May you and your families be richly blessed with Wealth, Health and Happiness Always in this year of the Ox. Happy Chinese New Year!
23 January 2009
22 January 2009
JR: "UK has nothing to sell"
Jim Rogers(JR)'s advise with reference to the pound and the UK economy pushed the country deeper into its financial gloom. With a very troubled housing and financial service sector, JR's statements push the already nervous investors over the edge. In fact, the advise spark a Sterling sell-off resulting it sitting at a 23 year low against the USD and an all-time low against the Yen. Questions have emerged whether the UK will be able to ride out this financial storm and how soon or earned the reputation as being the second European Union country after Iceland to fail in this crisis. Are the fundamentals of the UK that weak? Will the RBS, Lloyds and Barclays be nationalised soon? Will the country be able to retain its AAA ratings? Will pound near parity with the USD? Will the London Olympics 2012's projects get stuck? One thing I am sure, despite all this, the country will still have their famous football clubs and pubs, just to name a few.
FT.com: The pound is a currency with no underpinning and should fall against the dollar and the euro, says Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings and co-founder of the Quantum Fund with George Soros.
He says his view reflects the UK’s dire economic situation: “It’s simple, the UK has nothing to sell.”
Mr Rogers says the two main pillars of support for sterling have been North Sea oil and the strength of the UK financial services sector, in particular, the City of London’s role.
He says his view reflects the UK’s dire economic situation: “It’s simple, the UK has nothing to sell.”
Mr Rogers says the two main pillars of support for sterling have been North Sea oil and the strength of the UK financial services sector, in particular, the City of London’s role.
.
But Mr Rogers says just as North Sea oil is running out, so London’s standing as a major financial centre is set to suffer.
“I don’t think there is a sound UK bank now, at least, if there is one I don’t know about it,” he says.
“The City of London is finished, the financial centre of the world is moving east.”
“All the money is in Asia. Why would it go back to the West? You don’t need London,” says Mr Rogers.
Mr Rogers thinks the pound is more vulnerable than the dollar or the euro.
He says the UK housing market is arguably in a worse state than that of the US, given pockets of strength in the US and prices that are sliding across the board in the UK.
Meanwhile, he says, the UK is in worse shape economically than the eurozone, where most countries are not big debtors and do not run huge trade deficits.
“If the UK discovers more North Sea oil, I might change this view,” he says. “But I don’t see that happening.”
“I don’t think there is a sound UK bank now, at least, if there is one I don’t know about it,” he says.
“The City of London is finished, the financial centre of the world is moving east.”
“All the money is in Asia. Why would it go back to the West? You don’t need London,” says Mr Rogers.
Mr Rogers thinks the pound is more vulnerable than the dollar or the euro.
He says the UK housing market is arguably in a worse state than that of the US, given pockets of strength in the US and prices that are sliding across the board in the UK.
Meanwhile, he says, the UK is in worse shape economically than the eurozone, where most countries are not big debtors and do not run huge trade deficits.
“If the UK discovers more North Sea oil, I might change this view,” he says. “But I don’t see that happening.”
* China's economy grew 6.8% in the 4Q; slowest in 7 years. For the year, the economy grew 9% in 2008.
* South Korea's economy shrank 5.6% in the 4Q.
* BNM has lowered its key interest rate by 75 basis point to 2.5% yesterday. Pretty sharp and desperate?
* Japan keeps its key interest rate at 0.1%.
* Come July 6, KLCI will be replaced and be known as FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (30 largest main board companies based on investable market capitalisation. We will have a tough time getting used to it!
Labels:
China on the Go,
Economy,
Jim Rogers,
Market News,
Olympics
21 January 2009
Time to invest in China?
The report below from Morning Money was written by Louis Basenese an Associate Investment Director of The Oxford Club and a regular contributor to Investment U. This article first appeared in Investment U a week back. Like Jim Rogers, this investment manager seems to be very bullish with China and even provided 11 reasons why he is keen in buying China shares. Well, is he too early to call China a BUY? I just understand China's urban unemployment rate jumped for the 1st time in 5 years to 4.2% as of December 2008. Also, there were over 550,000 Chinese laid off in the last 3 months of last year. What will it be for the up and coming GDP figures and other economic data? Ugly also. Me? I will keep watching...till it turns really ugly.
5) The economy is NOT in a recession.
6) Massive foreign reserves.
7) Personal savings.
8) The consumer is just getting started.
10) The “mother of all stimulus plans.”
1) The truly “smart money” is buying, not selling.
To be fair, the reason Bank of America “took a little money off the table,” according to spokesman Bob Stickler, is because of its own financial condition and need to raise cash. Same goes for the Royal Bank of Scotland. Yet, looking past these institutions, the truly smart money is loading up on China. Mark Mobius, the king of emerging markets, sums it up best, “We’re having a wonderful time buying tremendous bargains.” Statistics from research firm EPFR Global indicate the rest of the smart money is following suit. Funds investing in emerging-market stocks raised their Chinese holdings to the highest level since 1995. We should, too.
2) Chinese stocks are cheap.
Ridiculously so. If legendary investors like Warren Buffett salivated over U.S. stocks trading at 12 times earnings, they should be rabid over Chinese stocks. Based on the MSCI China Index, the average Chinese stock trades for less than eight times earnings. Share prices are contracting, but earnings keep growing. Based on the severity of the sell off, you’d think every Chinese company was unprofitable and headed for bankruptcy. Yet the fundamentals remain rock solid. The average Chinese company is still growing earnings by 30%, according to a recent report in China Securities Journal. Compare that to the estimated 12% earnings decline in the fourth quarter for the companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, and the bargain valuations make even less sense.
3) Chinese investors learned a tough, but necessary, lesson.
During the height of the China mania, retail investors viewed the stock market as an ATM. They lined up by the millions to open brokerage accounts. But much like our infamous dot-com bubble, Chinese day traders and novice investors got a very painful reminder of what happens when the “Greater Fool Theory” reaches the last idiot. The important thing, however, is that the correction served a higher purpose. It began the process of flushing the extreme irrationality from the market. So we can be certain the next leg up will be governed by fundamentals, not hype.
4) Oil is much cheaper.
One of China’s biggest challenges was to keep a lid on inflation, while still maintaining its breakneck pace of economic growth. That was no easy task with oil at close to $150 a barrel, as the cost of shipping, food and fuel were rapidly increased. Keep in mind, China imports a net 3.3 million barrels of oil a day. Now that oil prices are down considerably, we can cross one big inflation risk off the list.
5) The economy is NOT in a recession.
Sure, it’s slowing down, but China is still on track for a solid 6% expansion based on analysts’ estimates. And 8% if you believe the government statistics. Regardless of who ends up being right, compared to the contraction in the United States, such a high rate of growth is downright explosive.
6) Massive foreign reserves.
The last time Chinese stocks were this cheap was during the Asian financial crisis. Back then, most Asian countries were running huge deficits. But this time the roles are reversed. As of December, China boasted of having $1.95 trillion in foreign reserves. And counting. If necessary, the government can deploy these surpluses to keep economic growth humming along.
7) Personal savings.
Unlike Americans that spend more than they earn, the Chinese save an amazing 35 cents of every dollar they bring in. This provides yet another cushion against any slowdowns. But also an enormous opportunity for future growth. As China’s economy develops, and affordable insurance and health care become ubiquitous, expect the Chinese to get comfortable spending more of their hard earned cash.
8) The consumer is just getting started.
The country’s burgeoning middle class, now the size of the entire United States, is just getting started. The McKinsey Quarterly estimates that it will take two decades before these nouveau riche reach their full spending potential. As we know from our own experience and prosperity - 70% of GDP in the United States is attributed to consumer spending - the consumer is an engine of economic growth. In other words, the global recessionary headwinds are no match for the Chinese consumer.
9) Forget what Westerners think, locals are optimistic.
We know consumer confidence plays a big role in the success of our own economy. It flat out stinks right now in the United States, and the economic conditions reflect that. But in China, it’s an entirely different situation. A recent survey from the Pew Research Center shows that most Chinese people (86%) feel positive about where their country is headed. And that’s up from 25% just six years ago. If they overwhelmingly see good things on the horizon, we should believe them.
10) The “mother of all stimulus plans.”
While the massive government stimulus package has yet to take hold in the United States, rest assured it will. The same goes for the $586 billion the Chinese government is pumping into its economy. As a fund manager for BlackRock Inc. (BLK) notes, China’s “got the mother of all stimulus plans” when you factor in the government spending, savings rates and the rapid decline in commodities prices.
11) The Best China Bets.
Make no mistake, the shooting-fish-in-the-barrel-stage of China investing is long over. Simply buying the iShares FTSE/Xinhua China 25 Index ETF (FXI) won’t cut it anymore. It’s too obvious.
So how do we play the next bull charge in China?
Well, last week, I offered up one compelling small-cap Chinese play, E-House Holdings Ltd. (EJ). I’d stick to that theme - small caps, with the strongest growth profiles. And that puts China Security & Surveillance (CSR), a leading provider of digital surveillance technology, and A-Power Energy Generation Systems (APWR), a power equipment company, at the top of my list. For those with a more conservative bent, I’d stick to large-cap, blue chip, best-of-breed China stocks - ones like China Mobile Ltd. (ADR: CHL), the world’s largest phone company. It sports a solid balance sheet, increasing profitability and a temporarily cheap valuation.
