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Most - S-Chip get ready to get 10-20% Price Hike
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Peg_li
Master |
19-Jul-2009 14:54
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Hi all, what kind of shares would you like to recomend to buy?it doesn't matter, it's just advice!post pls! | |||||||
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richtan
Supreme |
19-Jul-2009 13:20
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Hi petertan4949, Many thanks for your kind advice, however, I feels there is a need to set the records straight, thus the need to rebut lest those unwary forumers may be misled by those distorted posts or abuse of the rating system.
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petertan4949
Senior |
19-Jul-2009 12:55
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I do read your post, at time you take pain to reply to those who rate bad or those who somehow not happy with your post. My suggestiuon is keep to those people who you are interested to share with . Post to those who are really interested. Ignore those unwanted one. We forumer know what to look for? and know who is the guilty one. You dont need to reply to those post . It is a waste of time. For they will respond and there be no end. Just leave them alone. Anyway, there is no regulation that said you must reply to people who only interest in arging for the sake of arguing to gain attention. But i do see you are doing fine with your TA and those chart. Please do keep it up and share.Thanks for your posts.
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richtan
Supreme |
19-Jul-2009 12:37
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U r right, in another words, "Dun follow the herd instinct"
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petertan4949
Senior |
19-Jul-2009 12:36
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If the current rally continue, it is just a matter of time, before s chip play catch up with the mid cap and penny. buy only solid s-chip. buy when people not interested.and sell when they turn greedy |
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petertan4949
Senior |
19-Jul-2009 12:33
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But i do see china stock is good for long term. There are lot of money tp pick up here. s-chip is not dead, they are sleeping, buy those solid one and wait, time will come. what is your recommendation for s-chip.lease share. thanks.I know it is caevet emptor. |
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richtan
Supreme |
19-Jul-2009 12:33
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Read today's Sunday Times article pg 21 (World section) by Mark Mobius: China "to overtake Wall St in 3 years"
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dealer0168
Elite |
19-Jul-2009 12:08
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But 30yrs is too long lah. US market is too fragile. N it just a matter of time China take over. When? Let don't guess...... just see fr ourselves...... |
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petertan4949
Senior |
19-Jul-2009 12:03
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So we call dow , Wall st, what with China, Mandarin St? Beijing St? or What?, I thk Great Wall St. I dont think thay can, maybe in 30 yrs time, How can chinese takeover Microsoft, Coca cola, and all those brand names in 3 yrs. Call you to buy chinese coy now people also scare, no transparency. All big name control by communist. That is jmo. |
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dealer0168
Elite |
19-Jul-2009 11:49
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Today Strait Time, veteran fund manager Mark Mobius highlighted that China Stock Market may overtake Wall St in 3 years time. Indeed the time will come, it is just a matter of time. (my opinion) | |||||||
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Peg_li
Master |
17-Jul-2009 21:33
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I also hope so!
