
U are welcome..that's the purpose of this forum...but U hve to be responsible for yr own buy/sell decisions..not like some pple..start blaming if lose $$$ but make $$$ base on following start blaming..hope for the best
kelvinLim123 ( Date: 27-Dec-2012 23:54) Posted:
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Thanks you, noted.
u are generous to share.
starlene ( Date: 27-Dec-2012 23:49) Posted:
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Re: JES still undervalued at 16cts..worth a punt?
At 15.8cts is closed to Dec 2011 level..than 16-19cts in Jan 2012...Feb was 20-23. and Mar to amy wa 19-24.5cts hovering qquite long when it dropped as its gross margin was squeezed from 12 to 7.6 %..but recently with a few contracts awarded in Sept and Nov 2012 and more expected..JES shd hve limited downside from here..recalled a DBS analysts said it was agen and takeover target JES shot to 38cts,,imagines its ipo > 65cts now a fraction of it and co has remained profitable at this price still worth punting with limited downside risks
newbie2012 ( Date: 21-Sep-2012 10:09) Posted:
Guys:
Totally no idea about this stock but went in for 10 lots 2-3 days ago at 0.145(juz to try my luck) haha.
Any idea how it will go?
Cheers
U still holding? At 15.8cts is closed to Dec 2011 level..than 16-19cts in Jan 2012...Feb was 20-23. and Mar to amy wa 19-24.5cts hovering qquite long when it dropped as its gross margin was squeezed from 12 to 7.6 %..but recently with a few contracts awarded in Sept and Nov 2012 and more expected..JES shd hve limited downside from here..recalled a DBS analysts said it was agen and takeover target JES shot to 38cts,,imagines its ipo > 65cts now a fraction of it and co has remained profitable at this price still worth punting with limited downside risks
newbie2012 ( Date: 21-Sep-2012 10:09) Posted:
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JES still undervalued at 16cts..worth a punt?
Will keppel or Sembcorp be looking at JES since it is now in the offshore business ? ... Keppel planning to acquire shipyard in china...
Bloomberg News
Keppel May Acquire China Yard on Oil-Rig Demand: Southeast Asia
By Haslinda Amin and Kyunghee Park on December 18, 2012
Keppel Corp. (KEP), the world’s biggest oil-rig builder, may consider buying a yard in China as the nation boosts offshore drilling to meet rising energy demand.
Keppel, which already has one yard in China making parts for oil rigs, will seek out acquisitions if the government opens offshore projects by state-owned enterprises to foreign companies, Chief Executive Officer Choo Chiau Beng said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday in Singapore.
“If China is willing to open up its market to foreign- invested yards, for example, then of course we would be interested,” Choo said. “Right now, if a Chinese state-owned company wants to build a rig, they go to one of their own yards. In Brazil, we’re given the same chance as everybody else.”
Keppel is targeting emerging markets including China, West Africa and Mexico, as oil producers expand in new areas to offset waning reserves. The Singapore-based rig-builder, which operates yards in its home city as well as in the U.S., Qatar, Brazil and Indonesia, is seeking to move closer to its customers with new locations.
The possible expansion in China comes as the government encourages local shipyards to move into the offshore business. The country is targeting 20 percent of the global market for rigs, production facilities and other offshore products by 2015, according to the China Association of the National Shipbuilding Industry.
Offshore Threat
Chinese shipbuilders boosted output of offshore equipment 22 percent to 22.9 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) in the first 10 months, according to the shipbuilding group. New ship orders slumped 47 percent in the first 11 months to the least since 2003, according to Clarkson Plc, the world’s biggest shipbroker.
“Eventually, the Chinese yards will pose a threat to Keppel in the offshore business,” said Yeak Chee Keong, an analyst at Maybank Kim Eng Research Pte in Singapore, who rates Keppel a buy. “But in the short-term, customers will prefer established yards like Keppel because they know their orders will be delivered on time and on budget.”
