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xing78
    11-Jul-2011 16:15  
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No one cheering this counter on?

All camping @ Capitaland ? 
 
 
hlfoo2010
    07-Jul-2011 00:28  
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citrus
    06-Jul-2011 22:42  
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Friday May 13, 2011

Get ready for more heat

By YU JI
yuji@thestar.com.my



KUCHING: Miri and Limbang in the northern region are forecasted to receive 20% to 40% less rain than average in the coming months.

Malaysian Meteorological Department state director Wong Teck Kiong said northern Sarawak would receive the brunt of the hot and dry south-west winds. A large section of western Sabah is expected to be affected as well.

Sarawak is now experiencing the end of La Nina, which had brought with it unusually wet weather since last year.

El Nino — the opposite of La Nina — would not occur this year, Wong assured, although northern Sarawak was expected to receive just 150mm to 250mm monthly rainfall ahead.
Burning up: Satellite imagery showing four hot spots in Borneo. All are in West Kalimantan, just above the equator. — Photo courtesy of the Malaysian Meteorological Department


“Central and southern Sarawak have reverted back to ‘neutral’ dry weather, meaning the periods of dry spells could last days, some might last weeks,” Wong told The Star yesterday.

Traditionally, the driest month is August, with inter-monsoon returning by September.

In the past week, maximum temperatures have reached 36° Celsius in the state capital. The recorded hottest temperature in Sarawak was in 1998, during the haze emergency, at 38° Celsius.

The hottest record for Malaysia was 40.1° Celsius in Perlis on April 9, 1998, according to a department report.

With the return of the dry season, so has the haze. At noon yesterday, satellite imagery showed four hot spots in Borneo. All were located in West Kalimantan, close to Sarawak’s Lundu-Kuching-Samarahan region.

Visibility in the past few days had hovered around 8km in Kuching while it dropped to 6km in Miri at noon yesterday. “To state the obvious, since La Nina has ended, this year’s dry season will definitely be hotter than last year’s. Further episodes of haze cannot be ruled out,” Wong said.

“The hottest time of the day is just after noon, lasting two to three hours after that. With the south-west winds, when it does rain, it will be pre-dawn to early morning or in the afternoon.”

On the possibility of cloud-seeding, Wong said this extreme measure was always on the cards depending on the seriousness of the haze and water reserve levels at reservoirs.

“But if it is really very dry then we also cannot make something out of nothing, so to speak.”

The last cloud seeding was in 2009.

Up until August, MET’s latest report has Kuching receiving 200mm and 300mm monthly rainfall. Bintulu should be the wettest in Sarawak with an estimated 380mm monthly rainfall.

So far, Sarawak and Sabah have largely escaped the “annual” haze season. In Peninsular Malaysia, a handful of areas are at unhealthy levels. Visibility yesterday at Butterworth and Sepang were less than 4km.

“We can’t tell clearly how serious the haze could be in Sarawak,” Wong said. “But please, no open burning and given the high temperatures, I would also advise avoiding vigorous outdoor activities. Drink lots of water.”
 

 
citrus
    06-Jul-2011 22:33  
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weather rather dry so far:



  Monthly Rain Information

http://www.bmkg.go.id/BMKG_Pusat/CLIMATOLOGY/HujanBulanan_EN.bmkg

Rainfall Analysis:

 
 
hlfoo2010
    03-Jul-2011 17:25  
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Indonesia winning the war on coal exports

PUBLISHED : 30 JUN 2011 07:09:53 | UPDATED: 01 JUL 2011 07:40:06 email print-font+font

A suite of Australian coal companies are turning their focus to the booming Indonesia coal sector as Indonesia moves towards becoming the world’s largest coal producing nation.
 
 
citrus
    03-Jul-2011 13:42  
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excerpts from article:

Best IPO Coal India Gains 67% Among Initial Sales of $1 Billion

Bloomberg Markets Magazine
Partha S Bhattacharyya, chairman of Coal India Ltd.

Partha S Bhattacharyya, chairman of Coal India Ltd., attends the listing ceremony of Coal India Ltd. at Bombay stock exchange in Mumbai, India, on Nov. 4, 2010. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg



Money manager William Fries went to India in the summer of 2010 in search of investments for his Thornburg International Value Fund. Visiting companies in Mumbai and Delhi, he found they kept diesel backup generators on hand for the power interruptions that are common as the country struggles with an inadequate electricity supply.

