
merlin_magic ( Date: 26-Sep-2012 10:27) Posted:
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i wonder how the dividend will be.........
anyway i will long little bit if it keep falling cheers 
when the market in fear, be greedy.
when the market in greed, be fearful。
i just bought 200 lots, hopefully it will surge soon.. huat ar~ 
qtr end soon teamasick financial reports urgly ba
need to sell to get back into green ....
more they sell more the price will chiong cos will be holding by others then teamasick.......
 
Something go up must come down and something came down should went up.
This is the game we are facing.
Even if you are good on chart reading you may also not easily spot it, Unlike US stock its much more smooth for trading.
niuyear ( Date: 26-Sep-2012 09:07) Posted:
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yabbest ( Date: 26-Sep-2012 09:03) Posted:
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they sold ard 3.24 region, now trading 3.16
im sure they will buy back some other days, its biz  
Thanks mate, no worries wont blame anyone but only blame Mr. Market... LOL!!!
Queing at 3.34 get out the boat and going to get some other cyclical stock instead of defensive.
Any stock recommended? Lets huat together...
steadylar ( Date: 19-Sep-2012 12:08) Posted:
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WSCCCCCC ( Date: 14-Sep-2012 14:35) Posted:
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On Tuesday, Singtel re-test the support at $3.29 and closed at $3.32 with regular volume of 13.97 million shares traded.
Both RSI & MACD are flat as RSI trend sideways.
Important Resistance of Singtel: $3.39
Immediate Support of Singtel: $3.29
Currently prices are supported by 100 days MA at $3.29.
Since 10/Aug, prices .............      READ MORE
 
my personal preference is to keep telco for short to mid term but this depends on individual's opportunity cost. my line of thought for telco is that its relatively more stable than some others and they distribute dividends over the years. 
I tink cost at 3.34 is still ok though i sold at 3.4 and grab back at 3.31. my guts feel is that singtel will probably move back to 3.37 or slightly higher in the near future gaven that there will be another round of dividend end yr.
Starhub still my favourite and I curse myself for letting go at 3.30+....as over the period that I kip lking at tis counter, i find it a pretty tough counter.
above personal opinion oni hor.....gd luck.
rutheone1905 ( Date: 18-Sep-2012 09:11) Posted:
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just asked urself these few questions:
1) dump as in cut loss or dump with profit?
2) if cut loss the money from dump can reap profit from other counters? 
WSCCCCCC ( Date: 14-Sep-2012 14:35) Posted:
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Why Telecom Investors Should Be Wary of Record iPhone 5 Sales
Technology Reporter
Apple’s iPhone 5 is on track to be the fastest selling smartphone ever — a record 2 million phones sold on the first day of pre-order last Friday — but for wireless carriers like AT& T and Verizon Communications, the launch will serve as a key test. Are carrier stocks to remain reliable long-term, dividend-paying investments, or are they on their way to becoming trading vehicles timed to smartphone launch cycle dynamics?
Apple’s newest smartphone may disrupt a strong earnings environment for wireless carriers, exposing the recent strength of AT& T [T 37.60 0.34 (+0.91%)
] and Verizon to be driven by cyclical factors as opposed to sustainable strength. At the forefront of investor concern are subsidies that the carriers pay to Apple to sell new phones at a palatable price for consumers.
In the past, new iPhone launches have been a profit-draining proposition because carriers pay as much as $500 a phone in subsidies.
Currently, Apple [AAPL 699.781 8.501 (+1.23%)
] is challenging a record high share price of $700 on expectations of the new phone, while wireless carriers AT& T and Verizon sit near one-year highs. Blockbuster iPhone 5 sales could drive Apple shares, according to analysts, while carriers may be negatively impacted by subsidies in the near-term.
Already, analysts are warning that iPhone 5 subsidies may have a negative earnings impact on AT& T and Verizon [VZ 44.58 0.05 (+0.11%)
] , with the prospect that swarms of subsidized new users and phone upgrades hit at profitability into 2013. Meanwhile, amid iPhone 5 pandemonium and expectations that the LTE-enabled device will pull consumers to top networks and potentially away from struggling players like Sprint Nextel [S 5.27
0.01 (+0.19%)
] , it’s the latter who may be buffeted from earnings wrecking subsidies.
“We continue to believe that Sprint will capture its fair share of iPhone sales, while its upgrade and churn rates are likely to see smaller swings in part because Sprint has not seen as much benefit over the last two quarters as AT& T and Verizon,” writes Shing Yin, an analyst with Guggenheim Securities in a recent note to clients.
 
Because upgrades and new subscribers from other networks — the so-called “churn” — are likely biggest at AT& T and Verizon, Yin sees current profit margin expectations at risk. “We believe strong wireless margins have been a major driver of AT& T’s and Verizon’s outperformance since [the first quarter] if margins dip significantly, we believe both stocks could give back some of their recent gains,” the analyst notes.
On Monday, AT& T said it set weekend sales records on the launch of the iPhone 5. “Customers ordered more iPhones from AT& T than any previous model both on its first day of preorders and over the weekend,” said AT& T in a press release. The two million iPhone 5 orders already in will begin to be delivered on Sept. 21.
Apple’s sooner-than-expected iPhone 5 launch date and shipments are a key theme for lowered expectations on the Wall Street in assessing third-quarter carrier earnings. On Friday, Stifel Nicolaus analyst Christopher King cut his “buy” ratings on AT& T and Verizon as a result of iPhone 5 shipments in the quarter, which ends on Sept 30.
“[We] believe potential downside to earnings estimates exist as we enter into the back half of the year,” writes King, who estimates AT& T’s wireless service margins may fall by 12.6 percent by year-end, while Verizon’s may fall by 5.3 percent.
Todd Rethmeier, an analyst at Hudson Square Research recently cut AT& T from a “buy” to a “hold,” citing the impact of the iPhone 5.
Longtime carrier bear Craig Moffett of Bernstein Research calculates AT& T’s third-quarter margins could fall by 360 basis points and Verizon’s by 270 basis points as a result of the iPhone 5. However, Moffett does not espouse more optimism on Sprint, arguing it faces a similar-sized margin drop.
 
For investors, taking a long-term view of the iPhone 5 launch may trump any short-term earnings dent and the fears that in a worst-case scenario, declining carrier margins could show the cyclical nature of carrier earnings, poking holes in the argument that these stocks are safe, dividend-yielding investments.
Yin of Guggenheim Securities, though, goes beyond the iPhone 5 launch in forecasting difficulty for the carriers that lingers through future launch cycles. In fact, he views the carriers as being better positioned as a smart and recurrent trade rather than a “safe” long-term investment.
“[Other] smartphone makers are now timing their major new product releases to be coincident with the iPhone.... this likely means upgrade patterns — and therefore subsidy expense and margins — will become increasingly cyclical over time, as not only iPhone users but Android and Windows users get accustomed to waiting for new models every fall,” the analyst writes.