manufacturers.

Republicans are demanding huge cuts in government spending. While they are insisting there be no tax increases, they have been willing to consider other forms of revenue, particularly higher user fees.

" Revenues have never been off the table," said Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona, the Senate's Republican participant in the Biden talks. " There are some user fees that are probably way low compared to when they were originally set."

Obama's budget wants $85 billion in new user fees over 10 years, including raising the airline passenger security fee from a maximum of $5 per one-way trip to $11. Other proposals range from Food and Drug Administration food inspection fees to duck hunting fees.The $85 billion also includes federal auction of parts of the broadcast spectrum and the sale of surplus federal property.

Complicating matters is the congressional schedule. While the Senate is in session, the House is off this week ahead of the July 4 holiday. The House is scheduled to return next week when the Senate will be away. That makes it difficult for leaders in both chambers to find consensus among their respective memberships.

" It will take time, and that is a bit troublesome," Kyl said. " It will take time to both reach the agreement, to put it all together and to debate it on the floor. Nobody wants this to be just parachuted in three days before they vote on it. They want time to take it back to their constituents, talk about it, debate it on the floor."

Carney wouldn't set a deadline for a deal, saying he didn't want to name a " token timetable." He said Obama and Biden would hold additional meetings with congressional lawmakers, though none is scheduled at this point.

 

 
krisluke
    28-Jun-2011 09:31  
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Obama and Unemployment

 



One year after US President’ Obama’s Summer of recovery, US jobless rate remains high

Last year, the White House kicked off its “Summer of Recovery” a publicity initiative promoting US President Barack Obama’s promise that more Americans would be going back to work soon.

But 1 yr later, unemployment remains high, at 9.1%, and underemployment, the number of those working part-time but seeking full-time positions, stands at nearly 16%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

While new home construction increased to an annual rate of 560,000 units, that number falls considerably short of the 1.2 million new houses economists said are required for a sound housing market.

To make matters worse, consumer prices have been rising every month since June last year 25% of homeowners owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth and gross domestic product (GDP) did not grow last quarter at a rate high enough to generate new jobs.

But despite those grim figures, how much, or how little, is the Obama administration’s performance tied to the economy’s still sluggish performance?

Barry Bosworth, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and former presidential adviser, said the administration has done nothing “wrong” per se, and has followed the advice of many policy advisers and economists.

Still, the President has underestimated the Country’s economic problems and now displays very little leadership about what to do, he said recently.

Others argue that the President has inherited a basket-case economy and is trying to make the best of a bad situation.

Still, Mr. Bosworth said it has been a mistake to keep pumping up consumption when the main problem lies in investment and exports.

And despite both Democrats’ and Republicans’ contentions that they know what is best for the economy, neither the White House nor Congress have any effective answers, he said.
 
 
krisluke
    28-Jun-2011 09:29  
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Greece Default Threat Has Passed

 



Eurozone finance ministers have said they will decide on the “main parameters” of a new international bailout plan by early July

With the current 110 billion bailout insufficient to keep Greece going, European leaders are working on a further package of a similar size including a contribution from private banks which would agree to a “voluntary” rollover of their Greek debt.

Whether such a deal will be enough to stave off problems in the longer term remains uncertain. Many investors and economists believe that even if the austerity package is passed this week, it will merely delay an inevitable restructuring or default.

With the fate of both the existing aid plan and the new package dependent on this week’s vote, major rallies are planned by the protestors who have been occupying Syntagma Square outside the Greek parliament in Athens for the past month.

Public anger has been fuelled by Greece’s worst recession since the 1970s, a youth unemployment rate of more than 40 percent and public finances that have been shattered by a debt equivalent to some 150 percent of gross domestic product.

The powerful public sector union ADEDY and its private sector equivalent GSEE are due to hold a 48-hour strike on June 28 and 29, that will hit public transport, telecoms, the post office and many hospitals.

Many companies, including the main electricity group PPC which is slated for partial privatisation next year, have already started rolling stoppages.

On Monday, protestors hung a huge banner off the Acropolis, the ancient rock outcrop which dominates Athens, proclaiming: “People have the power, they never surrender”.

