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handon
    29-Jun-2009 21:14  
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BAC >14 this week.... see my boss right or not.... hehe.... Smiley

long live BAC... CBA.... ABC... hehe... Smiley
 
 
dealer0168
    29-Jun-2009 20:21  
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U.S. Stock-Index Futures Advance: Signal Rebound for S&P 500

By Sarah Jones June 29 (Bloomberg)

-- U.S. stock futures rose, indicating the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index may rebound following its first back-to-back weekly decline since March, as higher oil prices lifted energy producers. Exxon Mobil Corp. and ConocoPhillips increased in Germany. J.C. Penney Co. gained 1.2 percent after Morgan Stanley raised its recommendation for the third-largest U.S. department-store chain to “overweight.” Biogen Idec Inc. declined 1.1 percent as Deutsche Bank AG downgraded the shares and the biotechnology company said another patient using its multiple sclerosis drug was diagnosed with a brain illness. Futures on the S&P 500 expiring in September added 0.3 percent to 916.40 at 12:17 p.m. in London. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures climbed 0.3 percent to 8,394 and Nasdaq-100 Index futures gained 0.3 percent to 1,481.75. Stocks in Europe rose, while Asian shares dropped. The S&P 500, whose gain in the past three months was the steepest in seven decades, is rallying in tandem with benchmark measures for raw materials, developing-country equities and hedge funds. The so-called correlation coefficient that measures how closely markets rise and fall together has reached the highest levels ever, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. “It’s nice that have had a bit of a bounce in the market, but there is still a wall of worry that can be climbed,” said John Haynes, a U.S. equities strategist at Rensburg Sheppards Plc in London. “The consolidation we have seen is not unreasonable, but the next few quarters are going to be an interesting test for sentiment.” Volatility Gauge U.S. stocks declined last week as the highest American savings rate in 15 years spurred concern that consumer spending will slow and oil retreated. The S&P 500 has still rebounded 36 percent since reaching a 12-year low on March 9 amid speculation the deterioration in the global economy is slowing. While the S&P 500 has fallen in the past two weeks, the benchmark gauge for measuring the cost of using options as insurance against declines in stocks has slid to the lowest level since the last session before Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history. The VIX, as the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index is known, has dropped to 25.93 from a record 80.86 in November. That’s still above the 20.18 average over its 19-year history. Exxon, the largest U.S. oil producer, added 0.4 percent to $69.34, while ConocoPhillips rose 0.8 percent to $41.96. Crude gained as much as 0.7 percent to $69.67 a barrel in New York, recouping an earlier 1.2 percent loss. J.C. Penney, Biogen J.C. Penney climbed 1.2 percent to $28.72 in early New York trading. Morgan Stanley upgraded the shares to “overweight” from “equal-weight,” saying the retailer is the “most likely candidate in the department store group to outperform current consensus gross margin expectations in the second half of 2009 and beyond.” The shares didn’t trade in Europe. Biogen fell 1.1 percent to $49.53 in Germany after Deutsche Bank downgraded the shares to “hold” from “buy,” saying they were now “fairly valued.” Separately, Biogen said a case of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy was confirmed in a Tysabri patient on June 23. It was the 10th case confirmed since the treatment was reintroduced in July 2006.



Chua_01      ( Date: 29-Jun-2009 19:32) Posted:



Hi, dealer0168, any idea why green ?

 
 
Chua_01
    29-Jun-2009 19:32  
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Hi, dealer0168, any idea why green ?
 

 
dealer0168
    29-Jun-2009 18:52  
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Dow future is green...........Smiley
 
 
handon
    28-Jun-2009 20:48  
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dow footing at 8.3 solid like elephant....

BAC weak holders kena wipe out liao......

long live BAC... my boss may start to buy me cigarettes liao...

hehe.... Smiley
 
 
iPunter
    28-Jun-2009 19:00  
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Hahaha...

This is a time when shivering chilled frogs begin to be warmed up again... hehehe...

 "Cheong Aaarrrhhhh!!!" ... Smiley

 

 
Hulumas
    28-Jun-2009 18:43  
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This time you are right,,,,,,,,STI is "CHEONG...ONG...ONG...ONG".

iPunter      ( Date: 27-Jun-2009 10:46) Posted:



Hope it "Cheong Aarrrhhhh!!!" and "Cheong Aarrrhhhh!!!" ...