Whatever you do, don’t wait too long. The Chinese New Year holiday gets underway Jan. 25. When it’s over, don’t be surprised if the Chinese markets start fresh and get back to their winning ways.
I say that because the strong economic underpinnings, which lined investors’ pockets with gold from 2004 to 2007, remain well intact. Whether the next leg up will produce the same 450%-plus returns remains to be seen. But rest assured, the catalysts are in place to make it possible.
.
* Bloomberg: Singapore economy may shrink to record 5% adding to pressure for stimulus.
* Toyota is poised to end General Motors' 77 year reign as the world's largest automaker when the US company reports on its 2008 global sales today.
Labels:
China on the Go,
Economy,
Jim Rogers,
Market News
20 January 2009
HSBC replies
Of late, HSBC has been rumoured to require cash injection in order to keep its ship chugging along the stormy financial waters. Morgan Stanley for example, predicted the bank needs between USD20-30b of equity and halve its dividend in order to bolster its Balance Sheet. No recovery is anticipated in its results until 2011.
The news of the second financial bailout for the British banks and the staggering 70% fall of RBS yesterday compounded the already bruised European banks share prices, including HSBC. It is true as a 12 month analysis saw HSBC's share price peaking at HKD140 in May last year but has now gone down to HKD58. (refer here for share price movements). A drop of almost 60%.
HSBC has been "quick" to respond to the negative comments and says that it has ample of capital and do not need any help from anybody. It also added that, these "negative" analysts need to apologize once their predictions do not come true! Wow, we need more of such optimism(but truthful ones) in the market! Get ready your ang pow money to scoop the high dividend yield HSBC?
The Standard:Banking giant HSBC (0005) has refuted rumors that it is seeking capital support from the British government, saying it cannot "envisage circumstances" when such action would be necessary.
"HSBC has long been one of the world's most strongly capitalized banks and is committed to maintaining this position," the lender said in a statement in response to speculation that it would receive a cash injection when London announced yesterday a second bailout package for banks.
HSBC was on a list of lenders that could receive Bank of England funds in the first rescue plan unveiled in October. But HSBC rejected that offer, saying it had ample capital and needed no help from the central bank.
David Eldon, former chairman of Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, the local arm of HSBC, concurred saying the lender has no funding needs. He also said HSBC is only a victim of recent fund-raising activities by foreign banks.
Eldon cast doubt on statements by investment bank analysts that HSBC needs to raise funds, saying the London-based lender has always had a prudent policy regarding its capital base. Eldon said the analysts need to apologize once their predictions are proved wrong. Big investment banks including Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs have issued reports in recent weeks revising downward their forecasts on HSBC, and slashing their target prices for the lender's shares to as low as HK$52. They also predicted that the bank will cut dividends. Amid the bearish sentiment, shares of HSBC continued to nosedive in Hong Kong yesterday, losing 3 percent to close at HK$62.30, the lowest in more than 10 years. The bank's share price has shed around 15 percent since the beginning of this year.
Eldon also said he supports the Hong Kong Monetary Authority's proposal to take up all banking regulatory functions.
* Obama, the 1st Black President and the 44th President of the USA will be inaugurated today. Above. Dennis Haysbert played the accomplished President David Palmer in "24".
* YahooFinance: RBS expects full year loss up to 28B pounds due to a goodwill impairment charge related to the acquisition of ABN Ambro. The loss is probably the biggest loss ever by a British corporation.
* Forbes: South Korea's finance minister and top regulator replaced. President says reshuffle aimed at boosting economy.
* China Premier Wen says toughest year ahead since 2000.
* Jim Rogers said investors should be worried about USD, sell government bonds and buy raw materials, China stocks and the Japanese yen.
* FinancialDaily: Khazanah's December 31 portfolio down by 36.5% compared to 7 months ago. The investment now stands at RM33.7B. Also to note is Khazanah do not support LCCT in Labu plan.....??
The news of the second financial bailout for the British banks and the staggering 70% fall of RBS yesterday compounded the already bruised European banks share prices, including HSBC. It is true as a 12 month analysis saw HSBC's share price peaking at HKD140 in May last year but has now gone down to HKD58. (refer here for share price movements). A drop of almost 60%.
HSBC has been "quick" to respond to the negative comments and says that it has ample of capital and do not need any help from anybody. It also added that, these "negative" analysts need to apologize once their predictions do not come true! Wow, we need more of such optimism(but truthful ones) in the market! Get ready your ang pow money to scoop the high dividend yield HSBC?
The Standard:Banking giant HSBC (0005) has refuted rumors that it is seeking capital support from the British government, saying it cannot "envisage circumstances" when such action would be necessary.
"HSBC has long been one of the world's most strongly capitalized banks and is committed to maintaining this position," the lender said in a statement in response to speculation that it would receive a cash injection when London announced yesterday a second bailout package for banks.
HSBC was on a list of lenders that could receive Bank of England funds in the first rescue plan unveiled in October. But HSBC rejected that offer, saying it had ample capital and needed no help from the central bank.
David Eldon, former chairman of Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, the local arm of HSBC, concurred saying the lender has no funding needs. He also said HSBC is only a victim of recent fund-raising activities by foreign banks.
Eldon cast doubt on statements by investment bank analysts that HSBC needs to raise funds, saying the London-based lender has always had a prudent policy regarding its capital base. Eldon said the analysts need to apologize once their predictions are proved wrong. Big investment banks including Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs have issued reports in recent weeks revising downward their forecasts on HSBC, and slashing their target prices for the lender's shares to as low as HK$52. They also predicted that the bank will cut dividends. Amid the bearish sentiment, shares of HSBC continued to nosedive in Hong Kong yesterday, losing 3 percent to close at HK$62.30, the lowest in more than 10 years. The bank's share price has shed around 15 percent since the beginning of this year.
Eldon also said he supports the Hong Kong Monetary Authority's proposal to take up all banking regulatory functions.
* Obama, the 1st Black President and the 44th President of the USA will be inaugurated today. Above. Dennis Haysbert played the accomplished President David Palmer in "24".
* YahooFinance: RBS expects full year loss up to 28B pounds due to a goodwill impairment charge related to the acquisition of ABN Ambro. The loss is probably the biggest loss ever by a British corporation.
* Forbes: South Korea's finance minister and top regulator replaced. President says reshuffle aimed at boosting economy.
* China Premier Wen says toughest year ahead since 2000.
* Jim Rogers said investors should be worried about USD, sell government bonds and buy raw materials, China stocks and the Japanese yen.
* FinancialDaily: Khazanah's December 31 portfolio down by 36.5% compared to 7 months ago. The investment now stands at RM33.7B. Also to note is Khazanah do not support LCCT in Labu plan.....??
Labels:
China on the Go,
Economy,
Jim Rogers,
Market News,
Sector-Banking
19 January 2009
Technical Analysis - January 19 2009
S&P500 (850, last week 890 or -4.5% w.o.w )
The daily index has succumbed to selling pressure during last week. The Daily MACD, MACD Histogram, Guppy MMAs, Parabolic SAR and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are all showing negative already. However, we cannot discount a short term rebound during this week. For the weekly readings, the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR are still positive but will eventually turned negative if the selling continues further. The weekly ADX trend and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are not bullish yet while Guppy MMAs is weakening. The market is at best range bound. Like others, the market is still stuck in a major downtrend channel created since November 2007. Support is around 800 and resistance at 890.
KLSE CI (896, last week 919 or -2.5% w.ow)
One of the remaining few markets that still have a positive gain for the year but this may not likely to last soon. The index is finding it hard to sit above the daily 50-day ema. The daily indicators are at a crossroad again with the MACD, Parabolic SAR, ADX trend and DMI (+ve and –ve) going into an early bearish tone. The weekly charts MACD and Parabolic SAR are still positive but will eventually turned negative if the selling continues further. The market will need to work hard to avoid indicators turning negative again. To be positive, the index needs to clear the 935 level (a 20-day ema) and as such will breakaway from the major downtrend channel created since January 2008. The index is expected to trade between 850 and 970.
HangSeng (13,256, last week 14,377 or -7.8% w.o.w )
The index is determined to go south again. All the daily indicators like Parabolic SAR, the daily MACD and MACD Histogram and Guppy MMAs are turning negative and will remained so unless the index goes up strongly this week. We could see a short term rebound this week. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR but will eventually turned negative if the selling continues further. Support is seen at 12,600 and resistance at 15,000.
Nikkei 225 (8,230, last week 8,837 or -6.9% w.ow)
Similar with S&P500 and HangSeng, the index seems determined to go south again. However, we cannot discount a short term rebound during this week. All the daily indicators like Parabolic SAR, the daily MACD and MACD Histogram and Guppy MMAs are turning negative and will remained so unless the index goes up strongly this week. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR but will eventually turned negative if the selling continues further. Support is seen at 7,500 and resistance at 9,500.
* Bloomberg: China economy probably grew at slowest pace in 7 years as export slump.
* After ending 22 days of conflict leaving more than 1,200 Palestinians and 13 Israelis dead, Israel and Hamas has both declared victory?
Labels:
Economy,
Technical Analysis,
Warren Buffett
18 January 2009
Smart Investing/Trading for the week ending January 16 2009
Weekly US Markets Update and Outlook
Market braces for inauguration and earnings
MarketWatch:The inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama might be the only boost for Wall Street next week, as a deluge of what are expected to be mostly bad corporate results and fresh reports on the state of the housing market starts pouring in.