With financial markets watching the Greek crisis anxiously, Sarkozy told a news conference in Paris that the French authorities had reached an agreement with the banks on a voluntary rollover of maturing bonds.

“We concluded that by stretching out the loans over 30 years, putting (interest rates) at the level of European loans, plus a premium indexed to future Greek growth, that would be a system that each country could find attractive,” he said.

Banking sources confirmed that was part of an outline deal under which banks would reinvest 70 percent of the proceeds when Greek bonds fall due. Of that amount, 50 percent would go into the new 30-year bonds and 20 percent would be reinvested in a zero-coupon guaranteed fund based on high-quality securities.

European Union officials were discussing the French idea with international bankers and the Institute of International Finance (IIF) in Rome on Monday, eurozone sources said, and German banks voiced interest in the “French model”.

Any new financial rescue for Athens, including official lending and private sector participation, depends on the Greek parliament approving this week a five-year austerity plan and legislation to implement structural reforms and privatisations.

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos met ruling socialist party (Pasok) rebels in Athens to push them to toe the line in parliamentary votes on Wednesday and Thursday, where a defeat could plunge the country into default.

Greece’s conservative opposition has rejected calls for national unity, forcing Prime Minister George Papandreou to rely on his slim parliamentary majority to push through a painful mix of spending cuts, tax hikes and state selloffs.

However, with Greece stuck in deep recession, at least three Pasok deputies have expressed serious reservations or outright opposition to a plan they say will crush any hope of growth for years to come and it is unclear how the numbers will play out.

Without parliamentary approval for the measures, which have caused a wave of strikes and demonstrations, the European Union and International Monetary Fund say they will not release the fifth tranche of the 110 billion-euro bailout agreed last year.

If the 12 billion-euro tranche is not forthcoming, the Greek government, which has been shut out of financial markets because of the ruined state of its public finances, will run out of money within weeks, probably triggering a Europe-wide crisis.
 
 
krisluke
    28-Jun-2011 09:04  
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Fundamentally:
Popular Holdings (POP SP S$0.16 CEASE COVERAGE) - FY11 net profit fell 74.1% yoy. Balance sheet remains strong with net cash per share of 10.1 Scts. With a final DPS of 0.6 Scts, full year DPS is 1.0 Scts. Company open to diversifying its property business into the landed property segment as well as commercial and industrial sectors. Technical charts are favourable. Ceasing Coverage.


What's Relevant...  cimb

Singapore shares declined by 18.6pts (-0.6%) to 3,048.3. In the broader market, losers led gainers 240 to 141 with 0.8bn shares worth S$1.0bn changing hands. We expect the STI to open higher this morning as concerns over the Europe crisis eases.

Corporate News...

China XLX's share price has retreated 43% since our downgrade on 7 Jan 11. We believe the sharp drop has priced in its negatives. CXLX has been maintaining above-industry margins, while coal-cost pressure and production declines due to power cuts should be over for now. Margins and earnings in the next two quarters should be marginally better. Upgrade from Underperform to NEUTRAL. Our earnings estimates and TP of S$0.39 (7x CY12 P/E, 50% discount to peers) remain unchanged. We expect near-term catalysts from improving urea ASPs and stabilising margins for key product segments, although longer term, we remain wary of costlier coal input and fund-raising needs from aggressive expansion.
Global Logistics Properties has signed an agreement with Unicharm, a Japan-based leading manufacturer to develop logistics facilities for manufacturing bases of Unicharm in China. Under the strategic partnership framework agreement between the two companies, GLP will begin with the development of Unicharm's largest manufacturing and distribution facility in North China.
Freight Links Express's FY11 net profit rose 17.6% yoy to S$16.3m. attributable to higher business volume, including contribution from the management fees business, writeback of impairment loss on property, gain on sale and leaseback of the properties and write-off of receivable from an associate in FY10. A first and final dividend of 0.4 Scts was declared.
Yangzijiang has acquired a 54.5% equity interest in Runzhou Heavy Industry Co (RHICO) and its subsidiary Jiangsu New Yangzi Gas Co (JNYG). The total investment by Yangzijiang in RHICO is USD6.5m, equivalent to 54.5% of RHICO's registered paid in capital of USD12m. The investment is expected to reduce Yangzijiang's dependency on steel structure, paint surface preparation of steel as well as coating related business. It will also help to reduce business costs of Yangzijiang and secure long term stable supply of gas to meet the production needs of its shipbuilding business. Pending review, maintain OUTPERFORM, TP S$2.05.
KS Energy has secured a 1 plus 1 year bareboat charter contract worth up to €12m (including the 1 year option) for its Jack-up Offshore Accommodation rig - Atlantic Rotterdam. The Rig will be deployed for Shell in the UK sector of the North Sea and is expected to commence work on 1 August.
 