So NickyNg can be back in business again.. hehehe...  Smiley

 
 
aleoleo
    28-Jun-2009 18:40  
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Economic Preview

Jun 28, 2009, 12:01 a.m. EST

Damp conditions to limit fireworks from ISM, payrolls

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By Greg Robb, MarketWatch

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Damp economic conditions may limit any positive fireworks from key economic data this week, with several reports packed into a holiday-shortened week showing only modest improvement, economists said.

In its policy statement this week, the Federal Reserve said it was less worried about the economic outlook than it has been in some time, and that recent data "suggests that the pace of economic contraction is slowing." But it stressed that economic activity "is likely to remain weak for a time." See full story.

Payrolls



The key report next week will be the June reading on the health of the labor market, which has seen a steep downturn over the past 18 months amid expectations that unemployment will soon be over 10%.

"Since January last year, over 6 million jobs have been lost, and there is no indication that the layoffs will end any time soon," noted Millan Mulraine, economics strategist at TD Securities, in a note to clients.

The best that can be hoped for is that the pace of job losses continues to ease. After peaking at 741,000 in January, job losses moderated to 345,000 in May.

Economists are split on whether firms will cut payrolls by more than this benchmark.

The median forecast of economists surveyed by MarketWatch is for job losses to decline by 325,000, a slight improvement from May.

With Independence Day observed on Friday, the numbers will be released on Thursday at 8:30 a.m. Eastern.

The unemployment rate is expected to rise to 9.6%, not such a big jump compared to prior months.

Several analysts are skeptical, however.

James O'Sullivan, economist at UBS Securities, said that job losses could total over 400,000 in June as college students find it difficult to get work.

On the more optimistic side, Nigel Gault, chief US economist at IHS Global Insight, predicted job losses of 300,000.

"We're laying the groundwork to a bottom in activity in the third quarter," Gault said.

ISM



The second key data point this week will be the ISM factory index, a nationwide look at the manufacturing sector that tends to track the broad economy. It is expected to be the more positive than the job report.

The ISM is a diffusion index, with readings below 50% showing that more manufacturers are growing than contracting. It's a measure of the breadth of economic health across industries and companies.

After hitting a low of 32.9%, the ISM index has been clawing its way back towards 50%. It rose to 42.8% in May. Even more importantly, the new order sub-index rose above 50%.

Boosting expectations of a good report, the government reported that durable-goods orders rose 1.8% in May, well above expectations.

Economists surveyed by MarketWatch expect the ISM to rise to 44.0% in June after rising to 42.8% in May. This would be the fastest pace in ten months. The figure will be released on Wednesday at 10 a.m. Eastern.

Overall, economists said that fireworks may be in order later this year, perhaps by Labor Day, if the ISM factory index rises above 50% and job losses slow to a trickle.

Greg Robb is a senior reporter for MarketWatch in Washington.

 
 
aleoleo
    28-Jun-2009 18:25  
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Jun 26, 2009, 8:05 p.m. EST

Four banks fail, bringing 2009 tally to 44



By John Letzing, MarketWatch

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Four banks in Georgia, Minnesota and California were closed by regulators Friday, as the ongoing credit crisis continued to claim victims.

Villa Rica, Ga.-based Community Bank of West Georgia and Newman, Ga.-based Neighborhood Community Bank were closed, as were Irvine, Calif.-based MetroPacific Bank and Pine City, Minn.-based Horizon Bank. The closures brought the national tally this year to 44, and marked the ninth so far in Georgia.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said in a statement that it will mail checks to insured depositors at Community Bank of West Georgia on Monday. An institution able to assume the failed bank's deposits could not be found, the FDIC added.

Community Bank of West Georgia had $199.4 million in assets and $182.5 million in deposits as of May 15, according to the regulator, which said that at the time of the closing the bank had roughly $1.1 million in deposits that exceeded the $250,000 limit for insurance.

The FDIC estimated that the failure of Community Bank of West Georgia will cost its deposit insurance fund roughly $85 million.

Neighborhood Community Bank had $221.6 million in assets and $191.3 million in deposits as of March 31, the FDIC said.

The regulator said that West Point, Ga.-based CharterBank will assume National Community Bank's deposits, and that offices of National Community will reopen as branches of CharterBank.

