
May you and your families be richly blessed with Wealth, Health and Happiness Always in this year of the Ox. Happy Chinese New Year!
market and economic news, views, deals & spills.....
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.
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.
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.
Weekly US Markets Update and Outlook
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".
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.
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. * 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.
Weekly US markets Update and Outlook
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.
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!
US Markets Update and Outlook