 
krisluke
    28-Jun-2011 09:02  
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Oil and Gas sector: Release of supplies merely a stopgap measure

Summary: The International Energy Agency (IEA) announced last Thursday that it will be releasing 60m extra barrels of oil in the coming month, causing a knee-jerk negative reaction in the markets following the announcement. However, we expect this to only have a short-term impact on the oil markets. As developed markets continue their fragile economic recoveries, oil demand from emerging nations is expected to remain strong. In addition, as most of the easy oil has been exploited, extraction costs are also expected to rise in the future. In fact, we see it as a positive to keep oil prices in check so that economic recoveries do not get derailed we would be comfortable with oil prices above US$80 as this level should still sustain capital expenditure in the sector. Meanwhile, we maintain our Overweight rating on the broader sector. Keppel Corporation [BUY, FV: S$13.00] and Sembcorp Marine [BUY, FV: S$6.30] remain as our preferred picks, given the positive outlook for the segments they operate in, and their established market positions to capitalize on opportunities. (Low Pei Han)

KSH Holdings: A S$138m contract win to build Eight Courtyards

Summary. KSH announced yesterday that it had been awarded a S$138.4m construction contract by a JV between Fraser Centrepoint and Far East Organization for Eight Courtyards. This major contract win boosts KSH’s order book to approximately $360m. This is a significant contract win and the first project awarded to KSH by both developers since 2005. We think this could indicate a higher likelihood of future contracts from both developers as KSH develops stronger working ties and track records with them. In our view, this win demonstrates KSH’s continued ability to compete for projects but we remain cautious of an inflection point in private construction demand due to slowing private residential trends. As we have also accounted for such contract wins in our model, our earnings forecast for KSH remains unchanged. Maintain a HOLD rating on KSH with a fair value estimate of 31 cents. (Eli Lee)


For more information on the above, visit
www.ocbcresearch.comfor the detailed report.

NEWS HEADLINES

- European currency, stock and bond markets showed uncertainty yesterday ahead of the Greek Parliament’s vote on the EUR 28bn austerity bill.

- The historical land deal between Singapore and Malaysia may have huge implications for the property sector. Malaysia’s land plots have a total permitted floor area of up to 501,020 square metres and could imply a big supply of offices and homes to the market.

- Following NOL’s recent announcement to purchase ten new ships, Maersk said yesterday it would exercise its options with Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering to purchase ten new 18,000 TEU ships for its Asia-Europe routes.

- Biosensors International, which produces drug-eluting stents used to treat block arteries, said it aims to increase its current 27-30% market share in China as Johnson & Johnson, a rival firm, exits the sector.

- A River Valley Road walk-up apartment development was sold en-bloc for $70.5m, bringing the total value of the 32 en-bloc deals sealed this year to $1.73 bn.
 
 
krisluke
    27-Jun-2011 00:04  
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STI index chart 24 Jun 11 shown STI had bounced off from the 3000 support level region(purplish and green line). Given the uncertainty of the European debt crisis, STI might test the 3000 support level again. Any strong breakout of the 3000 support level   will lead STI to go to the next support level of 2900-2920 region.

So trade with care in such a uncertainty market!

#Source Taken: http://www.stocktraderabc.com

 
 
krisluke
    26-Jun-2011 23:59  
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Next Week’s Tape: Greece Is the Word



Everett


Monday: This week is so loaded with economic data it’s bananas, and we get shoved into the excitement right off the bat, with May personal income and spending data. Can you smell what the Commerce Department is cooking? If so, I’m sorry.  In the afternoon,  Nike jogs by with its earnings. See what I did there?  The Treasury auctions off a truckload of 2-year debt, which we’ll probably all buy because what else are we gonna do with our money?  Fed Heads Narayana Kocherlakota (Minneapolis) and Thomas Hoenig (Kansas City) do some talkin’.