CharterBank also agreed to buy $209.6 million worth of the failed bank's assets.

The failure of National Community will cost the deposit insurance fund $66.7 million, the FDIC added.

Minnesota-based Horizon Bank had $87.6 million in assets and $69.4 million in deposits as of March 31, the FDIC said. The failed bank's deposits will be assumed by St. Cloud, Minn.-based Stearns Bank, National Association.

The cost of Horizon Bank's failure to the deposit insurance fund will be $33.5 million, the FDIC added.

California-based MetroPacific Bank had $80 million in assets and $73 million in deposits, according to the regulator. The failed bank's deposits have been assumed by Tustin, Calif.-based Sunwest Bank.

The cost of MetroPacific Bank's failure to the deposit insurance fund will be $29 million, the FDIC said.

John Letzing is a MarketWatch reporter based in San Francisco.

 
 
dealer0168
    28-Jun-2009 11:59  
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FSB’s Draghi Sees Signs of Improvement in Economy


By Klaus Wille

June 27 (Bloomberg) -- The world economy is showing “convincing signs of recovery,” Mario Draghi, chairman of the newly created Financial Stability Board, said today after its first meeting.

“We observe signs of improvement here and there,” Draghi, who is also a member of the European Central Bank council and governor of the Bank of Italy, said in Basel, Switzerland. “Still, the fragilities of the economy and the financial system are there.”

The Basel-based board, which succeeds the Financial Stability Forum, will look at risks to financial markets and ensure that regulators in each country act upon them. Its members represent economies from Argentina to the United States and institutions such as the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

The global recession is showing signs of easing as financial markets thaw. Government reports this week showed that Europe’s manufacturing and service industries contracted at the slowest pace in nine months in June, while U.S. consumer spending rose in May. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development raised its forecast for the economy of its 30 member nations for the first time in two years this week.

The Financial Stability Board “noted signs of improvement in the global macroeconomic outlook and in some financial markets,” Draghi said. “Banks have raised capital from the private sector, but the process of restructuring and strengthening bank balance sheets is not yet completed. Corporate bond markets continue to see strong primary issuance.”

$1.4 Trillion of Losses

Financial institutions around the world have amassed losses of more than $1.4 trillion during the financial crisis, data compiled by Bloomberg show. In Europe, governments and central banks are on the hook for more than 3.7 trillion euros ($5.2 trillion) of guarantees and funding. UBS AG, the European bank with the biggest losses from the credit crisis, said on June 25 it expects a second-quarter loss.

In response, governments and central banks are tightening banking rules to strengthen the global financial system. U.S. President Barack Obama this month proposed new rules to tighten oversight, while European leaders agreed on a sweeping overhaul of their regulations.

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, a member of the Financial Stability Board, will “make an integrated proposal to strengthen the capital and liquidity regime by end-2009,” Draghi said, including requirements to address systemic risk.

Leverage Ratios

The Swiss National Bank on June 18 said UBS and Credit Suisse Group AG must increase the amount of capital they hold in relation to assets to withstand any further losses. The banks should aim for a so-called leverage ratio of at least 5 percent once the crisis is over, the SNB said, meaning the capital base should account for at least 5 percent of the balance sheet total. UBS’s ratio was 2.56 percent at the end of March.

Draghi said as a complement to the risk-weighted leverage ratios of the Basel 2 banking framework, regulators should consider a simpler figure.

“Basel 2 is a very sophisticated way of determining a leverage ratio,” he said. “In the end you come up with a leverage ratio but it’s the product of many different assessments of risk for different categories of assets under different markets conditions. What we are seeing is that markets have a simpler view. They want to look at some number.”
 

 
dealer0168
    27-Jun-2009 15:35  
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Oil prices hit reverse as Wall Street slips
Posted: 26 June 2009 2351 hrs

 
 
Photos 1 of 1

An oil rig out to sea south of Lagos
   
 


 


LONDON : Oil prices fell Friday, mirroring losses on Wall Street, as traders took profits after earlier jumping above 71 dollars per barrel on news of fresh unrest in key crude producer Nigeria.

New York's main futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in August, shed 94 cents to 69.29 dollars a barrel.

In London, Brent North Sea crude for August dipped 86 cents to 68.92 dollars.

Wall Street shares sank at the open on Friday, one day after a rally, as investors locked in profits and turned cautious ahead of the weekend.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 0.54 percent to 8,426.75 in opening trades, while the broad-market Standard & Poor's 500 shed 0.53 percent to 915.41.

"We are not getting support from equities with the S&P 500 trading lower," said Tradition Energy analyst Gene McGillian, cited by Dow Jones Newswires.

"The (oil) market wants to see if it can sustain the rally," he added.

Crude futures had bounced higher in earlier trade after Nigeria's main rebel group said it had launched a fresh attack against an oil installation in the south of the country.

Traders said oil had also won support from a weaker dollar which tends to push up demand for the commodity.

"While the markets are adding a geopolitical risk premium for OPEC member Nigeria's supply concerns, it is less than what would have been in other market conditions amid the current large level of commercial stocks and spare capacity at the moment," said Nimit Khamar, energy analyst at Sucden brokers in London.

"However, market participants remain on edge as it appears unlikely that OPEC would increase production in order to compensate for Nigeria's loss of supply."

Nigerian rebels attacked another oil installation in the country's main producing region despite President Umaru Yar'Adua's offer of an amnesty.

Militants from the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) said in a statement that late on Thursday they launched the attack after an army raid on a village that came despite the amnesty offer.

A spokesman for the Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell told AFP that the facility was operated by local company Sahara Oil but was close to a Shell installation.

MEND on Thursday carried out a pre-dawn attack against Royal Dutch Shell facilities in a warning to Russia not to invest in the country's oil and gas industry made during a visit to Nigeria by Russian President Dimitry Medvedev.

Yar'Adua on Thursday offered Niger Delta militants the amnesty to try to halt attacks on the oil industry that have cut the country's production by a quarter over the past three years.

MEND, which regularly attacks energy facilities, demands a fairer share of oil wealth for locals in the Delta region. Its activities have badly hit Nigeria's oil output, cutting daily production from around 2.6 million barrels in 2006 to some 1.8 million barrels now.

Dealers said oil had also found support from a weaker dollar, which makes dollar-priced oil cheaper to holders of stronger currencies, encouraging demand and leading to higher prices.

Crude fell mid-week as the dollar strengthened -- making oil more expensive for foreign buyers --- and after the United States reported mixed energy inventory data which traders said was supportive overall.

 
 
iPunter
    27-Jun-2009 10:46  
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Hope it "Cheong Aarrrhhhh!!!" and "Cheong Aarrrhhhh!!!" ...

So NickyNg can be back in business again.. hehehe...  Smiley
 
 
dealer0168
    27-Jun-2009 09:19  
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Ooo emm maybe all big investor went to Michael Jackson funeral............

Thus no one push the DOW index. Hope next week is better.....
 
 
iPunter
    27-Jun-2009 06:18  
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For the whole day, from start of trading till closing, the Dow has remained 'well below water, in minus territory!'...  Smiley
 
 
dealer0168
    26-Jun-2009 23:29  
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Emm but still hope that at end of the day, we can still see a + result.Smiley

N Monday, STI surge upwards still continue. Smiley

Going to bed liao, sweet dream to all investor............ Cheers.



richtan      ( Date: 26-Jun-2009 23:15) Posted:

Profit-taking is to be expected as yesterday had already rally up 172 points.

dealer0168      ( Date: 26-Jun-2009 21:42) Posted:



Monitoring DOW time now:

<LIVE CHART>

 


 

 
richtan
    26-Jun-2009 23:15  
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Profit-taking is to be expected as yesterday had already rally up 172 points.

dealer0168      ( Date: 26-Jun-2009 21:42) Posted:



Monitoring DOW time now:

<LIVE CHART>

 

 
 
thomas_low
    26-Jun-2009 21:43  
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There is no choice for the mutual fund managers but to reluctant buy to "pull the wools over the eyes of their investors", so up to end of the month they cant go low on popular stocks. Not so populars ones will get hit. So create a fantastic opportunity to bottom fishing for longing those not so popular stocks..
 
 
dealer0168
    26-Jun-2009 21:42  
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Monitoring DOW time now:

<LIVE CHART>

 
 
 
dealer0168
    26-Jun-2009 21:38  
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U.S. Consumer Spending Rose, Incomes Gained in May



By Shobhana Chandra


June 26 (Bloomberg) -- Consumer spending rose for the first time in three months in May as incomes jumped by the most in a year, a sign that government efforts to revive the economy may be starting to pay off.

The 0.3 percent gain in purchases followed no change in April, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Incomes surged 1.4 percent, reflecting tax cuts and Social Security payments from the Obama administration’s stimulus and driving up the savings rate to a 15-year high.

Government efforts to restore the flow of credit and prop up incomes are making it possible for consumers to spend even as unemployment climbs to levels last seen in the early 1980s. The loss of wealth caused by the worst housing slump in seven decades will prompt households to keep rebuilding savings, indicating an economic recovery will be slow to develop.

“Consumer spending has largely stabilized,” said James O’Sullivan, a senior economist at UBS Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. Stimulus-related measures “have contributed to increasing spending power. It sets the stage for more growth in consumption, and should help jumpstart the economy. Ultimately, we need the labor market to kick in as well,” he said.

Treasuries, Stocks

Treasuries advanced after the report, which also showed that inflation slowed last month. Yields on benchmark 10-year notes slipped to 3.50 percent at 9:05 a.m. in New York, from 3.54 percent late yesterday. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index were down 0.5 percent at 912.30.

Economists had forecast spending would rise 0.3 percent, after an originally reported 0.1 percent drop in April, according to the median of 76 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Projections ranged from no change to a 0.6 percent increase.

Wages and salaries dropped 0.1 percent in May, showing the effects of mounting job losses.

Today’s report also showed inflation moderated. The price gauge tied to spending patterns rose 0.1 percent from May 2008, the smallest gain since records began in 1959. The Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge of prices, which excludes food and fuel, rose 0.1 percent from a month earlier and was up 1.8 percent from a year earlier.

Adjusted for inflation, spending climbed 0.2 percent, following a 0.1 percent drop the prior month.

Savings Climb

Because the increase in spending was smaller than the gain in incomes, the savings rate surged to 6.9 percent, the highest level since December 1993. The rate may drop back in coming months as the effects of the stimulus wane.

Disposable income, or the money left over after taxes, increased 1.6 percent, after climbing 1.3 percent the previous month. Adjusted for inflation, disposable income also rose 1.6 percent.

Inflation-adjusted spending on durable goods, such as autos, furniture, and other long-lasting items, gained 0.9 percent last month after falling 1.3 percent in April.

U.S. auto sales rose to a 9.9 million-unit rate in May from 9.3 million the prior month. Industry estimates for June show the rate may exceed 10 million for the first time this year.

Consumer purchases of non-durable goods increased 0.4 percent after dropping 0.4 percent, today’s report showed.

Spending on services, the largest category, was unchanged in May.

Consumer Spending

Consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, rose in the first quarter at a 1.4 percent rate after falling in the last half of 2008 by the most since 1980, according to revised figures from Commerce yesterday. The economy shrank at a 5.5 percent annual rate from January to March, the revisions also showed.

Purchases may drop at a 0.6 percent annual rate this quarter before growing again in the second half of the year, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg this month.

Job losses are one reason for the projected decline. The unemployment rate, which reached a 25-year high of 9.4 percent last month, probably rose to 9.6 percent in June, economists predicted ahead of the government’s monthly jobs report due next week. The rate may climb to 10 percent by year-end, according to the survey.

Still companies like Hertz Global Holdings Inc. are among those seeing an improvement. The second-largest U.S. rental-car company yesterday forecast it will return to profit in the second quarter, after declines in business and consumer travel triggered two consecutive quarters of losses.

“Our car rental demand in the U.S. and Europe has stabilized,” Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Mark Frissora said in a statement. Summer peak reservations are “better-than- anticipated.”

Other retailers report Americans aren’t splurging. Kroger Co., the U.S. grocery chain that also operates Ralphs and Food 4 Less stores, said lower-priced store brands drew customers, helping lift first-quarter profit by 13 percent.

“Shoppers remain cautious in this economy, and we do not anticipate that changing anytime soon,” Chief Executive Officer David Dillon said on a conference call with analysts this week.
 
 
dealer0168
    26-Jun-2009 18:10  
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Emm, BDI index still dropping...........

Bulk shipping companies: The Baltic Dry Index, which measures the cost of shipping commodities, lost 1.3% yesterday in London, bringing declines in the past five days to 9.1%.
 
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