Home
Login Register
Others   

What?s Happened to Blumont, Asiasons and LionGold

 Post Reply 701-719 of 719
 
expertinvestor
    08-Oct-2013 20:18  
Contact    Quote!
Shall see Tmr!

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 19:13) Posted:

since u only bought 50 lots...ok lar

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:53) Posted:

Worth taking a bet. I feel that the company will do Sth to at least push it to around 50 cents? I'm thinking of Asiasons


 
 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 19:13  
Contact    Quote!
since u only bought 50 lots...ok lar

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:53) Posted:

Worth taking a bet. I feel that the company will do Sth to at least push it to around 50 cents? I'm thinking of Asiasons.

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:44) Posted:

better stay away...


 
 
expertinvestor
    08-Oct-2013 18:53  
Contact    Quote!
Worth taking a bet. I feel that the company will do Sth to at least push it to around 50 cents? I'm thinking of Asiasons.

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:44) Posted:

better stay away...

 

 
expertinvestor
    08-Oct-2013 18:52  
Contact    Quote!
Only can sell 4 days ltr. SGX rule lol.

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:28) Posted:

why u never sell in the morning???

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:19) Posted:

Bought Blumont at $0.145 yesterday. This morning thought huat. But drop back-.- 50 lots only haha.


 
 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 18:44  
Contact    Quote!
better stay away...
 
 
starlene
    08-Oct-2013 18:43  
Contact    Quote!
CorporateProfile.pdf
BGL_AlexPR.pdf
GroupAreasOfFocus.pdf
PaulInesBios.pdf
AlexBio1.pdf
Total size =1005K
(2048K size limit recommended)

When the designated was lifted sure cheong to a resaonable level..what I experienced in Jade(Cedar..now) worth taking the bet since Bluemountain is profitable since 2009,,recalled how citibank went below USD5 and AIG...can punt but be prepared to lose unlikley all the capital-in short better than 

casinos

ust a sell down for those who bought on thursday and friday whom are unable to pick up. 2 dollar stock 10 lots already 20k.shd be ok at 13cts quite stable liao..lack of demand becoz pple cant buy but come out cash,internet users can't buy too..can only sell for those who hve scrips


 

 
starlene
    08-Oct-2013 18:38  
Contact    Quote!


ust a sell down for those who bought on thursday and friday whom are unable to pick up. 2 dollar stock 10 lots already 20k.shd be ok at 13cts quite stable liao..lack of demand becoz pple cant buy but come out cash,internet users can't buy too..can only sell for those who hve scrips

 

ust a sell down for those who bought on thursday and friday whom are unable to pick up. 2 dollar stock 10 lots already 20k. 

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:28) Posted:

why u never sell in the morning???

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:19) Posted:

Bought Blumont at $0.145 yesterday. This morning thought huat. But drop back-.- 50 lots only haha.


 
 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 18:28  
Contact    Quote!
why u never sell in the morning???

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:19) Posted:

Bought Blumont at $0.145 yesterday. This morning thought huat. But drop back-.- 50 lots only haha.

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:09) Posted:

u're the man!!! but just be careful...last week's contra players due this week..


 
 
expertinvestor
    08-Oct-2013 18:19  
Contact    Quote!
Bought Blumont at $0.145 yesterday. This morning thought huat. But drop back-.- 50 lots only haha.

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 18:09) Posted:

u're the man!!! but just be careful...last week's contra players due this week...

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 17:18) Posted:

Haha I buy Liao..


 
 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 18:09  
Contact    Quote!
u're the man!!! but just be careful...last week's contra players due this week...

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 17:18) Posted:

Haha I buy Liao...

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 17:09) Posted:

be careful...don't anyhow give cash and ask ur broker press " buy"


 

 
expertinvestor
    08-Oct-2013 17:18  
Contact    Quote!
Haha I buy Liao...

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 17:09) Posted:

be careful...don't anyhow give cash and ask ur broker press " buy"

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 16:50) Posted:

This one cannot press. This one must give cash


 
 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 17:09  
Contact    Quote!
be careful...don't anyhow give cash and ask ur broker press " buy"

expertinvestor      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 16:50) Posted:

This one cannot press. This one must give cash.