That led Fries, four months later, to buy shares in the $3.5 billion initial public offering of Coal India Ltd. (COAL), the state-owned coal producer. He reasoned that sales of India’s main power-plant fuel would grow as more generation is added, helping the company’s earnings.

The bet has paid off. Coal India shares soared 67 percent through May 31 from their price in the IPO on Oct. 25. That’s the best performance for any initial share sale that raised $1 billion or more in the fourth quarter of 2010, the busiest quarter ever for new share issuance.

Returns were positive for 11 of the 14 sales in this ranking, Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its August issue. The average gain was 15 percent.

Fries, a managing director at Thornburg Investment Management Inc. in Santa Fe, New Mexico, continued buying Coal India as the shares climbed after the IPO. “The demand for their product is going to be there,” he says. “India has a big shortage of electricity, and they’re going to be building lots of power plants over the next decade.”

Commodities Companies



The third-best performer, after Coal India, was Malaysia’s Petronas Chemicals Group Bhd. (PCHEM), which was spun off by the state- owned oil exploration and production company. Its shares gained 39 percent through May. In fourth place, Australia’s QR National Ltd. (QRN), a coal-train operator that was sold by the Queensland state government, returned 35 percent.

The Coal India IPO was the biggest in Indian history. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government took advantage of rising equity markets to sell the world’s largest coal producer, part of a campaign to shed state-owned assets.

“There was no doubt Coal India would be the star deal of the disinvestment program,” says Sumit Bose, secretary of the Department of Disinvestment, which runs the government privatizations. “But we hadn’t anticipated the response to it would be so strong.”

The IPO has been a bonanza for buyers compared with the benchmark Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index, which lost 8.9 percent during the same period amid concern that accelerating inflation might derail the country’s growth. Coal India stock outperformed the MSCI World Index almost sevenfold.

Sold at a Discount



The shares were offered at a discount to other publicly traded coal producers such as Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU) in the U.S. or China Shenhua Energy Co., based on price-earnings ratios. Investors bid for at least $48.7 billion of Coal India shares, or 14 times what was offered.

Aside from the Indian government, Thornburg Investment was the biggest holder of Coal India stock in late May, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from regulatory filings. Fries’s $30 billion International Value Fund returned 7.4 percent through the first five months of this year.
 

 
citrus
    02-Jul-2011 04:13  
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Straits Asia Call Warrants 1 July 2011 S$2.80 1.0----these just expired, explains the trading on friday where price was being pressed down
 
 
citrus
    01-Jul-2011 13:54  
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old news but worth noting:

Itochu buys $1.5bn Colombia coal stake



by Mai Mizuta of mergermarket

Itochu, the Japanese trading house, pulled off a coup this week, beating both Xstrata and Glencore to acquire a 20 per cent stake in Drummond International’s Colombian coal mining operation. The deal, worth an eye-watering US$1.52bn, reveals a renewed hunger for thermal coal as a looming power deficit hangs over earthquake-hit Japan.



Thursday’s transactions values the assets of Drummond International’s Colombian operation at $7.6bn, a significant premium to a total value perceived by other bidders of $6bn. As the FT reports, the deal will give the Japanese conglomerate “rights” to sell Colombian coal in Japan.

Itochu already has a presence in Colombia in the auto parts and life sciences space, but this will be its first mining deal in the region and is in line with its diversification strategy. Itochu currently sources the majority of its energy supplies from Australia.

Itochu will establish a new holding company, Itochu Coal Americas, for the units of Drummond International that it will acquire. Capitalized at US $761.75m, the new holding company will be 100 percent owned by Itochu.

The acquisition will provide Itochu with access to seven million tons of coal annually, which is enough to meet 6 percent of coal demands necessary for electricity generation in Japan, according to reports. Itochu said it is looking to raise its share in coal mining operations globally to 20 million metric tons annually in the next four years.

Itochu is attempting to diversify its energy supplies given the nuclear scenario currently playing out in Japan, Penn Bowers, an analyst at brokerage firm CLSA . Coal has a low base-load and is a steady supplier of energy, Bowers said.

But Colombia is a bit of a strange place to be investing in coal because of complicated logistics, and so the question is where these shipments are going to go, Bowers continued.

Itochu, which is a major uranium supplier, already has coal assets through its energy portfolio via stakes held in Australian companies. A few days prior to Thursday’s acquisition, Itochu decided not to renew its agreement with Australia-listed coal explorer Aston Resources. This lead to speculation the Japanese trading company was unable to ink an attractive deal with its erstwhile partner and was seeking raw materials elsewhere.