Keppel won S$9 billion ($7.4 billion) worth of new orders this year through Nov. 26, helping increase its order book to S$12.2 billion. The company expects to deliver a record 21 rigs next year, exceeding its previous high of 14 in 2009.
The rig-maker has climbed 17 percent this year in Singapore, compared with 19 percent advances for the benchmark Straits Times Index (FSSTI) and its biggest rival, Sembcorp Marine Ltd. (SMM)
Picking Battles
Chinese shipyards Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Ltd. (YZJ) and Jinhai Heavy Industry Co. both announced their first offshore orders this month, helped by lower prices. Yangzijiang’s $170 million order for jack-up rig announced on Dec. 3 was lower than a similar order Keppel secured in April for $205 million. Lower prices are squeezing the profit margins of existing yards, including those operated by Keppel, Choo said.
“We must find new ways to compete, we must find battlefields that we can win,” Choo said. “We don’t compete with the giant in every area. There’s no need to. We can choose our battlefield.”
Keppel is building a second yard in Brazil as state-owned Petroleo Brasileiro SA (PETR4) develops the biggest oil discovery in the Americas in three decades off the country’s coast.
Keppel signed a $4.1 billion order in August to build five semi-submersible rigs for Sete Brasil Participacoes SA, an affiliate of Petrobras. It also received contracts worth $950 million to participate in building two floating oil production units for Petrobras.
The state oil producer is spending $236.5 billion as part of its five-year investment plan. The company has faced delays in carrying out exploration in the region and getting the rigs it needs to tap oil trapped under as much as 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) of salt and rocks below the Atlantic seabed.
“In Brazil, the Chinese yards can’t compete with us even though they’re cheaper in China,” Choo said. With Keppel’s rigs, “they can get delivery and go to work and earn money.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Kyunghee Park in Singapore at kpark3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Neil Denslow at ndenslow@bloomberg.net







Bloomberg News
Keppel May Acquire China Yard on Oil-Rig Demand: Southeast Asia
By Haslinda Amin and Kyunghee Park on December 18, 2012
Keppel Corp. (KEP), the world’s biggest oil-rig builder, may consider buying a yard in China as the nation boosts offshore drilling to meet rising energy demand.
Keppel, which already has one yard in China making parts for oil rigs, will seek out acquisitions if the government opens offshore projects by state-owned enterprises to foreign companies, Chief Executive Officer Choo Chiau Beng said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday in Singapore.
“If China is willing to open up its market to foreign- invested yards, for example, then of course we would be interested,” Choo said. “Right now, if a Chinese state-owned company wants to build a rig, they go to one of their own yards. In Brazil, we’re given the same chance as everybody else.”
Keppel is targeting emerging markets including China, West Africa and Mexico, as oil producers expand in new areas to offset waning reserves. The Singapore-based rig-builder, which operates yards in its home city as well as in the U.S., Qatar, Brazil and Indonesia, is seeking to move closer to its customers with new locations.
The possible expansion in China comes as the government encourages local shipyards to move into the offshore business. The country is targeting 20 percent of the global market for rigs, production facilities and other offshore products by 2015, according to the China Association of the National Shipbuilding Industry.
Offshore Threat
Chinese shipbuilders boosted output of offshore equipment 22 percent to 22.9 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) in the first 10 months, according to the shipbuilding group. New ship orders slumped 47 percent in the first 11 months to the least since 2003, according to Clarkson Plc, the world’s biggest shipbroker.
“Eventually, the Chinese yards will pose a threat to Keppel in the offshore business,” said Yeak Chee Keong, an analyst at Maybank Kim Eng Research Pte in Singapore, who rates Keppel a buy. “But in the short-term, customers will prefer established yards like Keppel because they know their orders will be delivered on time and on budget.”
Keppel won S$9 billion ($7.4 billion) worth of new orders this year through Nov. 26, helping increase its order book to S$12.2 billion. The company expects to deliver a record 21 rigs next year, exceeding its previous high of 14 in 2009.