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dealer0168
Elite |
17-Jul-2009 21:27
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Hope later part of July, S chip will surge. It just a matter of time. (my opinion)
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dealer0168
Elite |
17-Jul-2009 21:24
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Majority of the S chip 2nd qtr results announcement seems to come at Aug09 period. Maybe bc of that, their rally may come slow. My guess. | |||||||
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Peg_li
Master |
17-Jul-2009 21:21
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If no investment institutes buy S-chips, S-chips will not move up even if STI get to 3000.it looks like no big institutes are interested in small cap S-chips.they only care about blue chips.So retail investors had better invest in blue chips, not the small cap S-chips,it takes risk! |
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richtan
Supreme |
17-Jul-2009 18:44
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China’s Rebound Carries U.S., Asia Toward Recovery (Update1) By Bloomberg News July 17 (Bloomberg) -- China’s economic comeback is under way, towing along companies from Intel Corp. to Hyundai Motor Co. and starting to make up for weak demand in other major economies. The world’s third-largest economy grew 7.9 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier after expanding at the slowest pace in almost a decade in the previous three months, the statistics bureau said yesterday. The first acceleration in growth in more than two years came after the government implemented a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus plan and prodded banks to lend more. China is the only one of the 10 biggest economies that is expanding, highlighting the role the nation may play in easing the worst global recession since the Great Depression. The U.S. economy is still shrinking, five months after Congress agreed to President Barack Obama’s $787 billion stimulus package. “China cannot save the world by itself, but its recovery is a definite positive,” said Brian Jackson, a strategist at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong. “China has a lot more control over how its banks do business and they were in a lot stronger position than U.S. banks to implement policy stimulus.” The Chinese economy will expand 8.1 percent this year, according to the median forecast of 16 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News after the government released the second-quarter figure. Growth will accelerate to 9.1 percent in 2010, they estimated. The pickup, driven by tax cuts and government-funded incentives to encourage consumers to buy automobiles and electronics goods, is bolstering demand for imports. Asian Consumers Intel says consumers in Asia -- especially China -- are leading a recovery in demand for personal computers. The Santa Clara, California-based company’s sales in the Asia-Pacific region rose 21 percent to $4.41 billion in the past quarter, while sales in the Americas and Europe plunged. “We are seeing Asia-Pacific stronger than the rest of the world; in particular, consumption in China looks very good,” Stacy Smith, Intel’s chief financial officer, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television on July 14. “Mature markets are lagging a little bit behind.” Seoul-based Hyundai’s sales in China surged 56 percent from a year earlier to 257,003 units in the first half, making the country its biggest overseas and fastest-growing market. Sales by South Korea’s largest automaker in the U.S., which used to be its biggest market, dropped 11 percent to 204,686 units, according to the company. Investment Surge Government-influenced spending is driving more than four- fifths of China’s expansion, according to the World Bank. Urban fixed-asset investment surged 33.6 percent in the first half, the fastest growth in five years. Industrial production increased 10.7 percent in June from a year earlier, the largest gain in nine months. “China’s recovery is major positive news, especially for commodities exporters,” said Wang Tao, an economist with UBS AG in Beijing. “The strongest factor in China’s recovery is investment demand, which means it will import more commodities and machinery.” Chinese imports of copper and its products jumped to a record in June, increasing 13 percent from the previous month. Iron ore imports rose 3.4 percent in June to the second-highest level this year, as rising prices prompted steelmakers to produce more and buy more raw materials. Komatsu’s Upswing The Chinese government unveiled its stimulus package in November, four months before Obama’s measures were approved. The stimulus has boosted sales for construction equipment-maker Komatsu Ltd., while subsidies to encourage consumer spending have boosted sales for manufacturers such as Tokyo-based Nissan Motor Co., Japan’s third-largest automaker, and plastics-maker Teijin Ltd. in Osaka. Tokyo-based Komatsu, the world’s second-biggest maker of earthmovers, said last month its sales in China probably beat expectations in the quarter ended June 30. The company expects the market to grow to about 15 percent of total sales this business year, compared with 10 percent in 2008. AU Optronics Corp. and Chi Mei Optoelectronics Corp., Taiwan’s two biggest liquid-crystal display makers, said last week they expect third-quarter sales to rise from the previous three-month period, because there is a global shortage of glass while demand from China is strengthening. In June, China’s TV makers said they planned to purchase $4.4 billion of flat-panel products from Taiwan this year, doubling their December forecast. ‘Cautious Optimism’ “What you’re seeing happening in emerging Asia, not just China, is encouraging,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in a Bloomberg Television interview in Paris yesterday. “It provides some basis for cautious optimism that we’re going to start to come out of this over the next few quarters.” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke will brief Chinese officials at a summit this month about how the U.S. plans to keep inflation in check over the next few years, according to people advised on the plans. David Loevinger, a U.S. Treasury official coordinating the meeting, told business lobbyists and lawyers in Washington this week that the Obama administration was enlisting Bernanke to try to assuage Chinese concerns about long-term U.S. economic health, people at the meeting said on condition of anonymity. China, the largest foreign investor in U.S. Treasuries, increased its holdings to $801.5 billion in May. It’s still too much to hope that China can rally the world, given that its stimulus has been focused on bolstering demand at home, said Robert Carnell, chief international economist at ING Financial Markets in London. “There will be some economies that benefit on the sidelines, but that’s not going to help the average Joe on a street in America,” he said. “Its economy is not going to offset the U.S. and Europe declining simultaneously.” To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing on khamlin@bloomberg.net; Last Updated: July 16, 2009 20:24 EDT |
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richtan
Supreme |
16-Jul-2009 12:22
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China’s GDP Growth Quickens to 7.9% on Credit Boom (Update1) By Bloomberg News July 16 (Bloomberg) -- China’s economy rebounded from its weakest growth in almost a decade as record lending and surging investment countered a slump in exports. Gross domestic product expanded 7.9 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier after a 6.1 percent gain in the previous three months, the statistics bureau said in Beijing today. That was more than the 7.8 percent median estimate of 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. China’s 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package and the scrapping of lending restrictions for banks triggered the revival in the world’s third-largest economy. The nation risks bubbles in stocks and property after money supply grew by a record and inflows of cash pushed foreign-exchange reserves to more than $2 trillion. “China’s recovery is on track and growth may accelerate to near 9 percent in the third quarter and 10 percent in the fourth quarter,” said Lu Ting, an economist at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong. “The government won’t tighten policies too early but it should tell banks not to lend without limit.” The yuan traded at 6.8316 against the dollar as of 10:15 a.m. in Shanghai, from 6.8315 before the data were released. The Shanghai Composite Index of stocks rose 0.4 percent. The foundation of China’s recovery is “not yet firm” after the economy stabilized in the first half and the government will stick to its “moderately loose” monetary policy and “proactive” fiscal stance, statistics bureau spokesman Li Xiaochao said. Tightening Monetary Policy The central bank is using bill sales to drain cash from the financial system and push up money-market rates, seeking to tighten monetary policy without choking off a recovery. One-year lending rates and banks’ reserve requirements haven’t changed this year after reductions in 2008 to counter the global crisis. The government may refrain from “drastic” policy shifts until a recovery is better established, Lu said. The rebound in GDP snaps a two-year run of progressively slower growth. Investment in factories, property and roads surged 35.3 percent in June from a year earlier, quicker than the 33.6 percent pace for the first half as a whole, the statistics bureau said. Shanghai’s benchmark stock index has climbed almost 90 percent from last year’s low, with PetroChina Co. and Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. contributing the most. Premier’s Caution Premier Wen Jiabao cautioned this month that the nation faces weak export demand, rising unemployment and falling company profits. Industrial production increased 10.7 percent in June from a year earlier after an 8.9 percent gain in May, the statistics bureau said. Retail sales climbed 15 percent. Emerging economies, led by China, are set to regain growth momentum in the remainder of this year, helping the world economy to recover from the worst slump since World War II, the International Monetary Fund said in a July 8 report. China was the biggest contributor to global growth last year, accounting for a third of the expansion, according to IMF data, which uses purchasing power parity calculations to account for differences in exchange rates. Consumer prices fell 1.7 percent in June from a year earlier, the fifth monthly decline and the biggest drop since 1999, the statistics bureau said. Producer prices slid a record 7.8 percent. Wen wants faster growth to create jobs and maintain social stability ahead of the 60th anniversary of Communist Party rule in October. Ethnic riots in Urumqi in the northwestern Xinjiang province on July 5 left at least 192 people dead. China’s raised interest rates and added loan restrictions from 2007 to cool the economy and the property market. The slowdown deepened when the global financial crisis hit. To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing at khamlin@bloomberg.net; Li Yanping in Beijing at yli16@bloomberg.net Last Updated: July 15, 2009 22:17 EDT |
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des_khor
Supreme |
15-Jul-2009 16:01
Yells: "Tell me who is the God or MFT from this forum??" |
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S-Chips = Sell Cheap | |||||||
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Peg_li
Master |
15-Jul-2009 13:53
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Hope S-chips go up! | |||||||
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el7888
Veteran |
15-Jul-2009 12:46
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Andrew
Master |
14-Jul-2009 21:10
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Wah....one more company....Contel's Auditor issue red flag.....cannot recover some money....... | |||||||
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