"The stock market is a forward-looking animal that tends to move about five months ahead of the real economy, but right now its actions don't bode well for a recovery until late in the year at best," said Robert Kavcic, market strategist at BMO Capital Markets. With U.S. markets closed Monday for the Martin Luther King holiday, the trading week will kick off Tuesday. No economic reports are due that day, but there will be a slew of financial results, including those from IBM and Johnson & Johnson, two blue-chip stocks, and from regional banks, Regions Financial , State Street and U.S. Bancorp. Financial firms were already front and center in the market over the past week, as the likes of JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, and Citigroup, all posted worse-than-expected results, with the economic recession further darkening the outlook for the already-embattled sector.
"Earnings are terrible and outlooks are cloudy," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Trust. "For financials, there are more worries ahead in my view."
For the week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 3.7%, the broad S&P 500 fell 4.7%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite lost 2.7%.
But stocks still rose Friday, for the second consecutive session of gains, with the Dow ending the session up 68 points at 8,281, the S&P 500 rising 6 points to 850 and the Nasdaq gaining 17 points to 1,529.
The government late Thursday approved a deal to provide an additional $20 billion in capitalization for Bank of America and to guarantee up to $400 billion in losses on real estate loans at both the Charlotte, N.C. lender and at Citigroup. Separately, Citigroup said it would split its operations in two. Although the stock market seemed poised to continue its late-year bounce into January, many market strategists are now trimming their expectations in the face of much worse-than-expected economic data, including dismal job losses in December, and the few earnings reports that have come out so far.
Earnings at S&P 500 companies are now expected to have tumbled 20.2% in the fourth quarter of last year from the year-ago period, according to Thomson Financial. Just a week ago, expectations were for earnings to fall 15.1%. The ratio of negative to positive pre-announcements has jumped to 3.6 to 1, its highest level since 2001, during the last recession. "And one of the themes for the fourth quarter is that earnings weakness is spreading," said John Butters, earnings analyst at Thomson. "During the early stages, most of the weakness came from financials but now, seven out of the 10 sectors of the S&P 500 are expected to post negative growth." Firms in traditionally defensive sectors, such as health care, consumer staples, and utilities are the only ones expected to have posted any profit gains during the fourth quarter.
Next week, 55 companies from the S&P 500 will report, with a lot of financial firms' results due out, along with a number of big names from the tech sector. Besides IBM on Tuesday, Apple Inc. and eBay Inc. will report on Wednesday, followed by Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp. on Thursday. Other blue-chip stocks due to report are United Technologies on Tuesday, and General Electric Co. on Friday.
Housing
The housing market, whose demise revealed the bad home loans that led to the credit crisis and pushed the economy into recession, will dominate the news on the economic data front next week. Wednesday will bring data on mortgage applications from the Mortgage Bankers Association, and the January housing market index from the National Association of Home Builders. On Thursday, December housing starts and building permits, which are forward-looking indicators, will be released. Also on that day, investors will continue to monitor a dismal labor market with the release of weekly jobless claims numbers.
The Obama factor
The inauguration of President-elect Obama on Tuesday could still provide a needed boost for the market, according to Owen Fitzpatrick, market strategist at Deutsche Bank. "The luster around Obama is quite big," he said. "It's like a light switch: out with the old, in with the new." Political momentum for the president elect's economic stimulus plan, now estimated at around $850 billion, might also accelerate. "It's now on the horizon," Fitzpatrick said. "The size of the package is large and it should lessen the impact of the recession."
Weekly KLCI Technical Update and Outlook
ICapital: The KLCI has rebounded nicely from its bear market low to kick start the year 2009 and it is now trading within a rising wedge formation. However, the nearby trendline that would act as a resistance level has somehow prevented the bull from continuing the recent rally. A break below the lower trendline will also likely trigger another wave of selling pressure and signal a resumption of the downtrend. With the catalyst to improve the global economic outlook still missing, the bottoming process for the KLCI will probably be drawn out over a multi-month time period. If it can follow through above the recent high, it could then ignite a sharp rally.
Market braces for inauguration and earnings
MarketWatch:The inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama might be the only boost for Wall Street next week, as a deluge of what are expected to be mostly bad corporate results and fresh reports on the state of the housing market starts pouring in.
"The stock market is a forward-looking animal that tends to move about five months ahead of the real economy, but right now its actions don't bode well for a recovery until late in the year at best," said Robert Kavcic, market strategist at BMO Capital Markets. With U.S. markets closed Monday for the Martin Luther King holiday, the trading week will kick off Tuesday. No economic reports are due that day, but there will be a slew of financial results, including those from IBM and Johnson & Johnson, two blue-chip stocks, and from regional banks, Regions Financial , State Street and U.S. Bancorp. Financial firms were already front and center in the market over the past week, as the likes of JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, and Citigroup, all posted worse-than-expected results, with the economic recession further darkening the outlook for the already-embattled sector.
"Earnings are terrible and outlooks are cloudy," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Trust. "For financials, there are more worries ahead in my view."
For the week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 3.7%, the broad S&P 500 fell 4.7%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite lost 2.7%.
But stocks still rose Friday, for the second consecutive session of gains, with the Dow ending the session up 68 points at 8,281, the S&P 500 rising 6 points to 850 and the Nasdaq gaining 17 points to 1,529.
The government late Thursday approved a deal to provide an additional $20 billion in capitalization for Bank of America and to guarantee up to $400 billion in losses on real estate loans at both the Charlotte, N.C. lender and at Citigroup. Separately, Citigroup said it would split its operations in two. Although the stock market seemed poised to continue its late-year bounce into January, many market strategists are now trimming their expectations in the face of much worse-than-expected economic data, including dismal job losses in December, and the few earnings reports that have come out so far.
Earnings at S&P 500 companies are now expected to have tumbled 20.2% in the fourth quarter of last year from the year-ago period, according to Thomson Financial. Just a week ago, expectations were for earnings to fall 15.1%. The ratio of negative to positive pre-announcements has jumped to 3.6 to 1, its highest level since 2001, during the last recession. "And one of the themes for the fourth quarter is that earnings weakness is spreading," said John Butters, earnings analyst at Thomson. "During the early stages, most of the weakness came from financials but now, seven out of the 10 sectors of the S&P 500 are expected to post negative growth." Firms in traditionally defensive sectors, such as health care, consumer staples, and utilities are the only ones expected to have posted any profit gains during the fourth quarter.
Next week, 55 companies from the S&P 500 will report, with a lot of financial firms' results due out, along with a number of big names from the tech sector. Besides IBM on Tuesday, Apple Inc. and eBay Inc. will report on Wednesday, followed by Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp. on Thursday. Other blue-chip stocks due to report are United Technologies on Tuesday, and General Electric Co. on Friday.
Housing
The housing market, whose demise revealed the bad home loans that led to the credit crisis and pushed the economy into recession, will dominate the news on the economic data front next week. Wednesday will bring data on mortgage applications from the Mortgage Bankers Association, and the January housing market index from the National Association of Home Builders. On Thursday, December housing starts and building permits, which are forward-looking indicators, will be released. Also on that day, investors will continue to monitor a dismal labor market with the release of weekly jobless claims numbers.
The Obama factor
The inauguration of President-elect Obama on Tuesday could still provide a needed boost for the market, according to Owen Fitzpatrick, market strategist at Deutsche Bank. "The luster around Obama is quite big," he said. "It's like a light switch: out with the old, in with the new." Political momentum for the president elect's economic stimulus plan, now estimated at around $850 billion, might also accelerate. "It's now on the horizon," Fitzpatrick said. "The size of the package is large and it should lessen the impact of the recession."
Weekly KLCI Technical Update and Outlook
ICapital: The KLCI has rebounded nicely from its bear market low to kick start the year 2009 and it is now trading within a rising wedge formation. However, the nearby trendline that would act as a resistance level has somehow prevented the bull from continuing the recent rally. A break below the lower trendline will also likely trigger another wave of selling pressure and signal a resumption of the downtrend. With the catalyst to improve the global economic outlook still missing, the bottoming process for the KLCI will probably be drawn out over a multi-month time period. If it can follow through above the recent high, it could then ignite a sharp rally.
* ...PAS wins KT! ...second by-election win by Pakatan Rakyat after the March 2008's general election. Are we seeing a trend here for things to come?
* FT.com: Shift to dollar sees rouble reaching new low. Russia has since November last year devalued its currency 16 times to adjust for the collapse in the oil price.
* People are raising questions about the price gap between WTI and Brent.
* ECB cuts interest rate by 50 basis point to 2% .
15 January 2009
Japan: Where Capital Goes to Die
Hope I did not bore you again with another write up about the doom and gloom of Japanese stocks.....the author did give some recommended stocks to buy at the end though and a word of advise. "In Japan, just as we've discovered here at home(in the US), the market's best stocks are ignored, obscure, and small".
TheMotleyFool: Ah, Japan: land of the rising sun, homeland of the hot dog-eating champions, and capital-sucking vortex.
"Capital-sucking vortex?" That's a wee bit harsh, no?
No, it's really not Japan is where capital goes to die, and I have the stats to prove it.