The rig-maker has climbed 17 percent this year in Singapore, compared with 19 percent advances for the benchmark Straits Times Index (FSSTI) and its biggest rival, Sembcorp Marine Ltd. (SMM)
Picking Battles
Chinese shipyards Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Ltd. (YZJ) and Jinhai Heavy Industry Co. both announced their first offshore orders this month, helped by lower prices. Yangzijiang’s $170 million order for jack-up rig announced on Dec. 3 was lower than a similar order Keppel secured in April for $205 million. Lower prices are squeezing the profit margins of existing yards, including those operated by Keppel, Choo said.
“We must find new ways to compete, we must find battlefields that we can win,” Choo said. “We don’t compete with the giant in every area. There’s no need to. We can choose our battlefield.”
Keppel is building a second yard in Brazil as state-owned Petroleo Brasileiro SA (PETR4) develops the biggest oil discovery in the Americas in three decades off the country’s coast.
Keppel signed a $4.1 billion order in August to build five semi-submersible rigs for Sete Brasil Participacoes SA, an affiliate of Petrobras. It also received contracts worth $950 million to participate in building two floating oil production units for Petrobras.
The state oil producer is spending $236.5 billion as part of its five-year investment plan. The company has faced delays in carrying out exploration in the region and getting the rigs it needs to tap oil trapped under as much as 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) of salt and rocks below the Atlantic seabed.
“In Brazil, the Chinese yards can’t compete with us even though they’re cheaper in China,” Choo said. With Keppel’s rigs, “they can get delivery and go to work and earn money.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Kyunghee Park in Singapore at kpark3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Neil Denslow at ndenslow@bloomberg.net
Will keppel or Sembcorp be looking at JES since it is now in the offshore business ? ... Keppel planning to acquire shipyard in china...
Bloomberg News
Keppel May Acquire China Yard on Oil-Rig Demand: Southeast Asia
By Haslinda Amin and Kyunghee Park on December 18, 2012
Keppel Corp. (KEP), the world’s biggest oil-rig builder, may consider buying a yard in China as the nation boosts offshore drilling to meet rising energy demand.
Keppel, which already has one yard in China making parts for oil rigs, will seek out acquisitions if the government opens offshore projects by state-owned enterprises to foreign companies, Chief Executive Officer Choo Chiau Beng said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday in Singapore.
“If China is willing to open up its market to foreign- invested yards, for example, then of course we would be interested,” Choo said. “Right now, if a Chinese state-owned company wants to build a rig, they go to one of their own yards. In Brazil, we’re given the same chance as everybody else.”
Keppel is targeting emerging markets including China, West Africa and Mexico, as oil producers expand in new areas to offset waning reserves. The Singapore-based rig-builder, which operates yards in its home city as well as in the U.S., Qatar, Brazil and Indonesia, is seeking to move closer to its customers with new locations.
The possible expansion in China comes as the government encourages local shipyards to move into the offshore business. The country is targeting 20 percent of the global market for rigs, production facilities and other offshore products by 2015, according to the China Association of the National Shipbuilding Industry.
Offshore Threat
Chinese shipbuilders boosted output of offshore equipment 22 percent to 22.9 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) in the first 10 months, according to the shipbuilding group. New ship orders slumped 47 percent in the first 11 months to the least since 2003, according to Clarkson Plc, the world’s biggest shipbroker.
“Eventually, the Chinese yards will pose a threat to Keppel in the offshore business,” said Yeak Chee Keong, an analyst at Maybank Kim Eng Research Pte in Singapore, who rates Keppel a buy. “But in the short-term, customers will prefer established yards like Keppel because they know their orders will be delivered on time and on budget.”
Keppel won S$9 billion ($7.4 billion) worth of new orders this year through Nov. 26, helping increase its order book to S$12.2 billion. The company expects to deliver a record 21 rigs next year, exceeding its previous high of 14 in 2009.
The rig-maker has climbed 17 percent this year in Singapore, compared with 19 percent advances for the benchmark Straits Times Index (FSSTI) and its biggest rival, Sembcorp Marine Ltd. (SMM)
Picking Battles
Chinese shipyards Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Ltd. (YZJ) and Jinhai Heavy Industry Co. both announced their first offshore orders this month, helped by lower prices. Yangzijiang’s $170 million order for jack-up rig announced on Dec. 3 was lower than a similar order Keppel secured in April for $205 million. Lower prices are squeezing the profit margins of existing yards, including those operated by Keppel, Choo said.
“We must find new ways to compete, we must find battlefields that we can win,” Choo said. “We don’t compete with the giant in every area. There’s no need to. We can choose our battlefield.”
Keppel is building a second yard in Brazil as state-owned Petroleo Brasileiro SA (PETR4) develops the biggest oil discovery in the Americas in three decades off the country’s coast.
Keppel signed a $4.1 billion order in August to build five semi-submersible rigs for Sete Brasil Participacoes SA, an affiliate of Petrobras. It also received contracts worth $950 million to participate in building two floating oil production units for Petrobras.
The state oil producer is spending $236.5 billion as part of its five-year investment plan. The company has faced delays in carrying out exploration in the region and getting the rigs it needs to tap oil trapped under as much as 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) of salt and rocks below the Atlantic seabed.
“In Brazil, the Chinese yards can’t compete with us even though they’re cheaper in China,” Choo said. With Keppel’s rigs, “they can get delivery and go to work and earn money.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Kyunghee Park in Singapore at kpark3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Neil Denslow at ndenslow@bloomberg.net
Bloomberg News
Keppel May Acquire China Yard on Oil-Rig Demand: Southeast Asia
By Haslinda Amin and Kyunghee Park on December 18, 2012
Keppel Corp. (KEP), the world’s biggest oil-rig builder, may consider buying a yard in China as the nation boosts offshore drilling to meet rising energy demand.
Keppel, which already has one yard in China making parts for oil rigs, will seek out acquisitions if the government opens offshore projects by state-owned enterprises to foreign companies, Chief Executive Officer Choo Chiau Beng said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday in Singapore.
“If China is willing to open up its market to foreign- invested yards, for example, then of course we would be interested,” Choo said. “Right now, if a Chinese state-owned company wants to build a rig, they go to one of their own yards. In Brazil, we’re given the same chance as everybody else.”
Keppel is targeting emerging markets including China, West Africa and Mexico, as oil producers expand in new areas to offset waning reserves. The Singapore-based rig-builder, which operates yards in its home city as well as in the U.S., Qatar, Brazil and Indonesia, is seeking to move closer to its customers with new locations.
The possible expansion in China comes as the government encourages local shipyards to move into the offshore business. The country is targeting 20 percent of the global market for rigs, production facilities and other offshore products by 2015, according to the China Association of the National Shipbuilding Industry.
Offshore Threat
Chinese shipbuilders boosted output of offshore equipment 22 percent to 22.9 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) in the first 10 months, according to the shipbuilding group. New ship orders slumped 47 percent in the first 11 months to the least since 2003, according to Clarkson Plc, the world’s biggest shipbroker.
“Eventually, the Chinese yards will pose a threat to Keppel in the offshore business,” said Yeak Chee Keong, an analyst at Maybank Kim Eng Research Pte in Singapore, who rates Keppel a buy. “But in the short-term, customers will prefer established yards like Keppel because they know their orders will be delivered on time and on budget.”
Keppel won S$9 billion ($7.4 billion) worth of new orders this year through Nov. 26, helping increase its order book to S$12.2 billion. The company expects to deliver a record 21 rigs next year, exceeding its previous high of 14 in 2009.