Tuesday: Boom goes the dynamite. It’s Case-Shiller home-price data for April, followed by consumer-confidence data for May. You get one guess which direction they’re moving, and “up” is not an option. Treasury’s got a fever, and the only prescription is more auction: 5-year debt, come and get it. After the bell, central banker types Richard Fisher (Dallas Fed) and Jean-Claude Trichet (Europe) work their jaws.

Wednesday: We get  mortgage-application and pending-home sales data in the morning, so be sure to wear something that goes with sadness. Whole buncha earnings on the docket, including American Greetings, Family Dollar, KB Home and Monsanto. We’ll get a read on how much Americans did cheap shopping for gift cards they took back to chop up and fertilize the garden behind their newly built homes in foreclosure limbo. Fed Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin gets her talk on. Treasury has 7-year notes to sell you. Everybody will likely start freaking out about the Greek parliament, which starts voting on economy-killing measures.

Thursday: Greek parliament finishes voting on the puppy-murdering austerity plan, probably at midnight, knowing how they operate. The known universe will either be saved (for about a month) or destroyed (for about a day) on their vote. Here in the US of A, which has no debt problems to speak of, we get jobless claims and Chicago PMI. Keep a hanky handy. What’s that? You want more earnings? OK, then, if you say so: Apollo Group, Constellation Brands and Smith & Wesson will report on how people got drunk and waved guns around harmlessly at their online college. Fed Heads James Bullard (St. Louis) and Thomas Hoenig (again) flap the old gums for a bit.

Friday: That beeping sound is the Economic Data Truck, backing up to dump on your morning. Wait, that doesn’t sound right. Anyway, we get June auto sales all the live long day. We get ISM manufacturing for June, which could have a negative sign in front of it just to put the scare in us. Wait, there’s more: June’s final Michigan sentiment reading and May  construction spending are due, too. Then we’ll all have a drink. Without the guns.
 
 
krisluke
    25-Jun-2011 08:09  
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China’s Inflation coming Under Control

 



China’s Premier Wen Jiabao said that China’s efforts to stem inflation have worked and that the pace of consumer-price increases will slow, an assessment that contrasts with some economists advocating further steps.

“There is concern as to whether China can rein in inflation and sustain its rapid development, and my answer is an emphatic yes,” Wen wrote in an newspaper opinion piece today.

“China has made capping price rises the priority of macroeconomic regulation and introduced a host of targeted policies. These have worked. The overall price level is within a controllable range and is expected to drop steadily.” he is quoted as saying.

In a sign manufacturing expansion is easing, passenger-car sales fell for the 1st time in more than 2 yrs in May as the government phased out incentives.

China’s efforts to cool real-estate prices are damping demand for housing, prompting Standard & Poor’s to cut the outlook on Chinese developers to negative from stable last week.

The value of land sales in Beijing this year has dropped 75%, the Securities Times reported this week, citing data from Centaline Property Agency Ltd.

But, demand for steel and cement can be sustained by Wen’s campaign to start building 10 million low-cost homes this year.

Local government financing vehicles will be allowed to sell bonds to fund the construction of such projects, according to a notice on the website of the NDRC’s Anhui province branch on June 16.
 

 
krisluke
    25-Jun-2011 08:07  
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US Data Points to Recovery

 



US data points to underlying factory strength
New orders for US manufactured goods and a gauge of business spending plans rose in May, easing fears of a sharp slowdown in factory activity.

Durable goods orders increased 1.9% after dropping 2.7% in April, the Commerce Department said on Friday.

An improvement across the board in May and revisions to April’s figures that showed smaller declines than previously reported, pointed to underlying strength in a sector that has powered the economic recovery.

Economists had expected durable goods orders, a leading indicator of manufacturing health, to rise 1.5% in May.

The report came as a relief to investors after recent regional factory data had shown some signs of fatigue. Supply chain disruptions after the March earthquake and tsunami in Japan have been constraining manufacturing.

Prices for US government debt showed little change, while stocks on Wall Street opened lower after a brief suspension in the trading of some big Italian banks raised new concerns about the European debt crisis.