Firing up my super-duper stock screener (not sold in stores), I see 2,371 companies with a primary listing on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. That excludes non-Japanese firms that happen to have local listings, like Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW) and Aflac (NYSE: AFL). Out of all those businesses, how many do you think managed a greater-than -4% return on equity -- a solid but not stunning result -- over each of the years 2005, 2006, and 2007?
Make sure you don't guess too high, or you'll be disqualified. I'll give you a hint: The answer is less than 800.
The price is wrong! In fact, only 35 firms hit that mark! Add in the 925 companies on the Jasdaq exchange, plus the stragglers listed on other local exchanges, and the number climbs to ... 36. In total, fewer than 1% of Japanese equities pass this simple test of Capital Allocation 101.
Why does return on equity (ROE) matter to Foolish investors? Here's a primer, but the simple fact is that the "E" in ROE is shareholders' money. If management is retaining earnings to reinvest in the business, one of its basic requirements is to continuously generate an attractive return on the owners' investment. There are plenty of "profitable" companies in Japan, but those wealth-withering single-digit returns on equity just don't cut the wasabi.
Return on equity isn't the end-all and be-all of performance yardsticks, but it's a very handy one, especially if you remember that managers can juice this figure by taking on more debt. Note that I didn't limit my Japanese search to a maximum level of indebtedness. Some of the companies that passed the test only did so by leveraging to the hilt.
Do we avoid the archipelago entirely? After running this sobering screen, I'll definitely refrain from throwing investment dollars at something like the iShares MSCI Japan Index (NYSE: EWJ), no matter how cheap the broad market looks. However, I'm not going to rule out every single Japanese company. After all, I've got three dozen here that are at least worth a look. Take Komatsu, for example. This equipment heavyweight is the Japanese version of Deere (NYSE: DE). After checking out the numbers, I'm tempted to say that Komatsu is the superior firm.
These two outfits throw off about the same level of revenue, but Komatsu sports slightly fatter margins. In trying to suss out the difference, one statistic really jumped out at me. On its website, Komatsu lists 39,267 employees on a consolidated basis, whereas Deere recently claimed 56,700 full-timers. The resulting revenue-per-employee figure suggests that Komatsu's operations are a good deal more efficient.
I would also note that Komatsu has managed to post good returns on equity without employing nearly as much balance-sheet leverage as Deere.
Another interesting group of firms are the so-called sogo shosha, or general trading companies. Mitsubishi, Mitsui (Nasdaq: MITSY), Itochu, and Marubeni all passed my simple return-on-equity screen.
What do these firms trade, exactly? Well, pretty much everything, from textiles to food products to petroleum. Some of these companies date back centuries; they seem like a natural outgrowth of the nation's limited resource endowment.
I've run across several of these firms in my energy-sector coverage, from Mitsui's profitable Petrobras (NYSE: PBR) partnership to Itochu's dinged deepwater venture. They're interesting businesses, but I find them nearly impossible to analyze. If you're a fan of conglomerates like General Electric (NYSE: GE), then the Japanese trading houses may be right up your alley.
A Foolish final word I'm still parsing this list of Japanese firms, but here's a preliminary observation. Of the 36 firms, only six have a market capitalization north of $10 billion. In other words, the big boys are blowing it. That should make you even more wary of taking an index-based approach to your Japan exposure, unless you pick up one of the small-cap ETFs. In Japan, just as we've discovered here at home, the market's best stocks are ignored, obscure, and small.
* Nissan to post annual operating loss too?
* WSJ: Citigroup ready to shrink itself by a third!
* FT.Com: Morgan Stanley: TP for HSBC cut to 455p. It also says the bank needs between USD20-30b of equity and halve its dividend in order to bolster its Balance Sheet. No recovery in its results until 2011.
* China economy grew to 3rd largest in 2007 after beating Germany but still trails behind Japan and the US.
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* Jackie Chan to star in the remake of Karate Kid.
TheMotleyFool: Ah, Japan: land of the rising sun, homeland of the hot dog-eating champions, and capital-sucking vortex.
"Capital-sucking vortex?" That's a wee bit harsh, no?
No, it's really not Japan is where capital goes to die, and I have the stats to prove it.
Firing up my super-duper stock screener (not sold in stores), I see 2,371 companies with a primary listing on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. That excludes non-Japanese firms that happen to have local listings, like Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW) and Aflac (NYSE: AFL). Out of all those businesses, how many do you think managed a greater-than -4% return on equity -- a solid but not stunning result -- over each of the years 2005, 2006, and 2007?
Make sure you don't guess too high, or you'll be disqualified. I'll give you a hint: The answer is less than 800.
The price is wrong! In fact, only 35 firms hit that mark! Add in the 925 companies on the Jasdaq exchange, plus the stragglers listed on other local exchanges, and the number climbs to ... 36. In total, fewer than 1% of Japanese equities pass this simple test of Capital Allocation 101.
Why does return on equity (ROE) matter to Foolish investors? Here's a primer, but the simple fact is that the "E" in ROE is shareholders' money. If management is retaining earnings to reinvest in the business, one of its basic requirements is to continuously generate an attractive return on the owners' investment. There are plenty of "profitable" companies in Japan, but those wealth-withering single-digit returns on equity just don't cut the wasabi.
Return on equity isn't the end-all and be-all of performance yardsticks, but it's a very handy one, especially if you remember that managers can juice this figure by taking on more debt. Note that I didn't limit my Japanese search to a maximum level of indebtedness. Some of the companies that passed the test only did so by leveraging to the hilt.
Do we avoid the archipelago entirely? After running this sobering screen, I'll definitely refrain from throwing investment dollars at something like the iShares MSCI Japan Index (NYSE: EWJ), no matter how cheap the broad market looks. However, I'm not going to rule out every single Japanese company. After all, I've got three dozen here that are at least worth a look. Take Komatsu, for example. This equipment heavyweight is the Japanese version of Deere (NYSE: DE). After checking out the numbers, I'm tempted to say that Komatsu is the superior firm.
These two outfits throw off about the same level of revenue, but Komatsu sports slightly fatter margins. In trying to suss out the difference, one statistic really jumped out at me. On its website, Komatsu lists 39,267 employees on a consolidated basis, whereas Deere recently claimed 56,700 full-timers. The resulting revenue-per-employee figure suggests that Komatsu's operations are a good deal more efficient.
I would also note that Komatsu has managed to post good returns on equity without employing nearly as much balance-sheet leverage as Deere.
Another interesting group of firms are the so-called sogo shosha, or general trading companies. Mitsubishi, Mitsui (Nasdaq: MITSY), Itochu, and Marubeni all passed my simple return-on-equity screen.
What do these firms trade, exactly? Well, pretty much everything, from textiles to food products to petroleum. Some of these companies date back centuries; they seem like a natural outgrowth of the nation's limited resource endowment.
I've run across several of these firms in my energy-sector coverage, from Mitsui's profitable Petrobras (NYSE: PBR) partnership to Itochu's dinged deepwater venture. They're interesting businesses, but I find them nearly impossible to analyze. If you're a fan of conglomerates like General Electric (NYSE: GE), then the Japanese trading houses may be right up your alley.
A Foolish final word I'm still parsing this list of Japanese firms, but here's a preliminary observation. Of the 36 firms, only six have a market capitalization north of $10 billion. In other words, the big boys are blowing it. That should make you even more wary of taking an index-based approach to your Japan exposure, unless you pick up one of the small-cap ETFs. In Japan, just as we've discovered here at home, the market's best stocks are ignored, obscure, and small.
* Nissan to post annual operating loss too?
* WSJ: Citigroup ready to shrink itself by a third!
* FT.Com: Morgan Stanley: TP for HSBC cut to 455p. It also says the bank needs between USD20-30b of equity and halve its dividend in order to bolster its Balance Sheet. No recovery in its results until 2011.
* China economy grew to 3rd largest in 2007 after beating Germany but still trails behind Japan and the US.
.
* Jackie Chan to star in the remake of Karate Kid.
Labels:
China on the Go,
Economy,
Market News
14 January 2009
A rare P/BV of 1
Japanese companies, like the rest of its competitors around the world, are struggling with recessionary pressures. The effects of recession has hit sales(local and export) and increased the difficulty in raising funds. Some that are not level footed face the possibility of bankruptcies. In fact according to BBCNews, company bankruptcies in Japan jumped 24.7% in December from a year earlier. For the 2008 year, it rose 11%, the most in 8 years. With regards to operating loss, the latest forecast figures are also grim. Toyota, the world's second largest automaker is expected to lose USD1.7B this coming March, its first loss in 71 years due to slowing demand and a strong yen(yen soared 25% in 2008). Similarly, Sony is also expected to face an operating loss in the coming March of USD1.1B, its first loss in 14 years. Without doubt, such companies are all too ready to axe their workforce.
Would we be seeing opportunity here to buy cheap beaten up "blue chip" Japanese companies? In fact, according to IHT, refer here, the Nikkei which is nearing its 26 years low, and with a rare P/BV(or NTA) ratio of 1 now (October low of 0.87 when the index hits 6,995) indicates that investors are valuing companies at less than what they could theoretically be liquidated for. It added that even during Japan's decade of economic stagnation, deflation and banking troubles, the price-to-book ratio never fell below 1.