Itochu, which has a market cap of JPY 1,200bn, is a major energy supplier with an energy profile comprising of oil, gas and uranium. In addition to the aforementioned regions, it also has an energy presence in Indonesia, China and Canada.

 
 
 
Gaecia
    30-Jun-2011 16:40  
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wat's there to buy really..

Kensonic77      ( Date: 30-Jun-2011 16:29) Posted:



 

I am going long liao...


risktaker      ( Date: 27-Jun-2011 16:16) Posted:

When funds buy order comes in then you will cry no tears. I am bullish in SAR after it sell.down but i hold position i was thinking to enter @2.82 but no sellers. i wanted clear up haizz but no one.throw down heavily.


 
 
Kensonic77
    30-Jun-2011 16:29  
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I am going long liao...


risktaker      ( Date: 27-Jun-2011 16:16) Posted:

When funds buy order comes in then you will cry no tears. I am bullish in SAR after it sell.down but i hold position i was thinking to enter @2.82 but no sellers. i wanted clear up haizz but no one.throw down heavily.

alexchia01      ( Date: 17-Jun-2011 11:14) Posted:



I'm expecting StraitsAsia to fall to $2.40 and already given you the stop loss price.

If I'm wrong, you would loss 5%.

If I'm right, you stand to gain 16%.

You decide if you want to take the risk or.

Good luck.




 

 
citrus
    30-Jun-2011 16:15  
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Published June 30, 2011

Bumi listing brings Indonesia's Bakries to London

Listing also rekindles debate on the governance of premium-listed firms

Tuesday's listing of Indonesia-focused Bumi could also serve to redress a corporate governance balance that often tips in favour of institutional investors.



The politically connected Bakries have 55 per cent of Bumi after a complex deal last year that transformed what was then Vallar, a shell set up by Rothschild, into a sizeable player with stakes in two Indonesian coal firms.

The Bakries have only 29.9 per cent of voting rights, a limit intended to protect minority investors. But the potential catapulting of one of Indonesia's best-known political and financial families into the bluechip FTSE 100 index has revived debate over corporate governance safeguards in the sector, particularly in resources firms with large majority owners.

Indra Bakrie, Bumi's chairman, is the younger brother of tycoon Aburizal Bakrie, chairman of the Golkar party, part of Indonesia's ruling coalition.

Though not uncommon elsewhere, hefty founder-shareholders are unusual in the US and UK markets where ownership tends to be dispersed, and miners such as Fresnillo, Antofagasta and Vedanta - all majority owned by their founding families - have been viewed with caution by some institutional investors.

In large part, opaque communications are to blame, and both fund managers and governance specialists agree transparency will be key to the success of companies wanting to use the London market to cash in on the commodities boom.

'You just have to come clean,' the head of UK equities at a British fund management house said. 'If you are in this part of the world, that is one of the major issues you are going to face. A lot of the time (investors) don't know whether something is happening or not until afterwards, which is another reason why a lot of (managers) won't go into these things.'

Potential pitfalls came to the fore earlier this month with a messy power struggle between the board and major shareholders at Kazakh miner ENRC. The spat has left the company bruised, shares battered, and saw two high-profile independent directors ousted.

The solution for Bumi, governance specialists agree, will be remaining as open as it was in its listing prospectus, which detailed fraud risks and allegations of graft among risks to investors over 20 pages. In one instance, it detailed allegations by an Indonesian tax official at the centre of a high profile corruption trial who said that subsidiaries Bumi Resources, KPC and Arutmin paid him US$3 million to settle tax disputes.

Bumi said that Indonesian police had found insufficient evidence to file charges against Bumi Resources, and internal investigations found the allegations 'groundless'.

But Tuesday's listing of Indonesia-focused Bumi could also serve to redress a corporate governance balance that often tips in favour of institutional investors.

'We have to start being less suspicious about these new entrants to the market who are not playing the normal game of investing a small stake and want to buy a larger stake - we have to recognise that has advantages,' Roger Barker, head of corporate governance at the Institute of Directors, said.

'Of course there may be an impact on the share price, a risk premium, but one has to decide - perhaps that is the price worth paying for the benefit of a long-term shareholder.'

Mr Rothschild, Bumi's co-chairman alongside chairman Mr Bakrie, expects Bumi to move into the FTSE 100 index later in the year, but there are still high-profile doubters.