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 15:52) Posted:

be careful...don't anyhow press " buy"


 
 
expertinvestor
    08-Oct-2013 16:50  
Contact    Quote!
This one cannot press. This one must give cash.

Peter_Pan      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 15:52) Posted:

be careful...don't anyhow press " buy"

 
 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 16:40  
Contact    Quote!
dangerous...
 
 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 15:52  
Contact    Quote!
be careful...don't anyhow press " buy"
 

 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 14:10  
Contact    Quote!
good good

medivh      ( Date: 08-Oct-2013 14:00) Posted:



This  short story about  Bob was exactly what I posted and warned about in my point 3)  . Cut - and paste again lol

medivh
Elite
04-Oct-2013 16:17 About medivh Contact Quote!
x 0
x 0


Alert Admin


before i gtg, remember when longing and holding stocks you long

1) Play what you can afford to lose. meaning to say if you invested 20k, make sure you can afford to lose that 20k (if suspension or coy go bankrupt ..)

2) Put take profit limit. stop loss is impt to minimize your capital loss but usally in a crashed you will have already lost almost everything.

take profit is impt to stop you from being too greedy.

3) Never, ever fall in love with the stock that you long.. ppl usually thinks when they see px go higher and higher.. wah no need to take profit.. love the stock..buy more ...

then when it falls big time or suspend they will start to curse and swear.

some forummers have disappeared today due to their vested counters such as blumont, asiasons and liongold.. I hope they have gotten out liao..cause today is the big example of loving a counter.


Peter_Pan      ( Date: 07-Oct-2013 11:58) Posted:



 

What?s Happened to Blumont, Asiasons and LionGold Corp?



 

  On Friday morning three  popular Singapore shares fell  off the proverbial cliff.  Asiasons Capital Limited?s  (SGX: 5ET) slid  61% to S$1.04   Blumont Group?s  (SGX: A33) slumped 56% to S$0.88 and  LionGold Corp  (SGX: A78) dropped 42% to S$0.88.

All three shares have been suspended by the Singapore Stock Exchange ?to safeguard the interests of the market as there could be circumstances that would result in the market not being fully informed.?

All this has happened on an otherwise quiet day in which the  Straits Times Index  (SGX: ^STI) is currently down by only 0.2% to 3,139 points.

So, what exactly has happened to those shares?

I have no idea, and I will likely remain clueless until SGX or the respective companies shed more light on the matter. And even then, the real answers might never be known.

Understandably, existing shareholders  will  look at their portfolios and demand answers. But that might not be the right  question to ask.

First, a short story?

My Foolish colleague David Kuo recently  shared  a great story about a private ?investor? named Bob:

?Bob, you see, felt that blue chips were a little boring. In his mind, he could not see the attraction of buying a stock that only returned around 8% a year. (Oh dear. If only Bob knew that such an investment could double in value in around nine years.)

So, Bob decided he would chance his hand on a stock tip he got wind of at a local coffee shop. It seems that a little birdie told him that a particular penny stock was set to explode into life.

So at the first available opportunity, Bob phoned his broker to place an order for one lot. As it turned out, the shares rose sharply. So, a delighted Bob phoned his broker to buy more.

His broker advised him against it. But Bob was adamant. And sure enough the shares rose even further. Every time the shares rose, Bob would be on the phone straight away to buy even more. And every time that he did, his broker would warn him against it.

Then one day, the shares fell.

So, Bob quickly called his broker to sell his holdings. However, his broker was unable to find any buyers.

A perplexed Bob asked his broker why he couldn?t find a buyer for his shares. After all, there must have been plenty of buyers out there since the shares had risen so sharply previously.

?Not really?, his broker replied. Then came the shocker. ?You see, Bob, the only person out there buying the penny shares was you?.

? Then, the right thing to ask

It?s a great story by David and it is warning of sorts about the dangers that lurk behind penny stocks.

But while the situations involving the three shares will each have their nuances and differences, there are some parallels we can draw with hapless Bob.

Blumont had risen  from six cents a share a year ago, to S$2.45 on 30 Sep 2013. It wasreported  that  on 2 Oct 2013  the Securities Investors Association Singapore (SIAS) ?has called for a speedy investigation into the unusual rise in share price in Blumont Group.?