The USD was little changed against a basket of major currencies.
 
 
krisluke
    25-Jun-2011 08:05  
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Market Oversold on News Not Information

 



Stocks seen heavy losses on Friday based on News sparked worries about the Italian banking sector and Greek austerity plan, but the S& P 500 managed to hold its 200-day moving average, there was not spike in the Gold price and the VIX was little changed in a sign of market strength.

Aside from the misleading doomsday headlines, the US economy showed a strong turnaround and the EU have agreed to stop any default in Greece.

The U.S. economy expanded at a 1.9 percent annual rate from in January through March after expanding at a 3.1 percent pace during the last three months of 2010, revised figures from the Commerce Department showed. The government reported in May a quarterly expansion of 1.8 percent.

The Fed said after the June 21-22 policy meeting that it would maintain monetary economic stimulus after its $600 billion program of debt buying ends this month. The central bank purchased $4.6 billion of Treasuries maturing from April 2014 to May 2015 today.

Economic growth will pick up in the second half while remaining slow, and the Fed will maintain its record asset holdings for an “appropriate” period, according to Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher.

Europe’s leaders prepared the way for a second, large, bailout of Greece on Friday, pledging not to abandon the debt-laden nation to a default providing it votes a tough package of austerity measures through its Parliament next week.

“We have agreed that there will be a new program for Greece,” Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany told reporters at the end of a two-day summit meeting in Brussels. “This is an important decision that says once again we will do everything to stabilize the euro overall.”
 
 
krisluke
    25-Jun-2011 08:04  
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Wall St sinks on Europe's debt misery
Times Square, New York
* Trading briefly halted in some Italian banks' shares

  * S& P's 200-day moving average still holds

  * S& P 500, Dow fall for 7th week in last 8

  * Dow off 1 pct, S& P down 1.2 pct, Nasdaq off 1.3 pct (Updates to close)

  By Edward Krudy

  NEW YORK, June 24 (Reuters) - Wall Street dropped for a third day on Friday on worries about the Italian banking sector and Greece's debt crisis, but the S& P 500 managed to hold its 200-day moving average in a sign buyers still see value.

  The Dow industrials and the S& P 500 fell for their seventh week in the last eight. The benchmark S& P 500 is down 7 percent from its 2011 closing high at the end of April.

  Investors are fearful that Greece's government may fail to pass an austerity plan next week, which could force a default on its debt repayments. The government faces an electorate vehemently opposed to the austerity measures.

  " They (politicians) may not believe that financial markets are as sensitive to their decisions as they actually are, and there is a worry that somewhere along the line, some political vote goes against the market," said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist of the ConvergEx Group in New York.

  The S& P 500 remained within striking distance of its 200-day moving average -- a line that has been tested twice in recent trading and has so far acted as a springboard for stocks. The level was at 1,263.47.

  " Every time you test a resistance or support level, you make it weaker," Colas said. " It's almost like a piece of metal. Every time you hit it, it grows more fragile and that's why people are really worried the third or fourth time."

  Problems in the euro zone appeared to intensify as shares of Italian banks UniCredit SpA and Intesa Sanpaolo fell sharply on concerns about their capital positions. Trading in their shares was briefly suspended.

  The CBOE Volatility Index or VIX, Wall Street's barometer of investor anxiety, rose 9.4 percent to 21.10. Some analysts say fear needs to rise further before the market reaches a bottom.

  The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 115.42 points, or 0.96 percent, to 11,934.58 at the close. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 15.05 points, or 1.17 percent, to 1,268.45. The Nasdaq Composite Index lost 33.86 points, or 1.26 percent, to 2,652.89.

  For the week, the Dow fell 0.58 percent and the S& P 500 shed 0.24 percent, while the Nasdaq gained 1.39 percent.

  Bank stocks fell on concerns about the economic outlook. The KBW Banks Index lost 1 percent and the S& P Financial Sector Index shed 0.7 percent. The sector has been the worst-performing this year, falling around 8 percent.

  On Thursday, the market welcomed Greece's agreement to a five-year austerity plan.

  The euro declined against the dollar for a third straight session on worries Greece's parliament might not pass austerity measures needed for the country to secure more bailout funds.

  In the latest economic data, new orders for long-lasting U.S. manufactured products, known as durable goods, increased 1.9 percent in May after dropping 2.7 percent in April as bookings for transportation equipment rebounded strongly.

  Oracle Corp fell 4.1 percent percent to $31.14 a day after the world's No. 3 software maker posted disappointing results, especially in hardware sales. Oracle's results sparked concerns about a bigger slowdown in technology spending.

  Micron Technology Inc tumbled 14.5 percent to $7.21 after the memory chipmaker recorded results below expectations late Thursday. An index of semiconductor stocks lost 2.5 percent.

  About 9.26 billion shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, NYSE Amex and Nasdaq -- well above the daily average so far this year of around 7.57 billion. Analysts said Friday's volume was much higher than average due in part to the rebalancing of the Russell 2000 Index.

  Declining stocks outnumbered advancing ones on the New York Stock Exchange by a ratio of 19 to 11. On the Nasdaq, about three stocks fell for every two that rose.
 
 
krisluke
    25-Jun-2011 08:03  
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Wall St Week Ahead: Bulls ready to charge into a wall of worry
* Quarter-end bounce looms for stocks

  * Greece and Italy are sources of uncertainty

  * S& P's 200-day moving average a line in the sand

  By Rodrigo Campos

  NEW YORK, June 24 (Reuters) - A bounce could be the cards for U.S. stocks next week as bulls defend a key technical level and managers buy the quarter's winners to prop up their books.

  But gains coming from healthcare, staples or other defensive sectors that have outperformed the market in the last several months would only support the notion that the U.S. stock market needs to complete its correction phase and panic selling must occur before a more sustained comeback develops.

  " We want to see more fear," said Ari Wald, equity strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York.

  But be careful what you wish for.

  The sources of the recent decline, including Greece's slow march toward a default on its debt, weak U.S. economic data and the creeping deadline to lift the U.S. debt ceiling, are far from being resolved.

  HOLDING THE 200-DAY SHOWS THE WAY

  Despite a drop that dragged the S& P 500 as much as 8.2 percent below its three-year high hit in early May, the index held above its 200-day moving average -- a major line in the sand as the bulls and bears battle for control of the market.

  The slide had been telegraphed for weeks and the market's by-the-book performance -- pulling back to a widely followed level -- seems too well choreographed for some analysts.

  " The fact that we went to the 200-day ... seems just a little too perfect," said Marc Pado, U.S. market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald & Co in San Francisco.

  He said the timing of the move was supportive, as the market creates a technical base before resuming its upward move on the back of strong earnings.

  " You might get an attempt at a shakeout move," Pado said. " But sometimes the majority is right."

  Even if they are right, they don't seem too convinced. So far this quarter -- on track to be the first in the red for the S& P 500 in the last year -- daily volume on the New York Stock Exchange, NYSE Amex and Nasdaq has averaged 7.22 billion shares.

  That is down from the 7.94 billion shares traded daily during the first quarter, when the S& P 500 gained 5.4 percent. Commitment to the market has waned. The frantic selling, the flushing down of day traders seems absent so far in this corrective phase.

  Despite holding above that level, the market has not cleared the danger zone of dipping under its 200-day average. The curve has a steep slope, as the S& P 500 took roughly two years to notch a 100 percent advance from its March 2009 lows.

  The 200-day moving average now stands at 1,263.47, less than 0.4 percent below the S& P 500's close on Friday.

  " Every time you test a resistance or support level, you make it weaker," said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist of the ConvergEx Group in New York. " It's almost like a piece of metal. Every time you hit it, it grows more fragile and that's why people are really worried the third or fourth time."

  After three straight days of declines, the S& P 500 fell 0.24 percent for the week and finished at 1,268.45 -- its seventh decline in the last eight weeks.

  The Dow industrials < .DJI> lost 0.58 percent for the week, closing on Friday at 11,934.58, while the Nasdaq Composite < .IXIC> rose 1.39 percent for the week to end at 2,652.89.

  The next two weeks, before quarterly earnings season starts in earnest, could be marked by wild swings like the ones seen recently. On Thursday, after a market-friendly headline out of Greece, the S& P 500 posted its strongest comeback in almost a year, on days when the benchmark has fallen more than 1 percent.

  From its session low on Thursday, the S& P 500 climbed more than 20 points into the close. The Dow's swing covered 233.79 points from its intraday low to session high on Thursday.

  But buying interest waned on Friday. Aside from doubts about the passage in Athens' Parliament of higher taxes and service cuts, weak Italian banks also are scaring investors.

  The Federal Reserve on Wednesday gave a bleak outlook on the economy, lowering its forecasts for GDP growth for both 2011 and 2012. And Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke found it hard to explain the sources of a so-called economic " soft patch" that seems to have become pervasive.

  SUMMER STORM OF DATA

  Besides the weekly jobless claims numbers, housing and manufacturing data will attract the most attention next week.

  The S& P Case-Shiller April home prices index on Tuesday and the National Association of Realtors pending home sales for May on Wednesday could confirm the housing market's double dip.

  Factory activity grew in May at its slowest pace since September 2009, according to the Institute for Supply Management, and Friday's ISM number for June is expected to drop to 51.9, indicating an even slower rate of growth.

  New applications for unemployment insurance on Thursday are expected to land above 400,000 for a 12th straight week, according to economists polled by Reuters.

  Personal income and consumption, out Monday, are expected to tick higher in May. Consumer confidence, out Tuesday from the Conference Board, is forecast at a June reading of 60.5, just a touch lower than May's 60.8, a Reuters poll showed. Despite a recent string of weak data in May, a sharp drop in crude oil prices is expected to buoy consumer confidence.

  (Wall St Week Ahead appears every Friday. Comments or questions on this column can be emailed to: rodrigo.campos(at)thomsonreuters.com) (Reporting by Rodrigo Campos Additional reporting by Edward Krudy Editing by Jan Paschal)
 
 
krisluke
    25-Jun-2011 08:00  
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DEAR BERNANKE: A Huge Thanks For Attacking Inflation, And Bringing Gas Prices Down

Ben Bernanke

Image: commons.wikimedia.org


Dear Ben,

 

We just heard on Bloomberg TV that prices at the pump have fallen 21 days in a row.

We know that while prices were going up every day, you got a lot of crap from people about inflation, and how you weren't doing enough. So we just wanted to say: Thank you!

Now sure, we don't drive -- we live in New York after all -- but that doesn't mean we can't sympathize with those people out there who do drive, and for whom gas prices were taking a bigger and bigger bite out of their paycheck.

So again, big thanks.

Sincerely,

Joe Weisenthal
 

 
krisluke
    25-Jun-2011 07:57  
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STOCKS SMASHED AFTER GIGANTIC WEEK FOR NEWS: Here's What You Need To Know

Where to begin!

 

First, the scoreboard:

Dow: -108.60
NASDAQ: -34.45
S& P 500: -14.60

And now, the top stories:
  • Today was a brutal disappointment for the bulls. We had surprise comeback yesterday, and then an overnight rally in US futures, and yet... things fell apart. Stocks ended sharply lower.
  • But at around 6:30 AM it all started to fall apart. A member of the ruling PASOK party in Greece hinted that he might not support the government's austerity plan. If he doesn't support it, it means Papandreou's margin of victory on this bill is down to 3 votes! The vote next week has been scheduled with a debate from the 27-29th. It's going to be nuts.
  • Still, futures were higher  in the morning, but as soon as the opening bell came it all went negative. There wasn't too much US data. GDP and durable goods both came in basically in line.
  • And then after that it was basically a slow grind lower. Everyone's still talking about the IEA's big move, but no real action on that. And the debt ceiling talks are still blown up, but nothing particularly new there. Just a disappointing reversal of yesterday, and a big down day.
  • What did well? Bonds and the dollar, basically.
 
 
Hulumas
    24-Jun-2011 21:19  
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Since today looooooooh.
 
 
ruanlai
    24-Jun-2011 14:40  
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Since when here become KOPITIAM....... WELL DONE !!!

Hulumas      ( Date: 24-Jun-2011 14:29) Posted:

I drink one half package every morning. It is marvelously fragrant taste!

krisluke      ( Date: 23-Jun-2011 14:33) Posted:

Anyone bot Supercoffee mix today ? ? ??