The rig-maker has climbed 17 percent this year in Singapore, compared with 19 percent advances for the benchmark Straits Times Index (FSSTI) and its biggest rival, Sembcorp Marine Ltd. (SMM)
Picking Battles
Chinese shipyards Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Ltd. (YZJ) and Jinhai Heavy Industry Co. both announced their first offshore orders this month, helped by lower prices. Yangzijiang’s $170 million order for jack-up rig announced on Dec. 3 was lower than a similar order Keppel secured in April for $205 million. Lower prices are squeezing the profit margins of existing yards, including those operated by Keppel, Choo said.
“We must find new ways to compete, we must find battlefields that we can win,” Choo said. “We don’t compete with the giant in every area. There’s no need to. We can choose our battlefield.”
Keppel is building a second yard in Brazil as state-owned Petroleo Brasileiro SA (PETR4) develops the biggest oil discovery in the Americas in three decades off the country’s coast.
Keppel signed a $4.1 billion order in August to build five semi-submersible rigs for Sete Brasil Participacoes SA, an affiliate of Petrobras. It also received contracts worth $950 million to participate in building two floating oil production units for Petrobras.
The state oil producer is spending $236.5 billion as part of its five-year investment plan. The company has faced delays in carrying out exploration in the region and getting the rigs it needs to tap oil trapped under as much as 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) of salt and rocks below the Atlantic seabed.
“In Brazil, the Chinese yards can’t compete with us even though they’re cheaper in China,” Choo said. With Keppel’s rigs, “they can get delivery and go to work and earn money.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Kyunghee Park in Singapore at kpark3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Neil Denslow at ndenslow@bloomberg.net
AT THIS LEVEL 16..went in 100lots at 15.2cts...this morning..now profit liao
another stock which i have alot stuck at 0.33+
waiting for it to slowly rebound!! 
Recently went to about 13cts..in the past 15cts quite low but profit plunged hence the 13cts is reasonable but believe BB has bgt enough so time to push...high 15cts today
I shall wait till mid term 2013 and start buying.
newbiexpert ( Date: 11-Dec-2012 15:44) Posted:
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Massive worker protest at JES yard
Shanghai: Around one thousand workers from Jiangsu East Heavy Industry (JES) started a protest yesterday due to salary payments being six months in arrears.
The workers blocked several main highways and the Yangtze River Bridge in Jingjiang city of Jiangsu province which caused massive traffic congestion in the region. Hundreds of police officers rushed to the scene to maintain order, managing to restore traffic back to normal in about one hour.
The workers revealed that JES hasn’t paid their salaries since May this year, despite requesting payment several times from the company. However they claim the company's response was “either wait or quit” but with Chinese New Year approaching, many workers don’t even have enough money to go home which has left them no choice but to start a protest.
Singapore-listed JES made a profit of US$3.8m in the third quarter of this year, a 76% decline year-on-year. The company said the sharp drop is mainly due to declining profit margins and increasing operating costs. [11/12/12]
I am still holding ..JES..matter of time...meanwhile my Auric pacific has shot to $1.31
starlene ( Date: 21-Sep-2012 21:22) Posted:
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woah! seemed to be heavy trading suddenly!
 
Name | JES | +/- | +0.002 | Last | 0.157 |
Buy | 0.157 | Sell | 0.158 | Volume | 10,806,000 |
BuyVol | 205,000 | SellVol | 522,000 | Lot Size | 1000 |
 
wats happening to this counter? it doesn't seems to be trading?
About bottom iao at this level...used to buy at thsi level and sold off at> 30cts..limited downside form 15cts level,but once hit 38cts just sold off..has made good profits from this counter..still a profitable co..listed at about 66cts
starlene ( Date: 06-Jul-2012 13:19) Posted:
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arrrrhhhh.....tgt luck was wif mi when it went to 0.16 this morning but nw dwn trend again.....
Bought at .178 and still waiting for it to recover. It's  severely undervalued like you say. No BB's want to flirt with it. Why? 
i got burned bad!! bought at 0.38 around 2 years back and it's sliding and sliding
Guys:
Totally no idea about this stock but went in for 10 lots  2-3 days ago at 0.145(juz to try my luck) haha.
Any idea how it will go?
Cheers