However, some will advise you to keep your money first. Sourcing from Bloomberg here, Analyst John Mihaljevic, writing on the Web site Seeking Alpha, looked at corporate Japan’s evolution since the 1990s, and it’s not pretty. “We approached our study of Japanese stocks with the hypothesis that we should be able to find some compelling investments given the cheap valuations of a large subset of Japanese public companies,” wrote Mihaljevic, managing editor of the Manual of Ideas in New York. “So far, however, we have remained unimpressed.” Five specific issues are explored: a lack of business focus, murky corporate governance, little regard for returns on investment, the high cost of production, and clubby boardrooms.
Despite the above, will you forego this golden opportunity to make money in the long run since the average Japanese stocks are at firesale prices? Actually I am not sure. I did try to do a search using the Bloomberg machines to compare the Nikkei's P/BV with the Bursa or HangSeng in general. Apparently, no such average can be calculated from its database. However, there is such information based on individual stocks. To feel how a 1X P/BV is like, look at AirAsia now. Also, for comparison based on Kenanga Research's latest sector coverage, the P/BV of Property is 0.8X, Plantation 1.7X and Oil & Gas 1.9X . So is P/BV of 1 cheap then? I think the Nikkei's P/BV of 1 is cheap but too generalised as we must also look deeper into the individual stocks themselves. In addition, I believe other valuation ratios (p/e, eps growth, roe etc) must also be used to justify our conviction to buy.
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* Happy Ponggal to you! Hope you have the sweetest start for the year and your low is bearable while your high is exceptional!
* Citi which expects a technical recession in 1Q09 for Malaysia, downgrades on Malaysian banks but still a hold AMMB. It also says Singapore property is in a Bear Trap and advises to sell into strength.
* YahooNews: Yahoo names tech veteran Carol Bartz as new CEO.
* US Trade deficit hits 5 year low in November due to fall in oil prices and slower domestic demand.
* Bloomberg: ABN Ambro: China, HK stocks may be the first to bottom amidst slump.
* RTTNews: China's foreign exchange reserves reaches USD1.95T on 31st December. For the year, it was up USD417.8B. However, the 4th quarter increase has slowed down compared with the previous 3 quarters.
13 January 2009
Of culture, spirituality, morality and God
Bloomberg: The Dalai Lama, Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, blamed a lack of spirituality among people today for the global financial crisis. The Buddhist monk, speaking during a weeklong religious seminar in the Indian holy city of Varanasi, told followers that “rampant corruption in the world” is due to a decline in culture and spirituality. “People have become selfish and materialistic, which has led to the economic slowdown,” the 73-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner said in an address at the Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies yesterday, Indian state-run broadcaster Doordarshan reported.
The U.S. housing slump that began in 2007 has developed into a worldwide crisis that forced central bankers to cut interest rates to near zero to unlock credit markets, pushed governments to bail out their biggest banks amid $1 trillion of writedowns, and sent titans like General Motors Corp. and American International Group Inc. begging for bailouts.
The U.S. housing slump that began in 2007 has developed into a worldwide crisis that forced central bankers to cut interest rates to near zero to unlock credit markets, pushed governments to bail out their biggest banks amid $1 trillion of writedowns, and sent titans like General Motors Corp. and American International Group Inc. begging for bailouts.
Pope Benedict XVI, reflecting on the crashing stock markets and financial turmoil, said in October that money “is nothing” and the only solid reality is the word of God. “He who builds only visible and tangible things like success, career and money, builds the house of his life on sand,” the 81-year-old pontiff told bishops at an assembly in the Vatican.
Hey it it is time to seriously consider reading the teachings of the Great Confucius in Di Zi Gui.
* Bloomberg: 1) Euro falls to one month low versus Dollar on ECB rate view this Thursday.
2) RBS sees growth in China may slow to 5% this year. 3) Germany has agreed to spend an additional USD66.8b in the next 2 years, its second attempt to stem the worst recession since WWII in Europe's largest economy.
* FT.com: Ireland blames UK for engineering Sterling's slump.
* Aussie and NZ dollars fall on worsening outlook for world economy. As at yesterday, 1 AUD=RM2.44, 1 NZD=RM2.06
Labels:
China on the Go,
Economy,
Market News
12 January 2009
Technical Analysis - January 12 2009
S&P500 (890, last week 932 or -4.5% w.o.w )
There are some mixed signals in the short term coming from the index. For example, even though the Daily MACD is still in the positive, the Daily Parabolic SAR and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are showing weakness already. For the weekly readings, the indicators are improving slowly and the MACD had a positive crossover and the weekly Parabolic SAR has also just turned positive. The weekly ADX trend and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are not bullish yet. Support is around 820 and resistance at 950.
KLSE CI (919, last week 894 or +2.8% w.ow)
Unlike the other markets, the daily indicators continued to improve further during the week. The index is still able to sit above the daily 50-day ema. The daily indicators of Parabolic SAR, ADX trend and DMI (+ve and –ve) are still positive. The weekly charts have improved and the MACD and Parabolic SAR are still positive. The uptrend will be enforced further if the weekly ADX trend and DMIs (+ve and –ve) were to turn bullish too, so far still moving towards it only. The index is expected to trade between 850 and 970.
HangSeng (14,377, last week 15,043 or -4.43% w.o.w )
Another volatile situation during the week. Market sentiment for the current term seems to be mixed. While the week before there was a positive turnaround for the index, this week witnessed a negative turn. The index is now below the daily 50-day ema of 14,850 again. Except for the Parabolic SAR, the daily MACD and MACD Histogram are slightly negative. The weekly charts are doing well, especially the MACD and MACD Histogram which are bullish. The weekly Parabolic SAR is also positive. It will be bullish for the market if it can break through the tough weekly 20-day ema of 16,000. Support is seen at 14,000 and resistance at 16,000.
Nikkei 225 (8,837, last week 8,860 or -0.26% w.ow)
The daily indicators also giving some mixed signal during the week as the index falls below the daily 50-day ema of around 8,900 level after a brief success. The daily MACD and DMI indicators which have just turned positive earlier are getting weaker while the Parabolic SAR has just turned bearish. The weekly charts are improving. The Parabolic SAR is positive too. It will be bullish for the market if it can break through the tough weekly 20-day ema of 9,500. The index is expected to trade between 8,500 and 9,500.
* Japan market closed today due to the Coming of Age holiday and will be reopen on Tuesday.
* Bloomberg: Satyam may restate earnings, be broken up following Chairman Raju's arrest.
* The WSJ: Disney is moving ahead on a plan for a USD3.59B theme park in Shanghai- one of the largest foreign investments in China.
* China says it can be the first to "recover" from the current financial crisis.
Labels:
China on the Go,
Market News,
Technical Analysis
11 January 2009
Smart Investing/Trading for the week ending January 9 2009
Weekly US markets Update and Outlook
Stocks turn to earnings as recovery hopes slip
Marketwatch: Investors will get their first taste next week of what's expected to be a gruesome earnings season, with a double helping of sour 2009 outlooks and even more evidence of the depth of the recession.
"There's disappointment about the prospect of the recovery," said Ken Tower, market strategist at Quantitative Analysis Services. "Earnings are now more likely to disappoint, and across the board, [companies] are slashing estimates going forward." Stocks fell on Friday, and posted steep losses for the week, after the government said the U.S. economy lost another 524,000 jobs in December, and the unemployment rate rose to 7.2%, confirming 2007 as the worst for the labor market since World War II.
The current market consensus is for the U.S. recession to bottom out sometime in the middle of this year -- but the latest signs from the labor market suggested to many that these forecasts might be too optimistic.
"I think that people are too optimistic about the recovery," Tower said. "A lot of bad news is already priced in but every time you get worse than expected news, the stock market will have to adjust." On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average finished at 8,599.18, down 143.28 points, or 1.6%, for the session. For the week, the blue-chip average posted a loss of 4.8%. The S&P 500 lost 19.38 points, or 2.1%, to finish at 890.35, with the broad index losing 4.5% for the week. The Nasdaq Composite shed 45.42 points, or 2.8%, to stand at 1,571.59 Friday, leaving it down 3.7% from last Friday's close.
President-elect Barack Obama told a news conference on Capitol Hill the jobs report underlined the need for quick action on his proposed economic stimulus proposal.
"The new Obama Administration has been very quick to market their roughly $750 billion two-year stimulus package in the hopes of speedy implementation after the January 20 inauguration," said Sherry Cooper, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets.
"Even so, it appears that the squabbling on Capitol Hill will stall early passage, at least for a while," she said.
Next week, investors will key in to more economic data, especially the December retail sales numbers due out on Wednesday, and the Federal Reserve's Beige Book of economic conditions, released on the same day.
According to Marc Pado, market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald, the stocks in the retail sector bear watching as they have shown signs of life over the past week, even after most retailers posted scary same-store sales numbers.
Earnings
In the quarterly reporting season that gets its unofficial start Monday, analysts polled by FactSet anticipate earnings for S&P 500 companies fell 12%, dragged down by double-digit drops in auto, retail and materials companies. Alcoa Inc., which kicks off the unofficial start of reporting season after the close of trading Monday, earlier this week said it planned to cut 13,500 jobs, close plants and chop capital spending by 50%. Intel Corp., another blue-chip stock often used as a barometer for both the tech sector and the economy, will report earnings on Thursday.
Stocks turn to earnings as recovery hopes slip
Marketwatch: Investors will get their first taste next week of what's expected to be a gruesome earnings season, with a double helping of sour 2009 outlooks and even more evidence of the depth of the recession.