With the company trading at 500 times its last-12-months? earnings and over 60 times its book value at that time, SIAS also ?emphasised that shareholders need to know the reason behind [the price increase].?

The same goes for Asiasons and LionGold. Shares in the  former were  S$0.98 a share at the start of Sep 2013 before zipping up 197% to a high of S$2.91 just  nineteen days  later on 19 Sep 2013. Asiasons? shares then slipped very slowly to S$2.70 yesterday? And we know what happened next.

Meanwhile, LionGold closed at S$1.16 a share on 1 Aug 2013 before it climbed 50% in short order to hit a peak of S$1.75 on 27 Aug 2013. LionGold?s shares subsequently declined steadily before culminating in today?s drastic sell-off.

During the meteoric rise of all three shares, did shareholders ever question if the price increases can be justified by the changes in the company?s fundamentals?

Or, were the companies so undervalued ? or  very,  grossly  undervalued ? that the rapid price gains can be substantiated?  Those  are the real questions to ask!

Bob?s sole rational in buying shares was  because  the price rose. And when it fell, he suffered.

If Blumont investors were jumping onto the bandwagon  because  a price increase was their only lodestone for evaluation, then they will  naturally be lost when their reason for buying is no longer there.

On the other hand, if the reason for investing in the company was a belief in its long-term potential in the minerals and resources industry, in which Blumont has made substantial recent investments, then this episode might prove to be a blip, albeit an ugly one.

Foolish Bottom Line

Stock market prices can fluctuate irrationally and often wildly. That means to say that prices can keep rising even when the underlying businesses have poor fundamentals. If that?s the case, then don?t be surprised when the bottom falls out one day.

On the other hand, prices  can  collapse despite strong fundamentals. That?s when investors need to exercise discipline and not give into fear. A purchase during times of irrational distress can even set the stage for spectacular returns in the future.

Ultimately, investors have to recognise that business fundamentals are the main  drivers of  long-term shareholder returns. In the long run, it?s the  businesses  that matters.

  Source:  The Motley Fool



 
 
medivh
    08-Oct-2013 14:00  
Contact    Quote!


This  short story about  Bob was exactly what I posted and warned about in my point 3)  . Cut - and paste again lol

medivh
Elite
04-Oct-2013 16:17 About medivh Contact Quote!
x 0
x 0


Alert Admin


before i gtg, remember when longing and holding stocks you long

1) Play what you can afford to lose. meaning to say if you invested 20k, make sure you can afford to lose that 20k (if suspension or coy go bankrupt ..)

2) Put take profit limit. stop loss is impt to minimize your capital loss but usally in a crashed you will have already lost almost everything.

take profit is impt to stop you from being too greedy.

3) Never, ever fall in love with the stock that you long.. ppl usually thinks when they see px go higher and higher.. wah no need to take profit.. love the stock..buy more ...

then when it falls big time or suspend they will start to curse and swear.

some forummers have disappeared today due to their vested counters such as blumont, asiasons and liongold.. I hope they have gotten out liao..cause today is the big example of loving a counter.


Peter_Pan      ( Date: 07-Oct-2013 11:58) Posted:



 

What?s Happened to Blumont, Asiasons and LionGold Corp?



 

  On Friday morning three  popular Singapore shares fell  off the proverbial cliff.  Asiasons Capital Limited?s  (SGX: 5ET) slid  61% to S$1.04   Blumont Group?s  (SGX: A33) slumped 56% to S$0.88 and  LionGold Corp  (SGX: A78) dropped 42% to S$0.88.

All three shares have been suspended by the Singapore Stock Exchange ?to safeguard the interests of the market as there could be circumstances that would result in the market not being fully informed.?

All this has happened on an otherwise quiet day in which the  Straits Times Index  (SGX: ^STI) is currently down by only 0.2% to 3,139 points.

So, what exactly has happened to those shares?

I have no idea, and I will likely remain clueless until SGX or the respective companies shed more light on the matter. And even then, the real answers might never be known.

Understandably, existing shareholders  will  look at their portfolios and demand answers. But that might not be the right  question to ask.

First, a short story?

My Foolish colleague David Kuo recently  shared  a great story about a private ?investor? named Bob:

?Bob, you see, felt that blue chips were a little boring. In his mind, he could not see the attraction of buying a stock that only returned around 8% a year. (Oh dear. If only Bob knew that such an investment could double in value in around nine years.)