'It never occurred to those of us who helped launch the FTSE 100 index 27 years ago that one day it would be providing a cloak of respectability and lots of passive investors for companies that challenge the canons of corporate governance such as Vedanta, ENRC, Kazakhmys and Fresnillo,' Richard Lambert, former head of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) said.

'Perhaps it is time for those responsible for the index to rethink its purpose,' he wrote in a column in Tuesday's Financial Times focusing on Rothschild's second commodities venture, oil and gas shell Vallares.

Rothschild joined forces with the Bakrie Group last year for Vallar to take a 25 per cent stake in coal miner Bumi Resources and a 75 per cent stake in Berau Coal Energy. - Reuters

 







 

(LONDON) Shares in Bumi plc, the mining venture founded by Nat Rothschild, listed under their new name on Tuesday, giving Indonesia's Bakrie family a foothold in London and rekindling debate on the governance of premium-listed firms.

 


 
 
citrus
    30-Jun-2011 15:47  
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Bought back some alrdy. But tricky cos window-dressing.

 
 
risktaker
    27-Jun-2011 16:16  
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When funds buy order comes in then you will cry no tears. I am bullish in SAR after it sell.down but i hold position i was thinking to enter @2.82 but no sellers. i wanted clear up haizz but no one.throw down heavily.

alexchia01      ( Date: 17-Jun-2011 11:14) Posted:



I'm expecting StraitsAsia to fall to $2.40 and already given you the stop loss price.

If I'm wrong, you would loss 5%.

If I'm right, you stand to gain 16%.

You decide if you want to take the risk or.

Good luck.




hlfoo2010      ( Date: 17-Jun-2011 11:03) Posted:



 

From the News that

" Queensland’s mining industry is expected to lose another $1 billion in coal exports after the Japanese earthquake disaster" .

So soon from now JP will need to stock up at least roughly that amount when   their coal power generating plants   repaired right???

Look at SAR TA chart   i think SAR has one of the most health chart ??????? SO i not sure shorting is safe?????  

 


 
 
Noob79
    27-Jun-2011 15:51  
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Very strong reverse signal....Buy buy buy
 
 
marubozu1688
    25-Jun-2011 16:28  
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Hulumas
    17-Jun-2011 22:08  
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Will recovery buying on August 2011.

hlfoo2010      ( Date: 17-Jun-2011 16:32) Posted:

Left JAB 2.89 vs up   hook 2.9   going on

 
 
hlfoo2010
    17-Jun-2011 16:32  
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Left JAB 2.89 vs up   hook 2.9   going on
 
 
hlfoo2010
    17-Jun-2011 11:42  
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How come Au   have this problems??? 

---Coal miners shop for port swap 

Coal producers in Queensland are actively trading port allocations amid a shortage of available capacity




---COAL miners desperate for port capacity

Demand for stages two and three of the proposed Wiggins Island Coal Export Terminal significantly outweighs available capacity at the port.
 
 
alexchia01
    17-Jun-2011 11:14  
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I'm expecting StraitsAsia to fall to $2.40 and already given you the stop loss price.

If I'm wrong, you would loss 5%.

If I'm right, you stand to gain 16%.

You decide if you want to take the risk or.

Good luck.




hlfoo2010      ( Date: 17-Jun-2011 11:03) Posted:



 

From the News that

" Queensland’s mining industry is expected to lose another $1 billion in coal exports after the Japanese earthquake disaster" .

So soon from now JP will need to stock up at least roughly that amount when   their coal power generating plants   repaired right???

Look at SAR TA chart   i think SAR has one of the most health chart ??????? SO i not sure shorting is safe?????  

 

risktaker      ( Date: 16-Jun-2011 15:33) Posted:

Japan recovery shall kick in 2nd half of the year. Theres gonna be a huge demand and supply gap soon.


 
 
hlfoo2010
    17-Jun-2011 11:03  
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From the News that

" Queensland’s mining industry is expected to lose another $1 billion in coal exports after the Japanese earthquake disaster" .

So soon from now JP will need to stock up at least roughly that amount when   their coal power generating plants   repaired right???

Look at SAR TA chart   i think SAR has one of the most health chart ??????? SO i not sure shorting is safe?????  

 

risktaker      ( Date: 16-Jun-2011 15:33) Posted:

Japan recovery shall kick in 2nd half of the year. Theres gonna be a huge demand and supply gap soon.

 
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