"There's disappointment about the prospect of the recovery," said Ken Tower, market strategist at Quantitative Analysis Services. "Earnings are now more likely to disappoint, and across the board, [companies] are slashing estimates going forward." Stocks fell on Friday, and posted steep losses for the week, after the government said the U.S. economy lost another 524,000 jobs in December, and the unemployment rate rose to 7.2%, confirming 2007 as the worst for the labor market since World War II.
The current market consensus is for the U.S. recession to bottom out sometime in the middle of this year -- but the latest signs from the labor market suggested to many that these forecasts might be too optimistic.
"I think that people are too optimistic about the recovery," Tower said. "A lot of bad news is already priced in but every time you get worse than expected news, the stock market will have to adjust." On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average finished at 8,599.18, down 143.28 points, or 1.6%, for the session. For the week, the blue-chip average posted a loss of 4.8%. The S&P 500 lost 19.38 points, or 2.1%, to finish at 890.35, with the broad index losing 4.5% for the week. The Nasdaq Composite shed 45.42 points, or 2.8%, to stand at 1,571.59 Friday, leaving it down 3.7% from last Friday's close.
President-elect Barack Obama told a news conference on Capitol Hill the jobs report underlined the need for quick action on his proposed economic stimulus proposal.
"The new Obama Administration has been very quick to market their roughly $750 billion two-year stimulus package in the hopes of speedy implementation after the January 20 inauguration," said Sherry Cooper, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets.
"Even so, it appears that the squabbling on Capitol Hill will stall early passage, at least for a while," she said.
Next week, investors will key in to more economic data, especially the December retail sales numbers due out on Wednesday, and the Federal Reserve's Beige Book of economic conditions, released on the same day.
According to Marc Pado, market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald, the stocks in the retail sector bear watching as they have shown signs of life over the past week, even after most retailers posted scary same-store sales numbers.
Earnings
In the quarterly reporting season that gets its unofficial start Monday, analysts polled by FactSet anticipate earnings for S&P 500 companies fell 12%, dragged down by double-digit drops in auto, retail and materials companies. Alcoa Inc., which kicks off the unofficial start of reporting season after the close of trading Monday, earlier this week said it planned to cut 13,500 jobs, close plants and chop capital spending by 50%. Intel Corp., another blue-chip stock often used as a barometer for both the tech sector and the economy, will report earnings on Thursday.
Weekly KLSE CI Update and Outlook
ICapital: The KLSE CI is above its 30-day and 50-day but below its 50-week moving averages. Its daily MACD and DMI are bullish. On weekly KLSE CI. The stock market had one of its worst years ever in 2008, with the KLCI falling 39.3%. However, the KLCI has actually been quietly attempting to build a base in the past couple of months from which a bottom may form with the 800-mark acting as support. Would the volume that picked up substantially amidst the New Year rally be a precursor to a new sustained bull market?
* Beware of fake RMB ..esp...RMB100 notes.
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* I am feeling worried....TheStar: Government departments ordered to drop austerity measures.
* Bloomberg: Bank of Korea cuts key interest rate to record low 2.5% as recession looms.
* Bloomberg: Morgan Stanley: Buy Won, Mexican Peso, Yuan as dollar shortage ease.
08 January 2009
We are unmoved!
Stumbled into this article by AmResearch this morning. It is titled "Market Strategy : Five high conviction SELL ideas in a counter-cyclical rally." Another conviction to sell is noted below this article. Those who are bullish may not be too happy to read this. Incidently, all markets are in a sea of red today.
We are unmoved by the recent strength in the market, which may be attributable to the ‘January-effect’ and some rotational index-linked buying from portfolio funds looking to raise exposure to equity in the new year. Sure, there are growing calls for a recovery in Asian equities in the second-half of this year. The massive fiscal as well as monetary stimulus on the global front is expected to take hold, albeit with a time lag to lift the regional economies out of recession perhaps in 2010. But for now, we do not think that this extended counter-cyclical rally can be sustained as the near term macro cycles are fast deteriorating: the economic inflexion point will remain a moving target. After the steep and swift run where select big-cap stocks have already risen by more than 20% in the past month alone, valuations may not withstand the onslaught of negative macro news and earnings disappointment as we enter the 1Q earnings reporting season starting from the third week of January 2009. Furthermore, catalytic policy pronouncement to seriously prod the market’s immediate focus beyond upcoming weak earnings season also appears unlikely ahead of the transition in political leadership. We are advocating locking profits in the current counter-cyclical rally. In this report, we highlight five high conviction SELL ideas, namely Bumi-Commerce, SP Setia, IJM, MAS and TMI, where earnings may seriously disappoint.
We are unmoved by the recent strength in the market, which may be attributable to the ‘January-effect’ and some rotational index-linked buying from portfolio funds looking to raise exposure to equity in the new year. Sure, there are growing calls for a recovery in Asian equities in the second-half of this year. The massive fiscal as well as monetary stimulus on the global front is expected to take hold, albeit with a time lag to lift the regional economies out of recession perhaps in 2010. But for now, we do not think that this extended counter-cyclical rally can be sustained as the near term macro cycles are fast deteriorating: the economic inflexion point will remain a moving target. After the steep and swift run where select big-cap stocks have already risen by more than 20% in the past month alone, valuations may not withstand the onslaught of negative macro news and earnings disappointment as we enter the 1Q earnings reporting season starting from the third week of January 2009. Furthermore, catalytic policy pronouncement to seriously prod the market’s immediate focus beyond upcoming weak earnings season also appears unlikely ahead of the transition in political leadership. We are advocating locking profits in the current counter-cyclical rally. In this report, we highlight five high conviction SELL ideas, namely Bumi-Commerce, SP Setia, IJM, MAS and TMI, where earnings may seriously disappoint.
Similarly, JP Morgan wrote this morning on IOI. " We would take profit after strong outperformance; share price already implying CPO prices above RM2,000/T. TP is RM3.50"
* Satyam's "enron" type scandal will erode confidence in software/outsourcing companies and India in general.
* Bloomberg: BOE is expected to cut interest rates by 50 bp today to 1.5%, an all time record low. Why is the pound rallying mate?
* Bloomberg: Bank of China falls in HK after Li Ka-Shing sells 2 b shares at HKD1.98 (or 7.5% discount of its previous day closing price).
07 January 2009
A and H shares near parity
Near parity. Well, I think I have heard of this term being used quite commonly by financial commentators especially in the money markets these days. Remember months ago when the value of Canadian and AUD was close to the USD? Parity or Near parity term was used. Then only before year end, this word was used again. Sterling's drop to near parity with euro! Platinum near parity with gold! And now, near parity was used to compare China's A shares and Hang Seng's H shares which we all know for years having very much differences in price. Well, nothing is impossible as we are living in exciting times!
Mainland markets have different dynamics to those in Hong Kong. Shanghai was the world's best-performing market in 2007 thanks to huge demand by domestic investors who could not buy shares overseas.
But mainland retail investors have turned cautious after the Chinese market halved in 2008. The internationally oriented Hong Kong market has recovered from 2008's lows more quickly, narrowing the price gap.
Hong Kong shares have risen faster than their mainland counterparts, Mr Do said, partly because some investors shorted the Hang Seng and the Hang Seng Chinese Enterprises Index of H shares as proxies to hedge against other emerging markets. As markets recovered, they had to buy back the shares. "That's why the bounce has been so big."
But China has strict capital controls. They prevent arbitrageurs from buying shares of a dual-listed company cheaply in Hong Kong and selling them at a higher price on the mainland – a process that would eventually equalise prices.
"In Hong Kong and in Shanghai and everywhere else the methodology [of valuation] is the same, but prices do vary from the intrinsic value," said Steven Sun, senior China equity strategist for HSBC. "In the long run the difference should narrow."
FT.com: The difference in the share prices of Chinese companies listed in both Shanghai and Hong Kong has narrowed dramatically in recent weeks and may disappear if the Chinese economy proves resilient in the slowdown.
The A shares of companies traded in Shanghai or Shenzhen were on average 16.1 per cent higher than the H shares of the same 56 companies listed in Hong Kong, compared with 44 per cent in early December and a peak of 108.1 per cent on 16 January 2008, according to the Hang Seng China AH Premium Index.
Mainland markets have different dynamics to those in Hong Kong. Shanghai was the world's best-performing market in 2007 thanks to huge demand by domestic investors who could not buy shares overseas.
But mainland retail investors have turned cautious after the Chinese market halved in 2008. The internationally oriented Hong Kong market has recovered from 2008's lows more quickly, narrowing the price gap.
The premium could even turn into a discount if foreign investors become "massively bullish" on Chinese companies and so bid up H shares in Hong Kong, said Khiem Do, head of Asian multi-asset at Baring Asset Management. "If A shares trade at a discount, that means overseas investors are going crazy about China again and they can't access the A share market, therefore they have to buy H shares." That could happen if China grows more than expected or if the US and other developed economies shrink further than feared in 2009, he said. "But there are some very big 'ifs' there."
Hong Kong shares have risen faster than their mainland counterparts, Mr Do said, partly because some investors shorted the Hang Seng and the Hang Seng Chinese Enterprises Index of H shares as proxies to hedge against other emerging markets. As markets recovered, they had to buy back the shares. "That's why the bounce has been so big."