So, Bob decided he would chance his hand on a stock tip he got wind of at a local coffee shop. It seems that a little birdie told him that a particular penny stock was set to explode into life.

So at the first available opportunity, Bob phoned his broker to place an order for one lot. As it turned out, the shares rose sharply. So, a delighted Bob phoned his broker to buy more.

His broker advised him against it. But Bob was adamant. And sure enough the shares rose even further. Every time the shares rose, Bob would be on the phone straight away to buy even more. And every time that he did, his broker would warn him against it.

Then one day, the shares fell.

So, Bob quickly called his broker to sell his holdings. However, his broker was unable to find any buyers.

A perplexed Bob asked his broker why he couldn?t find a buyer for his shares. After all, there must have been plenty of buyers out there since the shares had risen so sharply previously.

?Not really?, his broker replied. Then came the shocker. ?You see, Bob, the only person out there buying the penny shares was you?.

? Then, the right thing to ask

It?s a great story by David and it is warning of sorts about the dangers that lurk behind penny stocks.

But while the situations involving the three shares will each have their nuances and differences, there are some parallels we can draw with hapless Bob.

Blumont had risen  from six cents a share a year ago, to S$2.45 on 30 Sep 2013. It wasreported  that  on 2 Oct 2013  the Securities Investors Association Singapore (SIAS) ?has called for a speedy investigation into the unusual rise in share price in Blumont Group.?

With the company trading at 500 times its last-12-months? earnings and over 60 times its book value at that time, SIAS also ?emphasised that shareholders need to know the reason behind [the price increase].?

The same goes for Asiasons and LionGold. Shares in the  former were  S$0.98 a share at the start of Sep 2013 before zipping up 197% to a high of S$2.91 just  nineteen days  later on 19 Sep 2013. Asiasons? shares then slipped very slowly to S$2.70 yesterday? And we know what happened next.

Meanwhile, LionGold closed at S$1.16 a share on 1 Aug 2013 before it climbed 50% in short order to hit a peak of S$1.75 on 27 Aug 2013. LionGold?s shares subsequently declined steadily before culminating in today?s drastic sell-off.

During the meteoric rise of all three shares, did shareholders ever question if the price increases can be justified by the changes in the company?s fundamentals?

Or, were the companies so undervalued ? or  very,  grossly  undervalued ? that the rapid price gains can be substantiated?  Those  are the real questions to ask!

Bob?s sole rational in buying shares was  because  the price rose. And when it fell, he suffered.

If Blumont investors were jumping onto the bandwagon  because  a price increase was their only lodestone for evaluation, then they will  naturally be lost when their reason for buying is no longer there.

On the other hand, if the reason for investing in the company was a belief in its long-term potential in the minerals and resources industry, in which Blumont has made substantial recent investments, then this episode might prove to be a blip, albeit an ugly one.

Foolish Bottom Line

Stock market prices can fluctuate irrationally and often wildly. That means to say that prices can keep rising even when the underlying businesses have poor fundamentals. If that?s the case, then don?t be surprised when the bottom falls out one day.

On the other hand, prices  can  collapse despite strong fundamentals. That?s when investors need to exercise discipline and not give into fear. A purchase during times of irrational distress can even set the stage for spectacular returns in the future.

Ultimately, investors have to recognise that business fundamentals are the main  drivers of  long-term shareholder returns. In the long run, it?s the  businesses  that matters.

  Source:  The Motley Fool


 
 
Peter_Pan
    08-Oct-2013 13:46  
Contact    Quote!
plunging again...
 
 
Peter_Pan
    07-Oct-2013 11:58  
Contact    Quote!


 

What?s Happened to Blumont, Asiasons and LionGold Corp?



 

  On Friday morning three  popular Singapore shares fell  off the proverbial cliff.  Asiasons Capital Limited?s  (SGX: 5ET) slid  61% to S$1.04   Blumont Group?s  (SGX: A33) slumped 56% to S$0.88 and  LionGold Corp  (SGX: A78) dropped 42% to S$0.88.

All three shares have been suspended by the Singapore Stock Exchange ?to safeguard the interests of the market as there could be circumstances that would result in the market not being fully informed.?

