Thanx i just turn short.... on us futures......
PauloGan ( Date: 24-Jun-2013 20:08) Posted:
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Banks& property sector down the STI...any solution?
Knn this spermsucker toad.
Hope nobody followed his calls lol
Hope nobody followed his calls lol
risktaker ( Date: 24-Jun-2013 19:32) Posted:
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think sti mkt is on a downtrend. stay out or trade cautiously.
Nb..... ok guys..... cya..... need to recover.... will be back when market ok....
How to use the info? 
Short sell orders executed on 24 June 2013
Buy what? 
Did you ask him to give you some detailed TA to support his buy call?
ruready ( Date: 24-Jun-2013 15:58) Posted:
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Stock Futures
Americas
| Index Future | Future Date | Last | Net Change | Open | High | Low | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dow Jones Indus. Avg | Sep 13 | 14,599.00 | -112.00 | 14,659.00 | 14,680.00 | 14,596.00 | 05:06:30 |
| S& P 500 | Sep 13 | 1,571.00 | -13.10 | 1,582.00 | 1,586.20 | 1,570.50 | 05:06:23 |
| NASDAQ 100 | Sep 13 | 2,847.75 | -17.25 | 2,864.00 | 2,869.25 | 2,845.50 | 05:05:39 |
| S& P/TSX | Sep 13 | 682.70 | +2.30 | 684.80 | 688.30 | 680.10 | 17:10:05 |
| Mexico IPC | Sep 13 | 38,148.00 | +496.00 | 37,880.00 | 38,285.00 | 37,350.00 | 18:59:00 |
| Bovespa | Aug 13 | 47,038.00 | -1,303.00 | 48,350.00 | 48,500.00 | 46,800.00 | 17:01:23 |
Last 15 mins sell down.
Dow futures 3digits down.
Pray for the best.
another bloody day
yr long time broker hai u so many time already, I'm surprise ur still here if u have been following his calls.  

ozone2002 ( Date: 24-Jun-2013 16:01) Posted:
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The Chinese economy over the past few years had been growing rapidly.   Their currency is getting stronger and their technologies have advanced.   Ordinary citizens are getting better and better with their lives keeping pace with rising prices. Many working class are lured into the property market with many snapping up apartments as soon as they were built with some buying more than 2 flats in the hope of making quick profits.
Recently, cooling of the property market have so impact on propety prices, but many are convinced that any fall is temporary.  
The leadership has so far shown that they are capable of steering the economy well.   However they should note that they are a large economy second to the USA which have always wished to be the world leader first in everything from economy to technology. It would be good that China recognized that it should not overtake the USA in anything because USA is capable of doing things capable of achieving its aims. They have an arsenal of everything they can make use of to prevent China from becoming the first.   Weapons can be in the form of economic sabotage, spying, protectionism, economic assasination via the media, analysts and so forth.
I only hope the Chinese deals carefully with each step they take in their relationship with the US. The recent leak by National Security Agency worker, Mr. Snowden about hacking of Chinese organizations by the US goes to show the hypocrisy that exist in the contraditory accusation of China being the hacker.
It goes to show that US govt is not a good guy after all. Quite disheartening as it has always been idol, and I am sadden by what has been revealed by Mr. Snowden about the underhand activities carried out by respectful country. 
 
 
Did you  hear wrongly or not...maybe he is telling the market  is bye bye bye.
Mai Hai Lang!lol
ruready ( Date: 24-Jun-2013 15:58) Posted:
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cos ur brokers wants comms comms comms! :)
ruready ( Date: 24-Jun-2013 15:58) Posted:
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my broker call me buybuybuy
China is ratcheting up its own fear and frightening its own industry into crashed!
More bad debt is being created by this fear!Dunno  how many small enterprise will fold.
Its old guard  create the biggest housing bubble and the new guard  come out to destroy the industry base for the bubble.
Hard landing will have severe repercussions.
China’s Credit Squeeze Deals Fresh Blow to Stocks
CNBC.com | Monday, 24 Jun 2013 | 2:09 AM ET
China's beleaguered equity markets are not having a good year: first there were worries about weak data and now a credit squeeze that is making investors steer clear of Chinese stocks.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite stock index tumbled almost 5 percent on Monday to its lowest level since early December. The sell-off spilled over into Hong Kong, where the Hang Seng stock index hit its lowest level in more than nine months.
Analysts say that until the tight liquidity conditions facing Chinese lenders ease or economic data improve, equity markets closely related to China are likely to remain under pressure.
Shanghai and Hong Kong are Asia's worst performing major stock markets this year with losses of roughly 12 percent each, followed by South Korea's Kospi, which is down almost 9 percent.
(Read More: What's Really Behind China's Cash Crunch)
" We are seeing ongoing weakness in Chinese stocks because of the credit squeeze and worries about China's economic growth because recent data have disappointed," said Audrey Goh, investment strategist at Standard Chartered in Singapore.
" When will the market stabilize? That is an open question – we need to see the PBOC [People's Bank of China] inject more liquidity and better economic data," she added.
Data last week showing the HSBC Purchasing Manager's Index, a gauge of manufacturing activity, moved deeper into contraction territory in June has fueled concerns that China's economy is slowing faster than anticipated.
U.S. Investment bank Goldman Sachs on Monday became the latest house to downgrade its forecast for Chinese economic growth, citing the tighter liquidity conditions as a reason for the move. 100837344
China's money markets have been under severe strain, with the key seven-day repo rate hitting a record high above 10 percent last week. The country's central bank has deliberately avoided pumping significant amounts of cash into the system in a bid to force local lenders to rein in credit growth which has reached worrying levels.
(Read More: China Stocks Bear Brunt of Growth Fears)
On Monday the central bank said that there were sufficient funds in the market, but banks need to improve their cash management, Reuters reported.
" It's all good in the long-run but in the short-term it is creating volatility in the financial markets when you're trying to control financial sector risk," Steven Sun, head of China equity strategy at HSBC, said on CNBC Asia's " Squawk Box," referring to the Chinese central bank's strategy.
Chinese banks were among the most heavily sold stocks on Monday, with the smaller lenders viewed as more dependent on short-term interbank funding suffering the most. China Minsheng Bank for instance fell more than 9 percent in Shanghai, while Ping An Bank slumped more than 8 percent.
Equity strategists said that while they did not expect China's stock market to be poised for a crash - an unanticipated and sharp drop in stock prices - the outlook was not great.
(Read More: Hedge Fund Manager Sees Stock Market Crash in China)
" I don't understand why they [China's central bank] are doing this. If you look at the way markets are trading, banks are trading, there is lots of uncertainty," Clay Carter, head of international equities at Perennial Investment Partners, told CNBC Asia's " Cash Flow." " It is one reason to stay away from Chinese equities at the moment."
— By CNBC.Com's Dhara Ranasinghe, Follow her on Twitter: @DharaCNBC
CNBC.com | Monday, 24 Jun 2013 | 2:09 AM ET
China's beleaguered equity markets are not having a good year: first there were worries about weak data and now a credit squeeze that is making investors steer clear of Chinese stocks.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite stock index tumbled almost 5 percent on Monday to its lowest level since early December. The sell-off spilled over into Hong Kong, where the Hang Seng stock index hit its lowest level in more than nine months.
Analysts say that until the tight liquidity conditions facing Chinese lenders ease or economic data improve, equity markets closely related to China are likely to remain under pressure.
Shanghai and Hong Kong are Asia's worst performing major stock markets this year with losses of roughly 12 percent each, followed by South Korea's Kospi, which is down almost 9 percent.
(Read More: What's Really Behind China's Cash Crunch)
" We are seeing ongoing weakness in Chinese stocks because of the credit squeeze and worries about China's economic growth because recent data have disappointed," said Audrey Goh, investment strategist at Standard Chartered in Singapore.
" When will the market stabilize? That is an open question – we need to see the PBOC [People's Bank of China] inject more liquidity and better economic data," she added.
Data last week showing the HSBC Purchasing Manager's Index, a gauge of manufacturing activity, moved deeper into contraction territory in June has fueled concerns that China's economy is slowing faster than anticipated.
U.S. Investment bank Goldman Sachs on Monday became the latest house to downgrade its forecast for Chinese economic growth, citing the tighter liquidity conditions as a reason for the move. 100837344
China's money markets have been under severe strain, with the key seven-day repo rate hitting a record high above 10 percent last week. The country's central bank has deliberately avoided pumping significant amounts of cash into the system in a bid to force local lenders to rein in credit growth which has reached worrying levels.
(Read More: China Stocks Bear Brunt of Growth Fears)
On Monday the central bank said that there were sufficient funds in the market, but banks need to improve their cash management, Reuters reported.
" It's all good in the long-run but in the short-term it is creating volatility in the financial markets when you're trying to control financial sector risk," Steven Sun, head of China equity strategy at HSBC, said on CNBC Asia's " Squawk Box," referring to the Chinese central bank's strategy.
Chinese banks were among the most heavily sold stocks on Monday, with the smaller lenders viewed as more dependent on short-term interbank funding suffering the most. China Minsheng Bank for instance fell more than 9 percent in Shanghai, while Ping An Bank slumped more than 8 percent.
Equity strategists said that while they did not expect China's stock market to be poised for a crash - an unanticipated and sharp drop in stock prices - the outlook was not great.
(Read More: Hedge Fund Manager Sees Stock Market Crash in China)
" I don't understand why they [China's central bank] are doing this. If you look at the way markets are trading, banks are trading, there is lots of uncertainty," Clay Carter, head of international equities at Perennial Investment Partners, told CNBC Asia's " Cash Flow." " It is one reason to stay away from Chinese equities at the moment."
— By CNBC.Com's Dhara Ranasinghe, Follow her on Twitter: @DharaCNBC