 
 
Hulumas
    24-Jun-2011 14:29  
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I drink one half package every morning. It is marvelously fragrant taste!

krisluke      ( Date: 23-Jun-2011 14:33) Posted:

Anyone bot Supercoffee mix today ? ? ??


 
 
krisluke
    23-Jun-2011 14:42  
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  Euro slips ahead of EU Council meeting, Greece to dominate

* Greece, lower Fed growth forecasts, China PMI curb risk taking

* Leveraged bets may not be helpful given cloudy outlook

  * Gold appears bullish vs sterling, Australian dollar

By Kevin Plumberg SINGAPORE, June 23 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar rose and Asian stocks fell on Thursday with investors reluctant to buy risky assets ahead of a European leaders meeting, which could be dominated by Greece's debt crisis, and after the Federal Reserve cut its growth forecasts. The U.S. economy is slowing and the Fed is not offering any more stimulus at this point -- even after the Bank of England stunned traders on Wednesday by saying it was considering more quantitative easing.

News that China's factory growth nearly stalled in June on weakening global demand was a further signal to keep trimming assets from their portfolios that are vulnerable to volatility, and perhaps also to keep gearing at a minimum, at least until the outlook for the second half was clearer.

" The key in this environment is really just low leverage," Adrian Foster, head of financial market research at Rabobank, told Reuters Television. " We have seen sharp moves to the upside and to the downside, and then look back and see markets have been flat for a couple of months. But if you had high leverage in that period you would have been chopped out." The Nikkei share average < .N225> fell 0.3 percent, weighed down the most by technology stocks. But foreign buying of relatively inexpensive Japanese shares and strength in blue-chip stocks such as Fast Retailing < 9983.T> and Honda Motor Co < 7267.T> should continue to support the Tokyo equity market.

" The Fed's view was not completely surprising, therefore the Tokyo market may not fall significantly... and Tokyo shares are still undervalued," said Tsuyoshi Kawata, a senior strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities in Tokyo. The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan < .MIAPJ0000PUS> fell 0.7 percent, with the consumer discretionary sector, what had been practically a sure-fire bet through most of the first half, leading the decline. The index has fallen 8.2 percent since May as of Wednesday, underperforming the 6.9 percent decline in the MSCI all-country world stocks index < .MIWD00000PUS> .

Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong were down 1.2 percent on the day < .HSCE> , continuing to underperform the broad Hang Seng index, after HSBC's early reading of Chinese industrial activity in June came in at an 11-month low. CROSSES OF GOLD Gold slipped in the spot market to $1,546.69 an ounce after four consecutive sessions of gains, but was still up 8.9 percent year to date, triple the returns of the U.S. S& P 500 equities index. [ID:nL3E7HN09Z] Furthermore, gold denominated in other currencies has been on a tear in recent weeks. Gold in sterling terms reached a record high of 969.66 pounds , gold/Australian dollar climbed to the highest in a year at AU$1,474.37.

Gold denominated in the Australian dollar could be poised for a volatile breakout to as higher as AU$1,950 in the new few months. [ID:nL3E7HM03R] The euro traded around $1.4300, near the middle of a trading range carved out over the past month. The looming risk of a debt default by Greece shifted back to the forefront of investors' minds, particularly after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the fate of the indebted country could threaten the global financial system. The euro fell to a session low of $1.4287 , down 0.3 percent on the day. The single currency would probably have to slide below a low for the month around $1.4070 before traders would pounce on the move. With the dollar slowly climbing out of a downtrend, such a move was not improbable. " Investors are buying back the dollar for now, and there even may be some who are going long, but yields on U.S. Treasuries would have to rise to help it break the downward trendline off the 2010 highs," said Teppei Ino, currency analyst at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ in Tokyo.

The European Union Council meets later for a two-day meeting. Though Greece is not formally on the agenda, markets will be looking for assurances from European that they have a workable plan to help Athens avoid a debt default and return to financial stability.

U.S. oil futures fell 1.3 percent to $94.20 a barrel , dragged down by continued flows into the dollar. Crude prices have dropped 17 percent since May as economists ratchet down growth forecasts for the world's biggest energy consumers.
 
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