Even now, the shares of some small companies such as Nanjing Panda Electronics and Sinopec Yizheng Chemical trade on mainland markets at about 4½ times their Hong Kong price. In theory there should be negligible differences between shares listed on two or more stock exchanges.
But China has strict capital controls. They prevent arbitrageurs from buying shares of a dual-listed company cheaply in Hong Kong and selling them at a higher price on the mainland – a process that would eventually equalise prices.
"In Hong Kong and in Shanghai and everywhere else the methodology [of valuation] is the same, but prices do vary from the intrinsic value," said Steven Sun, senior China equity strategist for HSBC. "In the long run the difference should narrow."
* BT(Singpore): Toyota to shut plants for 11 days during February and March in order to cut bulging inventories as sales plummet.
* Bloomberg: Alcoa, world's largest aluminium maker, will fire 13,500 employees, 13% of its workforce and reduce production.
* Bloomberg: Obama says federal budget deficit is likely to approach USD1T for years to come as the government grapples with a recession and other spending demands.
* RGE: Will the US Treasuries be the next bubble to fall?
* Parkson shares slumped after saying sales growth in China slows. Currently it is trading at RM3.68 or down 60 sen.
* WCT- took in its second limit down at 92.5 sen but now hovering around RM1.13 . Aseanbankers cut WCT’s earnings forecast by 21 per cent for this year and 11 per cent for 2010.
* BT: OSK-UOB: KLSE unlikely to hit 1,000 this year.
Labels:
China on the Go,
Economy,
Market News,
Sector - Gaming
06 January 2009
Confidence trickling in?
After more than a week of hefty rise in major world markets, market commentators have begun to feel "positive" again. Confidence seems to be on the rise amid cautiously due to a "new beginning" factor? It is true that markets do "look much better" now technically speaking despite the gloomy economic numbers being churned out. However, I must say the majority of the market participants are not convinced to go in just yet and only watched at the sideline. Or are you one of the many waiting for profit taking to set in before buying? Below is one of the few early bullish commentators for Bursa stocks. It advises "BUY" bombed-out stocks now despite an expectation of only a bear market rally this year.
Dow Jones Newswire: Malaysia players should move out of cash and into equities in 1Q09, says Macquarie; expects bear market rally this year, reckons investors "would do well to buy bombed-out stocks." Malaysian earnings likely to outshine region in 1Q09 as most of listed companies not exporters; also says "at some point, regional equity markets should respond to an easing in the bad news as fiscal policy stabilizes economic conditions towards mid-2009, leading to a partial recovery in 3Q." Recommends "bombed-out" stocks like AMMB(1015.KU), Genting(3182.KU), TM International(6888.KU), Tenaga(5347.KU). Still, warns market recovery expected to fade in 4Q as fiscal stimulus insufficient "and growth falls again once the money finishes traveling through the system"; reckons more fiscal stimulus would be needed for economy, forecasts "real recovery" through course of 2010.
* Above - Meydan RaceCourse Dubai -a joint venture project between WCT and Arabtec now gone "off course". See below.
* First limit down for the year...WCT Bhd (WCT) hits limit down in early morning trade today before it was suspended at 9.12am by Bursa Malaysia. The suspended price was RM1.29 The contract worth RM4.6b was cancelled “because of non-adherence to the agreed time schedule for construction.” WCT will make a material announcement late today. Meanwhile here are the latest TP for the stock. RHB Research RM1.28, AmResearch RM1.36. According to DJ, it may find support at MYR1.07 (Oct. 28 low), next at 90.5 sen (limit down threshold).
* Dr M: Save Palestine, Boycott US goods! Is it that easy Dr M? "OK, lets start by not using the computer!" Think of Microsoft, www, trades ......
* CNBC: People's Bank of China predicts China 2008 GDP growth seen at 9.3% and CPI at 6%.
* ChinaDaily: PWC: IPOs for China and HK will begin to pick up in the 2nd half of the year as the impact of stimulus package starts to feed into the wider economy.
BT: Palm oil at more than 2 month high. March delivery is now at RM1,894 a MT.
Labels:
Market News,
Stocks,
Technical Analysis
05 January 2009
Technical Analysis - January 5 2009
S&P500 (932, last week 873 or +6.8% w.o.w )
The index worked extremely hard during the week with a hefty rise of almost 7%. As a result, the daily indicators continued to be in the positive last week. The index is now above the daily 50-day ema. For the weekly readings, the indicators are improving slowly and the MACD had a positive crossover but the weekly Parabolic SAR is not positive yet. The uptrend will be enforced further if the daily/weekly ADX trend and DMIs (+ve and –ve) were to turn bullish too, so far still moving towards it only. Support is around 890 and resistance at 980.
KLSE CI (894, last week 867 or +3.1% w.ow)
The daily indicators continued to improve further during the week especially during the last day of trading for the week. The index went a step higher and close the week sitting above the daily 50-day ema despite the index under pressure as evident from the high daily stochastic oscillator. The daily indicators of Parabolic SAR, ADX trend and DMI (+ve and –ve) are still positive. The weekly charts have improved and the MACD and Parabolic SAR are still positive. The uptrend will be enforced further if the weekly ADX trend and DMIs (+ve and –ve) were to turn bullish too, so far still moving towards it only. The index is expected to trade between 850 and 930.
HangSeng (15,043, last week 14,184 or +6.06% w.o.w )
What a turnaround by the index again. Despite trending lower the week before, the index jumped 6% and is now above the daily 50-day ema . Despite this, the daily MACD and MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR are still slightly negative. The weekly charts are doing well, especially the MACD and MACD Histogram which are bullish. The weekly Parabolic SAR is also positive. Support is seen at 14,000 and resistance at 15,800.
Nikkei 225 (8,860, last week 8,740 or +1.37% w.ow)
The daily indicators continued to improve further during the week. The index seems to be heading towards the daily 50-day ema of around 8,900 level. The DMI indicators have just turned positive. However, the daily/weekly stochastic oscillator is at a high level which requires the index to correct soon. The weekly charts are improving. The Parabolic SAR has just turned bullish too. The index is expected to trade between 8,500 and 9,500.
.
* World condemns Israel's offensive in Gaza Strip.
* Bloomberg: Fed officials endorse "big stimulus" to pull economy out of recession.
* Bloomberg: Obama said to push for USD300b tax cuts in economic stimulus package.
* The Standard: HK investors of Lehman minibonds may have to pay around 20% of any money they receive to their US lawyers.
04 January 2009
Smart Investing/Trading for the week ending January 2 2009
US Markets Update and Outlook
Year-end rally to get put to the test
As volume returns, will recent euphoria depart?
MarketWatch: Like so many New Year's revelers, the U.S. stock market may try to stick to its resolutions -- and fail miserably.
After a dismal 2008, U.S. stocks started out the new year with a splash. The Dow Jones Industrial Average on Friday rose above 9,000 for the first time since early November and finished 6% higher for the week, ending a four-week losing streak. But with many professional money managers home for the Christmas and New Year's holidays, the stock market made its recent moves in very light volume. The return of institutional money next week will determine whether these gains stick. "The real question is, is this going to last when traders come back from vacation?" said Doug Roberts, chief investment strategist at investment research firm ChannelCapitalResearch.com.
Every day next week, traders will get a dose of new corporate and economic news that may give them more insight into the depth of the U.S. recession and credit crunch. Items most likely to move stocks include minutes from the Federal Reserve's last interest-rate setting meeting, two big tech conferences, returning lawmakers' efforts on another stimulus package and Friday's job report.
Autos, Madoff
The trading week starts out with a bout of Detroit dolor, Capitol Hill head-cracking and the end of an era at Apple, Inc. On Monday, U.S. automakers disclose auto sales for December. Industry sales risk dropping below a rate of 10 million on a seasonally-adjusted annual basis, or the lowest for 2008. The Treasury Dept.'s move last week to grant $5 billion in bailout money to GM's financing arm GMAC LLC, which immediately prompted GM and GMAC to ease lending conditions for new auto loans, probably came too late to sway December sales, say analysts. Still, with General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC executives making no secret of their problems in hearings last month, the market may shrug off auto sales data unless the expected drop turns into a freefall.
"People are obviously expecting pretty bad numbers," said Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Wealth Management. "The fear is that you get something far worse."
Also Monday, the House Financial Services Committee will hold a hearing on the $50 billion Ponzi scheme investment manager Bernard Madoff allegedly orchestrated. The panel, led by Barney Frank, D-Mass., says it will interview witnesses with an eye on making "the most substantial rewrite" of financial markets laws since the Great Depression.
TARP, Macworld
Any word from Washington on its efforts to stem the current financial crisis -- and prevent the next one -- is likely to pique investors' interest. President-elect Barack Obama and Democratic lawmakers say they want to pass a second fiscal stimulus package to create jobs and deliver tax cuts to low-wage and middle-income workers. Recent estimates of its size have ranged from $850 million to as much as $1 trillion. Plus, lawmakers are expected to enter a new round of wrangling over the uses of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. The Bush Administration's decision to extend the financial system bailout money to automakers pushed total TARP payouts past $350 billion. The Treasury Department must now convince Congress, which is at odds over the best uses of TARP, to release the second half of the $700 billion.
The House Financial Services Committee will hold a hearing Wednesday on uses of the TARP. Separately, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is scheduled to speak on the government-sponsored mortgage agencies. For tech investors, the annual Macworld trade show kicks off Tuesday with a keynote speech by a top Apple official -- but not Apple CEO Steve Jobs. The announcement last month that Jobs would forego his traditional opening remarks sent Apple's stock tumbling as worries resurfaced about Jobs' health. This is also the last Macworld Apple plans to attend. The sector gets a doubly whammy of product news next week as Microsoft Corp., Cisco Systems, Inc. and other tech heavyweights head to Las Vegas for the annual International Consumer Electronics Show.
More job losses
Economic data starts to pile up Tuesday with releases on the services sector, pending home sales and minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee's Dec. 16 meeting. That's the meeting when policymakers threw everything they had at getting credit moving in the economy.
To a certain extent, those efforts seem to be working. Mortgage rates dropped, and yields on Treasurys steepened as investors clung less desperately to safe-haven assets. Spreads on corporate debt have narrowed slightly, suggesting investors are feeling a bit more comfortable lending companies money.
"I'm cheered by the fact that spreads have come in and mortgage rates have come down," said Stone. "But we'll see if it follows through when we actually have people trading." Economic indicators early in the week -- plus Wednesday's ADP employment report and jobless claims on Thursday -- are the opening acts for Friday's main show, the December unemployment report.
Economists are looking for more of the same sorry news on the economy. They expect about half a million jobs to have disappeared in December, contributing to a 5% to 6% drop in the fourth quarter's gross domestic product.
"As we turn into the new year, the message from the data flow is as straightforward as it is glum," said J.P. Morgan Chase economist Bruce Kasman in a report Friday. "We are in the midst of a deep global economic contraction, one that is likely to produce the sharpest four-quarter decline in global GDP in the post-World War II era." In corporate news, Constellation Brands Inc., Monsanto Co, Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. and KB Home are scheduled to report earnings. Chevron Corp.will release an interim production update.
KLCI Update and Outlook
BT: The composite index's daily trend continued to stay below its intermediate-term downtrend. It continued to stay below its intermediate-term downside support.
The KLCI ended the year on a rather weak note when it closed at 873.43 on December 31, posting a year-on-year loss of 571.60 points, or 39.56 per cent. The FBM Second Board Index tumbled 2,778.34 points, or 41.27 per cent, to 3,954.01 while the FBM Mesdaq Index plunged 2,863.91 points, or 46.88 per cent, to 3,245.25.
The index's 14-day RSI stayed at 60.87 per cent level yesterday. Its 14-week and 14-month RSI stayed at 35.39 and 32.02 per cent levels respectively.
The composite index staged an overhead breakout of its 50-day moving averages on December 30 and continued to stay above that at the market close yesterday. This signalled a shift in market momentum.
Next week, the index's envisaged resistance zone hovers at the 897 to 930 levels while its immediate downside support is at the 856 to 890 levels.
Year-end rally to get put to the test
As volume returns, will recent euphoria depart?
MarketWatch: Like so many New Year's revelers, the U.S. stock market may try to stick to its resolutions -- and fail miserably.
After a dismal 2008, U.S. stocks started out the new year with a splash. The Dow Jones Industrial Average on Friday rose above 9,000 for the first time since early November and finished 6% higher for the week, ending a four-week losing streak. But with many professional money managers home for the Christmas and New Year's holidays, the stock market made its recent moves in very light volume. The return of institutional money next week will determine whether these gains stick. "The real question is, is this going to last when traders come back from vacation?" said Doug Roberts, chief investment strategist at investment research firm ChannelCapitalResearch.com.
Every day next week, traders will get a dose of new corporate and economic news that may give them more insight into the depth of the U.S. recession and credit crunch. Items most likely to move stocks include minutes from the Federal Reserve's last interest-rate setting meeting, two big tech conferences, returning lawmakers' efforts on another stimulus package and Friday's job report.
Autos, Madoff
The trading week starts out with a bout of Detroit dolor, Capitol Hill head-cracking and the end of an era at Apple, Inc. On Monday, U.S. automakers disclose auto sales for December. Industry sales risk dropping below a rate of 10 million on a seasonally-adjusted annual basis, or the lowest for 2008. The Treasury Dept.'s move last week to grant $5 billion in bailout money to GM's financing arm GMAC LLC, which immediately prompted GM and GMAC to ease lending conditions for new auto loans, probably came too late to sway December sales, say analysts. Still, with General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC executives making no secret of their problems in hearings last month, the market may shrug off auto sales data unless the expected drop turns into a freefall.
"People are obviously expecting pretty bad numbers," said Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Wealth Management. "The fear is that you get something far worse."
Also Monday, the House Financial Services Committee will hold a hearing on the $50 billion Ponzi scheme investment manager Bernard Madoff allegedly orchestrated. The panel, led by Barney Frank, D-Mass., says it will interview witnesses with an eye on making "the most substantial rewrite" of financial markets laws since the Great Depression.
TARP, Macworld
Any word from Washington on its efforts to stem the current financial crisis -- and prevent the next one -- is likely to pique investors' interest. President-elect Barack Obama and Democratic lawmakers say they want to pass a second fiscal stimulus package to create jobs and deliver tax cuts to low-wage and middle-income workers. Recent estimates of its size have ranged from $850 million to as much as $1 trillion. Plus, lawmakers are expected to enter a new round of wrangling over the uses of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. The Bush Administration's decision to extend the financial system bailout money to automakers pushed total TARP payouts past $350 billion. The Treasury Department must now convince Congress, which is at odds over the best uses of TARP, to release the second half of the $700 billion.
The House Financial Services Committee will hold a hearing Wednesday on uses of the TARP. Separately, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is scheduled to speak on the government-sponsored mortgage agencies. For tech investors, the annual Macworld trade show kicks off Tuesday with a keynote speech by a top Apple official -- but not Apple CEO Steve Jobs. The announcement last month that Jobs would forego his traditional opening remarks sent Apple's stock tumbling as worries resurfaced about Jobs' health. This is also the last Macworld Apple plans to attend. The sector gets a doubly whammy of product news next week as Microsoft Corp., Cisco Systems, Inc. and other tech heavyweights head to Las Vegas for the annual International Consumer Electronics Show.
More job losses
Economic data starts to pile up Tuesday with releases on the services sector, pending home sales and minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee's Dec. 16 meeting. That's the meeting when policymakers threw everything they had at getting credit moving in the economy.
To a certain extent, those efforts seem to be working. Mortgage rates dropped, and yields on Treasurys steepened as investors clung less desperately to safe-haven assets. Spreads on corporate debt have narrowed slightly, suggesting investors are feeling a bit more comfortable lending companies money.
"I'm cheered by the fact that spreads have come in and mortgage rates have come down," said Stone. "But we'll see if it follows through when we actually have people trading." Economic indicators early in the week -- plus Wednesday's ADP employment report and jobless claims on Thursday -- are the opening acts for Friday's main show, the December unemployment report.
Economists are looking for more of the same sorry news on the economy. They expect about half a million jobs to have disappeared in December, contributing to a 5% to 6% drop in the fourth quarter's gross domestic product.
"As we turn into the new year, the message from the data flow is as straightforward as it is glum," said J.P. Morgan Chase economist Bruce Kasman in a report Friday. "We are in the midst of a deep global economic contraction, one that is likely to produce the sharpest four-quarter decline in global GDP in the post-World War II era." In corporate news, Constellation Brands Inc., Monsanto Co, Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. and KB Home are scheduled to report earnings. Chevron Corp.will release an interim production update.
KLCI Update and Outlook
BT: The composite index's daily trend continued to stay below its intermediate-term downtrend. It continued to stay below its intermediate-term downside support.
The KLCI ended the year on a rather weak note when it closed at 873.43 on December 31, posting a year-on-year loss of 571.60 points, or 39.56 per cent. The FBM Second Board Index tumbled 2,778.34 points, or 41.27 per cent, to 3,954.01 while the FBM Mesdaq Index plunged 2,863.91 points, or 46.88 per cent, to 3,245.25.
Its daily and weekly fast MACDs (moving average convergence divergence) continued to stay above the support of their respective slow MACDs at the market close yesterday. Its monthly fast MACD continued to stay below its slow MACD.
The index's 14-day RSI stayed at 60.87 per cent level yesterday. Its 14-week and 14-month RSI stayed at 35.39 and 32.02 per cent levels respectively.
The composite index staged an overhead breakout of its 50-day moving averages on December 30 and continued to stay above that at the market close yesterday. This signalled a shift in market momentum.
With the shift in market momentum to the upside, the KLCI is now staging a re-test of its previous resistance high of 926.65 set on November 5 2008. A decisive breach of this resistance is likely to see a major trend reversal.
Next week, the index's envisaged resistance zone hovers at the 897 to 930 levels while its immediate downside support is at the 856 to 890 levels.
* Back to school tomorrow! Happy learning and making new friends!
* RGE: DJIA's stocks performance in 2008 is the worse since 1931.
* AP: Singapore's economy shrinks 12.5% in Q4. Citigroup: " If we are correct, 2009 will mark the most severe recession in Singapore's history.
* RTTNews: Japan PM says the country will be the first to recover from the financial crisis.
* Too much to handle? Bursa experienced its 3rd technical(after the lunch break) glitch since Bursa Trade implemented more than 1 month ago.
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