All this has happened on an otherwise quiet day in which the  Straits Times Index  (SGX: ^STI) is currently down by only 0.2% to 3,139 points.

So, what exactly has happened to those shares?

I have no idea, and I will likely remain clueless until SGX or the respective companies shed more light on the matter. And even then, the real answers might never be known.

Understandably, existing shareholders  will  look at their portfolios and demand answers. But that might not be the right  question to ask.

First, a short story?

My Foolish colleague David Kuo recently  shared  a great story about a private ?investor? named Bob:

?Bob, you see, felt that blue chips were a little boring. In his mind, he could not see the attraction of buying a stock that only returned around 8% a year. (Oh dear. If only Bob knew that such an investment could double in value in around nine years.)

So, Bob decided he would chance his hand on a stock tip he got wind of at a local coffee shop. It seems that a little birdie told him that a particular penny stock was set to explode into life.

So at the first available opportunity, Bob phoned his broker to place an order for one lot. As it turned out, the shares rose sharply. So, a delighted Bob phoned his broker to buy more.

His broker advised him against it. But Bob was adamant. And sure enough the shares rose even further. Every time the shares rose, Bob would be on the phone straight away to buy even more. And every time that he did, his broker would warn him against it.

Then one day, the shares fell.

So, Bob quickly called his broker to sell his holdings. However, his broker was unable to find any buyers.

A perplexed Bob asked his broker why he couldn?t find a buyer for his shares. After all, there must have been plenty of buyers out there since the shares had risen so sharply previously.

?Not really?, his broker replied. Then came the shocker. ?You see, Bob, the only person out there buying the penny shares was you?.

? Then, the right thing to ask

It?s a great story by David and it is warning of sorts about the dangers that lurk behind penny stocks.

But while the situations involving the three shares will each have their nuances and differences, there are some parallels we can draw with hapless Bob.

Blumont had risen  from six cents a share a year ago, to S$2.45 on 30 Sep 2013. It wasreported  that  on 2 Oct 2013  the Securities Investors Association Singapore (SIAS) ?has called for a speedy investigation into the unusual rise in share price in Blumont Group.?

With the company trading at 500 times its last-12-months? earnings and over 60 times its book value at that time, SIAS also ?emphasised that shareholders need to know the reason behind [the price increase].?

The same goes for Asiasons and LionGold. Shares in the  former were  S$0.98 a share at the start of Sep 2013 before zipping up 197% to a high of S$2.91 just  nineteen days  later on 19 Sep 2013. Asiasons? shares then slipped very slowly to S$2.70 yesterday? And we know what happened next.

Meanwhile, LionGold closed at S$1.16 a share on 1 Aug 2013 before it climbed 50% in short order to hit a peak of S$1.75 on 27 Aug 2013. LionGold?s shares subsequently declined steadily before culminating in today?s drastic sell-off.

During the meteoric rise of all three shares, did shareholders ever question if the price increases can be justified by the changes in the company?s fundamentals?

Or, were the companies so undervalued ? or  very,  grossly  undervalued ? that the rapid price gains can be substantiated?  Those  are the real questions to ask!

Bob?s sole rational in buying shares was  because  the price rose. And when it fell, he suffered.

If Blumont investors were jumping onto the bandwagon  because  a price increase was their only lodestone for evaluation, then they will  naturally be lost when their reason for buying is no longer there.

On the other hand, if the reason for investing in the company was a belief in its long-term potential in the minerals and resources industry, in which Blumont has made substantial recent investments, then this episode might prove to be a blip, albeit an ugly one.

Foolish Bottom Line

Stock market prices can fluctuate irrationally and often wildly. That means to say that prices can keep rising even when the underlying businesses have poor fundamentals. If that?s the case, then don?t be surprised when the bottom falls out one day.

On the other hand, prices  can  collapse despite strong fundamentals. That?s when investors need to exercise discipline and not give into fear. A purchase during times of irrational distress can even set the stage for spectacular returns in the future.

Ultimately, investors have to recognise that business fundamentals are the main  drivers of  long-term shareholder returns. In the long run, it?s the  businesses  that matters.

  Source:  The Motley Fool

 
Important: Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy .