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This blog is authored by an old multi-bagger blue chips stock picker uncle from HDB heartland!

"The market is not your mother. It consists of tough men and women who look for ways to take money away from you instead of pouring milk into your mouth." - Dr. Alexander Elder

"For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them." - Aristotle

It is here where I share with you how I did it! FREE Education in stock market wisdom.

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Important Notice and Attention: If you are looking for such ideas; here is the wrong blog to visit.

Value Investing
Dividend/Income Investing
Technical Analysis and Charting
Stock Tips

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

STI


Straits Times 2,702.46 +14.36+0.53%

DOW


Dow 11,555.63 +32.62+0.28%

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Dow and S&P 500 advanced for a second day on Tuesday as stronger-than-expected consumer confidence data and hopes for further progress on a solution to Europe's fiscal mess bolstered sentiment.


However, in a sign investors are still nervous about the European debt crisis, defensive sectors such as utilities and consumer staples were among the best performers. The Nasdaq composite index also closed lower.

Helping to lift the mood on Wall Street, the Conference Board, an industry group, said its index of consumer confidence jumped to its highest level since July, handily topping economists' forecasts.

Financial shares limited the advance, with the S&P financial index (.GSPF) down 0.6 percent. Shares of Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) dropped 3.2 percent to $5.08, its lowest closing level since March 2009.

Bank shares have been battered by worries that the impact of the euro zone crisis could spread through the global financial system and their losses highlight the fragility of any stocks rally until European Union policymakers resolve it once and for all.

"There seems to be some movement on the European front, but things certainly haven't been resolved. Financials are taking a step back, and are kind of keeping a cap on the market as a whole," said Thomas Villalta, portfolio manager for Jones Villalta Asset Management in Austin, Texas.

The Dow Jones industrial average (DJI:^DJI) was up 32.62 points, or 0.28 percent, at 11,555.63. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (SNP:^GSPC) was up 2.64 points, or 0.22 percent, at 1,195.19. The Nasdaq composite index (Nasdaq:^IXIC) was down 11.83 points, or 0.47 percent, at 2,515.51.

In a positive sign for the euro zone, Italian bond yields fell from session highs. In the auction, Italy's government sold 7.5 billion euros of three- and 10-year bonds, close to the upper end of its target range.

Investors also eyed a meeting of European officials in hopes they will make progress in resolving the region's debt crisis.




Tuesday, 29 November 2011

Lian Beng wins S$98m worth of deals from unit, HDB

By YEO AIQI


Lian Beng Group Ltd on Tuesday announced that its unit, LS Construction Pte Ltd, has secured contracts worth about S$98 million.

They are S$13.2 million contract from Housing and Development Board, Singapore (HDB) and S$84.5 million contract from Lian Beng Centurion (Mandai) Pte Ltd (LBCM), a subsidiary of the company.

HDB's contract is expected to be completed by September 2013 and comprise of proposed building works at Tampines Neighbourhood.

LBCM's contracts comprise of proposed erection of a 10-storey ramp-up factory at Mandai Estate and due to be completed by May 2013 and two blocks of 12-storey independent worker's dormitory development at Mandai Estate. The latter is due to be completed by May 2013.

The HDB's contract is expected to have a positive financial impact on the net tangible assets per share and earning per share of the Group for the financial year ending May 31, 2002.

The LBCM's contracts are not expected to have a material financial impact on the net tangible assets per share and earning per share of the Group for the financial year ending May 31, 2012.



STI


Straits Times 2,688.10 -6.33-0.23%

REITs and rights issues: Dilutive or not? (2)

Read? REITs and rights issues: Dilutive or not?

Investor A's ROC will be dilutive relative to Investor B's ROC

No need to manipulate the numbers.

Just try to key in any reasonable number for earning, nil-paid rights, discount rate etc into the worksheet and the result will always be the same. ROC of Investor A will always be lower than the ROC of Investor B. Maths is not biased when the same set of numbers is applied to both investors.


Let continue with the Maths:

Assuming Investor A will always sell his entitled nil-paid rights and Investor B will always fully subcribe for his entitlement of nil-paid rights.

After three rounds of cash calls, relative difference in ROC between Investor A and Investor B is slowly becoming more obvious.



The rights exercise price is $0.90 i.e. 10% discount to the current price at $1 and current dividend yield at $1 is 10%.

How high can one resonably expect to sell nil-paid rights in the stock market?


$0.04?





$0.05?

















-CapitaLand, Temasek unit in $3.3 bln west China development

SINGAPORE, Nov 29 (Reuters) - The Singapore-led group that won a tender for a large site in the western Chinese city of Chongqing will spend a total of 21.1 billion yuan ($3.31 billion) on what it hopes will become one of the most prominent projects in China, lead developer CapitaLand Ltd said on Tuesday.


CapitaLand, together with shopping mall arm CapitaMalls Asia , announced earlier on Tuesday that they were part of a consortium that had been awarded a 91,783 square metre site next to Chongqing's central business district for S$1.28 billion ($985.30 million).

Capitaland and CapitaMalls will each take 25 percent of the river-front project, while Singbridge Holdings, a unit of Singapore state investor Temasek will hold 30 percent.

The remaining 20 percent will be held by an unnamed party.

Capitaland beat five other parties in a closed tender where the design was a factor in choosing the winner, CEO Liew Mun Leong said at an analyst and media briefing.

Designed by architect Moshe Safdie, the planned development will include a shopping mall and eight towers for residential, office, serviced residences and hotel use with a total gross floor area of 817,000 square metres.

A "sky deck" will connect four of the towers, similar to the Marina Bay Sands casino-resort in Singapore which was also designed by Safdie.

"We are very confident this will be a must-see site for anyone coming into western China," said CapitaLand chief operating officer Lim Ming Yan.



DBS LAUNCHES FIRST-EVER SUPPLIER FINANCING PROGRAMME FORSINGAPORE RETAIL SECTOR

Continues to execute against strategy to build regional GTS franchise; groundbreaking deal with Dairy Farm Singapore may benefit thousands of companies

SINGAPORE, 29 November 2011 – DBS Bank today announced that it has entered into a supplier financing programme with leading retail group, Dairy Farm Singapore, the first such programme for the retail industry in Singapore. This groundbreaking supply chain financing initiative also underscores DBS’ leadership in providing working capital solutions for enterprises across Asia.

The supplier financing programme is an innovative working capital solution which will deliver efficiencies in the end-to-end process of the supplier to buyer operating model. DBS has worked with Dairy Farm to customise a programme that will provide significant financial benefits to its suppliers and deliver a more efficient and secure process to support the supply chain. Dairy Farm operates 818 retail stores in Singapore under the well-recognised brand names of Cold Storage, Market Place and Shop N Save supermarkets, Giant hypermarkets, Guardian Health and Beauty chain and 7-Eleven convenience stores. As one of the biggest retail chains in Singapore, Dairy

Farm also operates one of the most complex producer to consumer business models with its large supplier network encompassing an enormous range of individual products.

The supplier financing programme is another of DBS’ new and innovative products designed to support its customers by increasing cash flow and reducing operational expenses. DBS is in the process of launching similar supply chain financing programmes across China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, India and Taiwan.

DOW


Dow 11,523.01 +291.23+2.59%


NEW YORK (AP) -- A weekend of strong holiday shopping in the U.S. and radical proposals for stanching Europe's debt crisis sent stocks soaring Monday. The Standard & Poor's 500 index broke a seven-day losing streak and the Dow Jones industrial average jumped 291 points, its biggest gain in a month.

Markets in Europe also surged as leaders there discussed previously unthinkable approaches for containing the region's debt troubles, such as joint bond sales and much tighter fiscal controls. France's CAC-40 jumped 5.5 percent. Indexes in Germany and Italy rose 4.6 percent. The battered euro rose against the dollar.

European finance ministers discussed aggressive measures to stop the debt crisis from destroying the 17-nation currency union. In a sign of how desperate the situation has become, one proposal being discussed ahead of a financial summit Tuesday calls for having nations cede control over their budgets to a central European authority. Profligate borrowing and spending by Greece and other countries helped trigger the two-year old crisis.

Another plan calls for Europe's most stable economies like Germany, France and Austria to jointly sell bonds to provide assistance to the region's most indebted members.

Retail stocks, meanwhile, spiked after initial reports showed a record number of shoppers hit the mall or bought gifts online during the holiday weekend. Macy's Inc. rose 4.7 percent and Best Buy Co. rose 3.4 percent. Thanksgiving weekend is a make-or-break time for many retailers. Black Friday is often the biggest retail sales day of the year.

The Dow soared 291.23 points, or 2.6 percent, to 11,523.01. Alcoa Inc. jumped 5.7 percent, the most of the 30 stocks in the Dow. The Dow plunged 564 points last week on fear that Europe's debt crisis was spreading to large countries like Spain, Italy and even Germany.

The S&P 500 rose 33, or 2.9 percent, to 1,192.55. The gains came across industries and sectors; only six stocks in the index fell. The Nasdaq composite rose 85, or 3.5 percent, to 2,527.34.

As the threat of an imminent meltdown in Europe ebbed, U.S. investors focused on a strong weekend of holiday shopping. A record 226 million shoppers visited stores and websites during the four-day holiday weekend starting on Thanksgiving Day, up from 212 million last year, according to early estimates by The National Retail Federation. They spent more, too: The average holiday shopper spent $398.62 over the weekend, up from $365.34 a year ago. That's an encouraging sign for consumer spending.

The retail numbers added to a growing set of indicators, including steady drops in the number of new applications for unemployment benefits, that suggest the U.S. economy is continuing to heal. As recently as August, there were widespread concerns that the U.S. could enter another recession.

"This goes in stark contrast to the gloom and doom that had been over markets," said Rob Lutts, president of Salem, Ma.-based investment firm Cabot Money Management. "A lot of the stocks I follow have been more oversold than any time I can remember in the last few years."

That negativity has helped drag the S&P 500 down 5.9 percent in November. Monday's gains broke a seven-day losing streak for the index, its longest since the wild market swings from this August. That slide took the S&P down 7.9 percent.

Bank stocks rose sharply as investors became less fearful of an imminent freeze-up in Europe's financial system. Citigroup Inc. leapt 6 percent and Morgan Stanley jumped 4.1 percent.

Despite the big move in the markets Monday, many troubling questions remain about the situation in Europe. Borrowing rates remain onerously high for several major European countries including Spain and Italy. That's a sign markets still don't believe enough is being done to get the region's finances in order.

Credit rating agency Moody's warned on Monday that the "rapid escalation" of Europe's financial crisis is threatening the creditworthiness of all euro zone governments, even the most highly rated. Only six of the euro zone's 17 countries have the top rating — Germany, France, Austria, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Finland.

Also, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development issued a report Monday saying the continued failure by EU leaders to stem the debt crisis "could massively escalate economic disruption" and end in "highly devastating outcomes."

After the market closed, there was another reminder of the debt troubles still looming in Washington. The Fitch ratings agency lowered its outlook on the U.S. government's credit rating following the failure of a congressional panel to agree on long-term budget cuts.

Monday, 28 November 2011

REITs and rights issues: Dilutive or not?

Assuming 1 for 2 nil paid rights issue at 10% discount at $0.90 and nil paid rights can be sold at $0.02 in the stock market to reduce holding costs and stock can be purchased at $1.

EPS at $0.1 at 100% payout for DPS at $0.1 so the dividend yield at $1 purchase price = 10% ROC

Here is the Maths.

No point guessing or debating. See the Maths. See the truth for yourself.  Dilutive or not?


Investor A

Investor A has 10,000 shares but has decided not to subscribe for his entittled 5,000 nil paid rights issues. He then sold them at $0.02 and collected $100 as profit. After the sales of  his entitled 5,000nil paid rights, his invested capital for holding 10,000 shares has dropped to $9,900 as he used his $100 profit as cost reduction for holding 10,000 shares.

Investor B

Investor B has 10,000 shares and has decided to fully subscribe for his entittled 5,000 nil paid rights issues for $4,500 so his new invested capital for holding 15,000 shares has increased to $14,500

Dividends after right issues for the total enlarged shares of 150,000

Let see what happen?

Assuming the earning has increased from $10,000 to $14,500 for the enlarged shares of 150,000 as the company has successfully deployed the additional capital to earn more. But, due to enlarged share base of 150,000, the EPS has reduced to $0.0967. With 100% payout, the DPS is also at $0.0967.

ROC of Investor A for 10,000 shares = $967/$9,900 = 9.76%
ROC of Investor B for 15,000 shares = $1,450/$14,500 = 10.0%


Dilutive or not?

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Sabana Reit to acquire industrial building for S$14.8m

By CARINE LEE


Sabana Shari'ah Compliant Reit on Monday announced that it had on Nov 25, entered into a sale and purchase agreement for the proposed acquisition of a three-storey general industrial building located at Woodlands Loop.

The 77,544 sq ft property, which Sabana Reit will purchase at S$14.8 million, is a JTC leasehold estate of 30 + 30 years tenure commencing from September 16, 1994, with a remaining tenure of approximately 43 years. Sabana Reit has paid a cash deposit of S$148,000 into an escrow account.

The proposed acquisition, to be financed by debt, is part of the Reit's investment strategy and provides improved asset diversification to benefit unitholders.

Upon acquisition, Sabana Reit will enter into a lease agreement with the existing tenant for a term of three years.

The seller, Winstant & Co Pte Ltd, has agreed to provide rental income support, subject to an aggregate maximum sum of S$958,058, for three years.



STI

Straits Times 2,694.43 +50.50+1.91%

Record Black Friday weekend sales in US

WASHINGTON: Americans shrugged off economic gloom to post record Thanksgiving weekend sales of $52.4 billion, the National Retail Federation said on Sunday, as shoppers prepared for "Cyber Monday" online deals.


Sales over the long holiday weekend were up 16 percent compared to last year, marking the biggest dollar amount ever spent over the Black Friday period, the unofficial start of the Christmas shopping season, the NRF said.

"Stuffed to the brim from their holiday meals and eager to shop, more consumers than ever turned out for retailers' Black Friday promotions, a promising sign for the economic recovery," said NRF president Matthew Shay.

"After an historic holiday weekend, retailers know the holiday season is far from over and will continue to look for ways to excite holiday shoppers and build on the momentum we've seen thus far."

The average holiday shopper - 226 million of them visiting stores and websites this weekend, according to the association's survey - spent $398.62, up from $365.34 last year.

Meanwhile, Internet sales also jumped for the year, according to an IBM Smarter Commerce survey, which reported a whopping 39.3-percent increase in online Thanksgiving spending.

Consumers were likely to continue the trend on Monday, known as "Cyber Monday" for the deep discounts offered on Internet retail sites - with 37.8 percent of total weekend spending already made online.

"We are anticipating a very strong Cyber Monday," NRF vice president Ellen Davis told reporters in a conference call about the survey, which included figures for Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and projected spending for Sunday.

Davis warned against over-optimism, saying that similar Black Friday figures were seen in 2008 during the recession, but afterwards, "nobody shopped for the rest of the holiday season."

Shoppers mobbed malls and went online in droves to snap up bargains late Thursday, through the night and into Friday -- an annual sales ritual that marks the start to the end-of-year shopping season relied on by many retailers.

The stampede for deeply discounted goods was fed by aggressive marketing, with many stores this year moving up their sales launches to intrude on Thursday's Thanksgiving holiday, and carry on through the weekend.

The orgy of consumption was marred by a number of isolated violent incidents. One woman pepper-sprayed other shoppers at a Los Angeles-area Wal-Mart, while there were several shootings at stores across the country.

Sears opened Thanksgiving morning - traditionally a time when families gather for quiet get-togethers - and Toys "R" Us opened at 9:00 pm on Thursday.

Wal-Mart's big discount rival Target upset some employees by opening doors at midnight on Thanksgiving.

John Squire, chief strategy officer at IBM Smarter Commerce, said this year "marked Thanksgiving's emergence as the first big spending day of the 2011 holiday season with a record number of consumers shifting their focus from turkey to tablets and the search for the best deals."

The momentum "continued into Black Friday where the big winners were those retailers that delivered a smarter commerce experience with compelling, relevant deals that people could easily access from their channel of choice," he added.

Neel Grover, the president and CEO of online seller Buy.com, which offers consumers links to more than 4,000 top retailers, said his firm's "initial holiday results point to a strong start of the season."

- AFP/de

Sunday, 27 November 2011

SIA Engg Weekly

Getting interesting now. Will it breakdown?

Portfolio Management - Portfolio Risk (3)

Read? Portfolio Management - Portfolio Risk (2)

You must understand this.

A well diversified portfolio across a few sectors is not about loss protection since a well diversified portfolio will also suffer losses in a bear market. But, we don't want one or two counters in our portfolio to cause a huge damage to it and then it can become too difficult to recover without adding new capital into our portfolio.

Read? The Cruel Math of Big Losses - II

Saturday, 26 November 2011

The Reit myth busted

Whatever Reits pay out in dividends, they will take back a few years later in the form of rights issues


By TEH HOOI LING

SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

THE high yields of real estate investment trusts (Reits) are tempting. And indeed, they have been touted as a relatively safe and stable instrument to own if one is looking for a steady stream of income. As such, many investors see Reits as a good asset class to have in one's retirement accounts.

But you know what? That Reits are good income-yielding instruments is but a myth. The thing is, whatever they pay out in dividends, they will take back - all and more - a few years later in the form of rights issues.

Here's what I found. Of the 17 Reits which have a listing history of at least four years on the Singapore Exchange, only three have not had any cash calls or secondary equity raising. The remaining 13 have had cash calls, and many had raised cash multiple times. One had a few rounds of private placement of new units which diluted the stake of existing unitholders somewhat.

For many of these Reits, the cash called back far exceeded the cash received. So, the myth of Reits as almost comparable to a fixed income instrument is really busted.

Take CapitaMall Trust (CMT) which was listed in July 2002. Assuming that Ms Retiree bought one lot or 1,000 units at the initial public offering (IPO) for a total sum of $960. For the whole of 2003, she received $57 in dividends. However in that year, CMT also had a one-for-10 rights issue. To subscribe for her entitlement, Ms Retiree would have to cough out $107.

In 2004, she would received $89 for the total number of CMT units she owned. That year, CMT had another rights issue, also one-for-10. The exercise price was higher at $1.62. To subscribe, Ms Retiree would have to fork out $178.

In 2005, CMT again had another fund raising exercise via rights issue. Ms R would pocket $124 in dividends but in that same year, had to return $282 back to the Reit.

In the next three years - 2006 to 2008 - Ms Retiree felt rich and happy. She merrily banked in her quarterly distributions which amounted to $404 for her holdings of CMT. Her one lot, after three rights issues, had grown to 1,331 units.

In the following year, another $175 was distributed. But CMT wasn't going to let Ms R be happy for long. It launched a big one - a 9-for10 rights issue. To fully subscribe for her entitlement, Ms R had to empty her bank account of a whopping $982.

And you know what, the cash call came in March 2009, when the Straits Times Index fell below 1,600 points, and many retirees were dismayed to see their investment portfolios plunge by half or more. Many fret if they would have enough left in the pot to sustain their lifestyle. Having to cough up more money for a Reit was the last thing that they wanted to do!

Negative cash flow

And here's the final tally. Since its IPO until today, a holder of one lot of CMT would have received $1,264 in cash distributions. However, in all, he or she had to return $1,549 back to the Reit so as to subscribe to their entitlement of new issues. That's a net outflow of $284 per lot.

It's the same story with K-Reit Asia, Capitacommercial Trust, Frasers Commercial Trust, Mapletree Logistics, First Reit, Lippo Malls Indo Retail Trust, AIMS AMP CAP and Saizen REIT in that what was taken back from investors was more than what was given out.

K-Reit has been one of the most aggressive fund raising Reits. Had you started with just one lot when it was listed in April 2006, you would have to dish out $8,399 to subscribe to your rights issue. Distributions amounted to $1,110, resulting in a net outflow of $7,289.

For Reits with at least four years of track record, only Fraser Centrepoint, Parkway Life and CapitaRetail China have not had any cash calls.

Instead of a rights issue, Suntec Reit raised funds by issuing new units to some institutional investors at a slight discount. Existing unitholders don't have to cough out additional cash, but they would have their share of earnings diluted somewhat.

Misalignment of interests

Reits are managed by managers, and managers are paid based on the size of the portfolio that they manage. So the incentive is for the managers to continue to raise money and expand the portfolio size. Sometimes this is not done in the best interest of unitholders.

The most recent controversy was over K-Reit's purchase of Ocean Financial Centre (OFC) from its sponsor Keppel Land. K-Reit has launched a 17-for-20 rights issue to pay for the purchase which was deemed by the market to be expensive at a time of uncertain outlook and when office rental is expected to ease.

BT reader Bobby Jayaraman argued that rather than be compensated based on factors such as the value of assets, net property income and acquisition fees, Reit managers should be paid based on a combination of growth in distribution per unit and market valuation of the Reit.

'If Reit managers were paid on the basis of distribution per unit and market valuation growth, would K-Reit have bulldozed its way through the OFC acquisition like they have done?

'The day K-Reit announced the OFC acquisition, its stock price fell close to 10 per cent and has continued sliding. Yet, its Reit manager will take home significantly increased management fees while shareholders would have lost a good chunk of their capital even as they bear significantly more risk in the form of higher leverage and potential property devaluations given the uncertain environment,' he wrote to BT.

Misalignment of interests aside, there

But while Reits may not be the perfect income yielding instrument that they are made out to be, they have proven their capacity for capital appreciation. Relative to the capital ploughed in, CapitaMall Trust has rewarded its unitholders with a return of 127 per cent. Most Reits have yielded positive total returns.

Instead of buying Reits for yields, some savvy investors only buy them when they see those with good quality assets trade at sharp discounts to their book value. For example in the first half of 2009, CMT was trading at 50 per cent its book value. Today, it is not as cheap. At $1.755, CMT is now trading at 13 per cent premium to its net asset value of $1.55.

Hence, valuation metrics which apply to a typical asset heavy stock would apply to Reits as well.

Read? Right issue back again (6)

Createwealth8888:

The only issue is the right issues and make sure you fully understand the right issue especially when you are very firm in your mind that you are investing for long-term e.g. more than 10 years for dividends.

When you made money from trading the Reits due to market sentiment arising from the right issue announcement that is trading gain. It has nothing to do with dilutive factor of right issues.  Get it?

You can only hear success stories loud and clear!

Just for Laugh ....

I have been crawling the cyber space day and night for more than 10 years for investment ideas and reading postings and articles from  investors and traders. We can only hear their success stories loud and clear. It is nothing wrong to boast your success stories as it is human nature to feel good. If you don't feel good then you need to seek an appointment with Research Department in IMH. Your brain is a good research material for the researchers there.

We can only hear whispers of failures. Why? Losers are too depressed to talk about it so we don't get to learn from them.

The latest example is shorting of CDL by a local Guru. Win money eats Bread. Lose money drinks Kopi.

Whenever you read in the cyber space, your mind must open up like a parachute. The parchute may ensure you safety down to Earth only it is wide open; anything else you are likely to be dead! Get it?

Why Bread? Why Kopi?

???
???
???


BreadTalk. KopiTiam.


Kids are expensive liabilities! (2)

Read? Kids are expensive liabilities!

Do you like this post by LP? Starting a new friendship with an old friend

If you like this post by LP and fully agree that this friendship is great. Walk your talk! Have your future friend or friends writing similar post in another new technology in 30 years time. hee hee.

I have cash but I don't like to pay up!

Just for Laugh ...

You have plenty of cash rotting in the bank and still don't like to pay up. Why? Common reason for doing so as you want to maintain maximum liquidity for investment opportunity. You like to think that you are savvy investor who knows how to spot good investment opportunity when it arises.

BTW, is your invertible cash rotting in the bank in 2009? So you are still waiting for more opportunities in 2012/13? NATO again?

Cash rotting in the bank and at the same time helping to pay banker's salary and bonus is worth waiting for? The idea of investing is simple but never easy!

DOW


Dow 11,231.94 -25.61-0.23%

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks posted seven straight sessions of losses on Friday, ending the worst week in two months, as the lack of a credible solution to Europe's debt crisis kept investors away from risky assets.


Wall Street traded higher for most of the abbreviated session on hopes that "Black Friday," the traditional start of the U.S. holiday shopping season, would support major retailers. But gains were quickly offset by headlines out of Europe that further dented market sentiment. With less than 20 minutes before the close, all three stock indexes had turned negative.

Yields on Italy's debt approached recent highs that sparked a sell-off in world markets. Italy paid a record 6.5 percent to borrow money over six months on Friday, and its longer-term funding costs soared far above levels seen as sustainable for public finances.

High debt yields from major economies in Europe such as Spain, France and Germany suggest investing in the region is seen as being more risky.

"Trading remains cautious (since) the poor auction of German bonds mid-week raised concerns the debt crisis is spreading to Europe's core," said WhatsTrading.com options strategist Frederick Ruffy.

Adding to concerns, Standard & Poor's downgraded Belgium's credit rating to double-A from double-A-plus, citing concerns about funding and market pressures.

The Dow Jones industrial average (DJI:^DJI) slipped 25.77 points, or 0.23 percent, to 11,231.78 at the close. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (SNP:^GSPC) declined 3.12 points, or 0.27 percent, to 1,158.67. The Nasdaq Composite Index (Nasdaq:^IXIC) shed 18.57 points, or 0.75 percent, to 2,441.51.

For the week, the S&P 500 fell 4.7 percent, giving back almost two-thirds of its gains in October, the market's best month in 20 years. The Dow was off 4.8 percent for the week and the Nasdaq fell 5.1 percent.




Friday, 25 November 2011

STI since 2005


Great Robinson Christmas Sales soon?

STI


Straits Times 2,643.93 -33.22-1.24%

We don't like to strongly believe that we will drop dead suddenly

Just for Thinking ....

We don't like to strongly believe that we will drop dead suddenly. But, if we do; then our thinking over saving, spending, insurance, investment, debts and work-life balance may significantly change direction going forward in our life.

Read? Regrets of Dying

Thursday, 24 November 2011

You Will Never Know It May Make A Difference In Someone's Life or Thinking (3)

You may like to know what is the most lesson learnt from this blog by other blog readers.

Read? You Will Never Know It May Make A Difference In Someone's Life or Thinking (2)

One blog reader, CH said that he has learned the most important lesson here: Performance measurement. It is this measurement that should matter most.

Read more? Measure your investment performance

Why do you want to spend some of your time (the most precious commodity in your life)  to invest your hard-earned money?

There is only one reason to do it that is to grow your money and the rate of growing this money cannot be ignored. It must be diligently tracked to give you periodic and consistent feedback on your investing performance. With this feedback, you can then objectively review and revise your 3M - Method, Mind, and Money to meet your investing goals. Without measuring CAGR or XIRR on your investment portfolio, you may be drifting along your investing journey by feeling good and positive about it.

CapitaLand sets up US$180m China real estate development unit

By CARINE LEE


CapitaLand Limited on Thursday announced the incorporation of CapitaLand Xinye (Hangzhou) Real Estate Development Co Ltd.


The wholly-owned subsidiary domiciled in China has a registered capital of US$180 million, and is principally involved in real estate development and management.



STI


Straits Times 2,676.95 +0.38+0.01%

Health is Wealth???

Just for Thinking ....

Is heath = wealth???

May be not exactly true.

Good health may not significantly increase our wealth; but deteriorating health will significantly reduce our wealth and no amount of wealth spent can restore back our health. So we must take good care of our health to prevent losing too much of our wealth.

DOW - Bears won!


Dow 11,257.55 -236.17-2.05%

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks tumbled again on Wednesday, leaving the benchmark S&P 500 on pace for a sixth straight decline as frustration with the euro zone's debt crisis coupled with weak Chinese factory data sank investor sentiment.


Debt problems that have plagued Europe and the United States have pressured markets, knocking the S&P down more than 7 percent over the last six sessions.

World stocks hit their lowest in six weeks on Wednesday as weak demand in a German bond auction heightened fears the euro zone crisis would worsen, although a German official downplayed those worries.

"Clearly Europe is continuing to drive the bus. The market is exhausted, it is tired of the lack of leadership on both sides of the pond, it is tired of the continuing drama that is playing out there that no one seems to be paying attention to," said Ken Polcari, managing director at ICAP Equities in New York.

"The path of least resistance is lower because the market is starting to say to you it is getting disgusted with the lack of any concrete plan. Whether it is the ECB monetizing the debt, whatever it is, the market is not getting anything."

Data showed Chinese manufacturing shrank the most in 32 months in November, intensifying concerns about a global economic slowdown. U.S. crude oil fell 2.6 percent on fears of reduced demand from China, the world's No. 2 economy.


U.S. data painted a mixed picture and showed little reason for optimism. New unemployment benefit claims rose last week and consumer spending barely increased in October, while other reports showed new orders for a range of long-lasting manufactured goods rose.


The Dow Jones industrial average (DJI:^DJI) dropped 192.65 points, or 1.68 percent, to 11,301.07. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (SNP:^GSPC)(Chicago Options:^INX) fell 21.25 points, or 1.79 percent, to 1,166.79. The Nasdaq Composite Index (Nasdaq:^IXIC) lost 50.51 points, or 2.00 percent, to 2,470.77.






Wednesday, 23 November 2011

You Will Never Know It May Make A Difference In Someone's Life or Thinking (2)

Read? You Will Never Know It May Make A Difference In Someone's Life or Thinking


I have spend my past five years since Sunday, 19 November 2006 writing blog post after blog post related to investment, finance, insurance, and life.
 
If any of my blog posts has made a difference in someone's life or thinking; it willl be enough reward to me for spending some of the most precious commodity in my life in this blog. Cheers!




STI


Straits Times 2,672.59 -44.61-1.64%

Singapore's inflation rate holds above 5%

SINGAPORE: Singapore's inflation rate held above 5 per cent for the fifth straight month in October.


The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 5.4 per cent from a year ago, easing from the previous month's gain of 5.5 per cent.

The October reading is above market expectations of a rise of 5.2 per cent.

The CPI rose 0.4 per cent in October 2011 from the previous month.

The Department of Statistics said the CPI reading reflected mainly higher costs of accommodation, private road transport and food.

The higher cost of accommodation was due to higher imputed rentals of owner-occupied homes.

Private road transport costs were driven by a significant increase in Certificate of Entitlement, or COE premiums and higher petrol prices.


Excluding accommodation costs, the consumer price index rose by 4.1 per cent compared to the same month last year.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore's core inflation measure for October (which excludes the costs of accommodation and private road transport) rose by 2.3 per cent from a year earlier, and increased by 0.3 per cent from September.

The central bank has raised its inflation forecast twice this year, and predicts an annual gain of around 5 per cent for 2011.

The MAS expects inflationary pressures to taper off next year, and forecasts headline inflation of 2.5 to 3.5 per cent.

- CNA/ck

Four Pillars in our life to support our happiness index



Read? Catching the moments of happiness!

Read? Value has a value only if its value is valued

To support our happiness index from falling or crashing

We must be mindful and always seek ways and means to strengthen our four Pillars in our life to support our happiness index from falling or crashing.

  1. Personal Health and family members health
  2. Money
  3. Family (more than one member and companion is counted)
  4. Community
Any weakness in any of these four pillars in our life may cause our happiness index to start falling soon so always seek ways and means to strengthen these four pillars and watch for cracks in these pillars too.

Remember we sow what we reap in life!

DOW


Dow 11,493.72 -53.59-0.46%

NEW YORK (AP) -- A downward revision of U.S. economic growth in the third quarter sent stocks lower Tuesday. Higher borrowing costs for Spain also renewed worries about Europe's debt crisis.


The Commerce Department reported that the U.S. economy grew at a 2 percent annual rate from July through September, down from its initial estimate of 2.5 percent. Economists had expected the figure to remain the same.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 53.59 points, or 0.5 percent, to close at 11,493.72. Aluminum maker Alcoa Inc. led the Dow lower. The Dow had been down as many as 113 points shortly before noon.

The Dow plunged 249 points Monday as a congressional committee failed to reach a deal to cut budget deficits. The deadlock raised fears that rating agencies might lower the U.S. government's credit rating if Congress tries to circumvent the automatic spending cuts that are supposed to occur in the event of an impasse. Some Republicans have said they would try to block cuts to defense spending.

"Markets are looking for clarity, and you didn't get that from the super-committee," says Steven Ricchiuto, chief economist at Mizuho Securities. "There's no reason to believe the economy is going to get stronger."

Across the Atlantic, there were more signs of trouble in Europe's debt crisis. Spain was forced to pay sharply higher interest rates in an auction of short-term debt. The higher rates suggest that investors are still skeptical that the country will get its budget under control despite a new, center-right government coming to power this week.

Investors have been worried that Spain could become the next country to need financial support from its European neighbors if its borrowing rates climb to unsustainable levels. Greece was forced to seek relief from its lenders after its long-term borrowing rates rose above 7 percent on the bond market. The rate on Spain's own benchmark 10-year bond is dangerously close to that level, 6.58 percent.

The Standard & Poor's 500 fell 4.94 points, or 0.4 percent, to 1,188.04. The Nasdaq composite fell 1.86, or 0.1 percent, to 2,521.28.

It was the fifth straight decline for the S&P 500, the longest losing streak since August. The S&P has lost 5.5 percent over the past week on worries that Spain could get dragged into Europe's debt crisis and as Congress neared a deadlock over cutting the U.S. budget deficit.

Trading was relatively quiet ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday Thursday. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange was 3.9 billion shares, below the average of 4.7 billion over the previous 100 days.




Tuesday, 22 November 2011

MAS weighs in on Reit sector debate

By JAMIE LEE


(SINGAPORE) The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) may offer more regulatory guidance to the real estate investment trust (Reit) industry in efforts to boost corporate governance standards, it said yesterday.

MAS did not highlight specific companies but was responding to criticism that current rules governing the Reit sector fail to protect the interests of minority shareholders.

Central to this brewing debate is the $1.57 billion sale of Keppel Land's entire stake in Ocean Financial Centre to K-Reit Asia - a plan that was criticised by shareholders for both the timing and price. The deal was approved but through a show of hands at the shareholders' meeting - a voting system that the Singapore Exchange (SGX) is proposing to ban.

Under a show-of-hands system, each person gets a single vote regardless of the number of shares he holds. The alternative of poll voting gives each shareholder voting rights according to the size of his shareholding.

'The current code on collective investment schemes under MAS, which regulates Reits, is not robust enough to prevent unscrupulous Reits from taking advantage of minority shareholders,' said reader Bobby Jayaraman in a letter to The Business Times on Nov 16.

'The major culprit is the incentive system for Reits, which does not always align with shareholder interests,' he added.

Rather that be compensated based on factors such as the value of assets, net property income and acquisition fees, Reit managers should be paid based on a combination of growth in distribution per unit and market valuation of the Reit, said Mr Jayaraman.

In response, MAS director of communications Angelina Fernandez said in a letter: 'MAS will consider issuing further guidance to the industry as part of our ongoing effort to enhance corporate governance in Reits and other listed entities.'

The regulator reminded companies and boards to uphold high corporate governance standards. 'Corporate governance rules and guidelines cannot envisage all possible circumstances,' Ms Fernandez said.

'When observing such rules and guidelines, companies and their boards must always bear in mind the interests of shareholders or unitholders; and not take an overly technical approach,' she added.

MAS highlighted current rules that are in place to safeguard investor interest when it comes to interested party transactions. For example, transactions that represent at least 5 per cent of the Reit's net asset value are subject to voting by independent unitholders, and two independent valuations have to be obtained - one for the Reit manager, and another for the sponsor.

Limits are also set on the sale and purchase prices, and acquisition fees paid to the manager are in the form of units that can be sold only after a year.



STI


Straits Times 2,714.39 +16.41+0.61%

DOW


Dow 11,547.31 -248.85-2.11%

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street stocks skidded on Monday, extending losses from across Europe as fears over out-of-control government debt on both sides of the Atlantic hit financial markets.


Commodity prices also fell.

Wall Street hit a month-low as the S&P 500 index fell 2.5 percent, dropping below the 1,200-point level for the first time since October.

The Dow and tech-heavy Nasdaq indices each lost nearly 3 percent, following through on last week's declines as a congressional "super committee" was expected to concede defeat in its bid to lower the U.S. deficit.

U.S. oil prices traded at around $96 barrel, down 1.3 percent, after falling 2 percent earlier.

Gold futures lost more than 2 percent, breaking below $1,700 an ounce. The precious metal is on course for an 18 percent loss on the year.

Investors took refuge in safe-havens, pushing yields on benchmark 10-year U.S. bonds down to 1.95 percent from 2.01 percent on Friday.

The dollar hit a six-week high versus a currency basket but then pared some of its gains after data showed U.S. existing home sales unexpectedly rose in October as low mortgage interest rates and rising rents led more homebuyers into the market.

Light trading volume, expected throughout the week due to Thursday's U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, could add to market volatility, traders said.



Monday, 21 November 2011

Cambridge Industrial Trust to acquire warehouse for S$35.5m

By CARINE LEE


Cambridge Industrial Trust on Monday announced that it will purchase an industrial building on Toh Guan Road East for a purchase consideration of S$35.5 million.

The property, a five-storey warehouse building with an ancillary office, has a gross floor area of approximately 17,917 sqm. It is a JTC leasehold estate of 30+30 years tenure commencing from February 16, 1991.

Cambridge Industrial said it believes the property will enhance its overall portfolio and further reduce its reliance of income stream on any single asset and tenant.

The Trust intends to fund the acquisition through a combination of 60 per cent cash and 40 per cent debt, and expects to use part of the proceeds from previous equity fund-raising exercises to fund the purchase.

The acquisition is expected to be completed by the first quarter of 2012.



STI


Straits Times 2,697.98 -32.36 -1.19%




Sunday, 20 November 2011

Know thyself. Be true to it and avoid the pain within.

  • STI has been dropping!
  • More and more bad news coming out!
  • Your portfolio also drops 20%

How are you feeling now?

  1. Feel like selling away everything and keep cash and then wait for more good news to come before going back to the market.
  2. Continue to be concerned; but won't put in any more money. Enough of this stock investing. It is just too difficult.
  3. Put in more money as this is a great and rare opportunity presented by the market.

If your answer is 1 or 2, you may be better off in investing in low price volality, low volume and dividend paying stocks or bonds may be a good choice too. Low volume means less market speculators coming into your stocks to play your emotional roller coaster ride.

How to spot ponzi or scam investment scheme?

Just for Thinking ....

Guaranteed Return of e.g above 5% on your investment in 3 or 6 month time

The key word is Guaranteed Return.

There is no such investment in the market that can guarantee Return over 3 or 6 month and not even one year. It is certain. It is a ponzi or scam investment scheme. They either take part of your investment and return it back to you as 5% return on your investment or take part of other newer investors investment and give it to you.

How the scheme works?

You invest $10K. After 3 month, the scheme takes your $500 and return it back to you as 5% gain. When you received your own $500, you jump through the roof. You go round telling your friends and relatives how good is your investment. 5% return in 3 month. OMG! Soon your friends and relatives will get sucked into it.

If you seriously think that you have found such investment scheme that offers guaranteed good return on investment. Don't be selfish. Let me know. I want to join in too!


Saturday, 19 November 2011

Lenders of stocks. You are screwed!

Borrowing the idea from LP ** "BIAS" is a special feature in my blog where I get to say whatever I want with scant regards for your feelings. I'm not politically correct in this feature, so go ahead, judge me."




Just For Laugh ....
 
You lend out your your stocks to shortists to short your stocks down just to earn a few % interests per annum and happily get paid for pennies by borrowers for that period for being screwed. When a stock gets shorted; the only way is down. When the stock price is down; momentary you either widen your unrealized paper losses or reduce your unrealized paper gains. Either way you are screwed. You don't feel the pain doesn't mean you are not screwed! So are you stock prostitute?
 

Legg Mason's Bill Miller Exits: Last Mutual Fund Rock Star?

Just for Thinking ...

Read? Bolton's china fund takes a beating

Createwealth8888: Veteran experts in investing are losing their money so can we still survive in this new investing climate?

CNBC – Thu, Nov 17

The end of Bill Miller's 30-year run managing the Legg Mason Value Trust (NYSE: LM - News) may mark the end of investment rock stars to emerge from the mutual fund industry as more versatile and higher-paying hedge funds attract the best talent and exchange traded funds offer a lower cost alternative to retail investors.


Bill Miller became a household name and his fund, a member of many 401k plans, amid a 15-year streak of beating the S&P 500 (INDEX: ^GSPC - News) beginning in the early 1990s. The mutual fund star mantle was passed to Miller from Peter Lynch, who was famous for his stewardship of the Fidelity Magellan Fund and his book, "One Up on Wall Street," in the 1980s.

As the focus faded on the likes of Miller and Lynch, as well Mario Gabelli, Marty Whitman, Charles Royce and David Dreman, the new stars of the investing world emerged from the hedge fund industry. Names like Bill Ackman, David Einhorn and John Paulson are now the most-followed stock pickers.

"Mutual funds remind me of AOL (NYSE: AOL - News) dial-up: a dwindling collection of old people who don't know better, contributing monthly to a comically inferior product," said Phil Pearlman, investor and executive editor of StockTwits.com. "And Miller was the symbolic figurehead of this beta minus fees charade."

Equity mutual funds, which tend to have a long-only style and a mandate to be mostly fully invested, have been a victim of a low return, high correlation world, leaving little room for the outperformance and separation that makes stars. The S&P 500 is trading around the same levels the index was at in 1999, a victim of the Internet and housing bubbles popping.

"Stars depend on market cycles and investor appetites," said Michael Farr of Farr, Miller & Washington, a high net worth investment management firm. "In the last decade, only higher risk (often with leverage) has produced returns."

Hedge funds have been raking in assets at an explosive pace over the last decade because of their ability to lever up and their versatility to bet against stocks, as well as the use of more exotic instruments such as currencies and credit default swaps .

Assets in hedge funds, closed to people without a minimum of $1 million to invest, grew to $1.7 trillion as of the end of the third quarter, according to BarclayHedge, an alternative investment database. Mutual fund assets were at $11 trillion as of September, down from their high of $12 trillion at the end of 2007, according to the Investment Company Institute.

Greenlight Capital's Einhorn, Pershing Square's Bill Ackman and John Paulson all gained notoriety for their bets against the housing crisis. Einhorn was famously short Lehman long before its 2008 bankruptcy. Bill Miller, to the detriment of his fund's holders, infamously kept buying Bear Stearns before it collapsed and was sold to JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM - News).

Meanwhile, the popularity of exchange-traded funds among retail investors have shined a light on the fee structure of actively-managed stock mutual funds, the majority of which have been underperforming the S&P 500 the last decade. Assets in ETFs, which blindly mimic whole sectors and indexes are currently at around $1 trillion, up from $608 billion at the end of 2007, according to ICI.

For example, Miller's Value Trust has an expense ratio of 1.76 percent, while the PowerShares Nasdaq 100 (NASDAQ: QQQ - News), among the most actively-traded ETF, has a ratio of 0.2 percent.

"Stock-picking managers haven't been able to become stars in the last five to 10 years because stock picking itself has not been a rewarding endeavor," said Josh Brown, money manager and author of The Reformed Broker blog. "Record high correlations and ETFization has meant that knowing which asset classes to weight more heavily and lightly has produced superior returns for fund managers who know how to do it - not choosing Coke (NYSE: KO - News) over Pepsi (NYSE: PEP - News)."






DOW


Dow 11,796.16 +25.43+0.22%

By Daniel Wagner, AP Business Writers

Stocks finished about where they started Friday as investors balanced positive signs for the U.S. economy with a looming deadline for a deficit-cutting committee in Congress. Steep declines earlier in the week left the market with its worst weekly loss since September.


The Dow Jones industrial average gained 25.43 points, or 0.2 percent, to close at 11,796.16. The Dow traded in a relatively narrow range, rising as many as 84 points and falling as many as 15. Hewlett-Packard Co. jumped 2.6 percent, the most of the 30 stocks in the index, on an analyst upgrade.

The Conference Board's index of leading economic indicators rose more than Wall Street analysts were expecting, a sign that the economy may pick up in the coming months. But many investors were cautious as a key Congressional committee remained deadlocked on ways to cut the U.S. budget deficit.

A bipartisan panel must agree on making at least $1.2 trillion in deficit cuts by Thanksgiving. If the committee fails and Congress takes no other action, automatic spending cuts will take effect beginning in 2013. Economists worry that a deadlocked Congress will erode business confidence and slow the already-fragile economy.

The Standard and Poor's 500 lost 0.48 point, or less than 0.1 percent, to 1,215.65.

Telecommunications and technology stocks fell broadly. The Nasdaq composite slid 15.49, or 0.6 percent, to 2,572.50. Salesforce.com plunged 10 percent after its quarterly results came in below estimates.

The Dow is down 2.9 percent for the week. Broader indexes fell even more. The S&P 500 lost 3.8 percent, the Nasdaq 4 percent. The market fell sharply Wednesday and Thursday on worries that Europe's debt crisis could spread and hurt U.S. banks.

Encouraging economic reports this week — including a drop in un employment applications and an increase in industrial production — did little to help the market because a European meltdown would easily drag down the U.S. economy, said Kim Caughey Forrest, equity research analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group.

"Our economy might be improving, but the fixation is on what's going to happen with the world banking system if defaults happen in Europe," she said. She said investors are reluctant to take big positions because no one knows how Europe's problems will be resolved, or how U.S. companies' future profits will be affected.




Friday, 18 November 2011

STI


Straits Times 2,730.34 -47.91-1.72%

Bolton again!

I wrote in Nov 2009 Cash Is King?

Bolton's china fund takes a beating

Lost -29% of NAV in six months to Sep 30.

Bolton said:

"It  was a real lesson for me. I was wrong. In this business of probabilities, they are many times I'm wrong. But, it's darkest before dawn."

"The most difficult thing about investment is not about what the future looks like but what future is discounted in today prices. If future looks bad and everyone becomes risk averse, that's a far less risky world."

"This is the time to be optimistic and go against the trend. The most dangerous times are opposite, when everyone's happy."



DOW - It is getting worse!


Dow 11,770.73 -134.86-1.13%

NEW YORK (AP) -- A spike in borrowing costs for the Spanish government renewed worries about Europe's debt crisis and pushed stocks lower for the second day in a row.


A stalemate in Congress over cutting the budget deficit also pulled the market down Thursday. Technology stocks sank after NetApp and Applied Materials predicted weaker earnings.

In Spain, an auction of 10-year bonds left the country paying interest rates of nearly 7 percent, the highest rate since 1997. Economists see that level as unsustainable because it would make the interest payments on Spain's debt so high that the government would barely be able to afford them. Greece and Ireland were forced to seek rescue loans from the European Union after their bond yields jumped above the same level.

Concerns about Europe's debt crisis overshadowed better economic reports in the U.S. The number of people seeking unemployment benefits last week fell to the lowest level in 7 months, a sign layoffs are easing.

"The economic data in the U.S. has been improving," said Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at RDM Financial in Westport, Conn. "If it weren't for Europe, I think equity markets would be doing much better right now."

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 134.86 points, or 1.1 percent, to close at 11,770.73. The index wavered most of the morning, then turned sharply lower shortly after noon. It fell as many as 229 points at 2:30 p.m.

Spain has more than twice the amount of debt as Greece and Ireland combined, which would make it difficult for other countries to rescue. Like Italy, whose main borrowing rate also spiked above 7 percent in the last week, the country is trying to pay down its debts as its economy slows.

The Spanish bond auction came a day after Fitch Ratings warned that major U.S. banks could be "greatly affected" if Europe's debt crisis continues to spread beyond the financially troubled Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Italy and Spain.

Another looming concern for investors is that a Congressional supercomittee will fail to agree on $1.2 trillion in budget cuts before a Nov. 23 deadline. If they don't, huge cuts to government spending are scheduled to kick in across the board.




Thursday, 17 November 2011

For how long can we control our mind? Don't need to talk about investment!

Just for Thinking ....

Dementia is a loss of brain function that occurs with certain diseases. It affects memory, thinking, language, judgment, and behavior.



Read? Dementia

I saw what can really happen to a person who has dementia; and for older folks like me should include it as part of financial planning. How can a family member take over my portfolio when sign of dementia is showing up.

This is what happened today.

My mother-in-law tapped her ezlink card at MRT gate and went out first. I followed closely behind her. As she was slow in walking through the gate but I was quick to tap my ezlink card and caused the card to fail. I tapped again but still failed. So I went to the control room but the staff was busy on the phone and I have to wait for him.

I could see my mother-in-law looking quite lost from a distance when she realized that I was not behind her. She nervously looked around and searched for me. At last she realized that I was inside the MRT station. She tapped her ezlink card and came in again.

Dementia can happen to any old folks so we need to consider it as part of financial planning.

Dragon Mansion sold for S$130m

By CARINE LEE


Dragon Mansion, a 68-unit residential development located within walking distance to the Tanjong Pagar and Outram Park MRT stations, has been sold for S$130 million.

The price translates to $1,093 per square feet per plot ratio.

The 38,618 sq ft site was sold to Spottiswoode Development Pte Ltd, a 50:50 joint-venture company owned by Lian Beng Group and Centurion Properties Pte Ltd.

Each owner of Dragon Mansion will receive sale proceeds of about $1.91 million.

Spanish, French Debt Auctions Disappoint; Yields Rise

By: CNBC.com with Reuters Twitter


The spread between French 10-year government bonds and their German equivalents rose to a fresh euro-era high of 200 basis points on Thursday on fears that the debt crisis engulfing the euro zone is spreading to its larger economies, with disappointing auctions of French and Spanish debt.

France offered 6 to 7 billion euros of Treasury notes (also called BTANs ) at an auction , with the 5-year French treasury bond's average yield reaching 2.82 percent on a 1.675 bid/cover ratio.

The Spanish/German 10-year yield spread rose 16 basis points on the day to 477 basis points, while the yield on its 10-year bond also hit the highest since the inception of the euro at 6.57 percent.

The French/German 10-year yield spread hit a euro-era high of 197 bps. Yields in a Spanish auction of 10-year bonds rose to an euro lifetime high of 6.975 percent and the country sold 3.56 billion euros ($4.8 billion) worth of debt. Credit default swaps on French and Spanish sovereign debt hit a record high on Thursday



STI


Straits Times 2,778.25 -29.19-1.04%


DOW


Dow 11,905.59 -190.57-1.58%

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks declined on Wednesday as policymakers said Europe's debt crisis posed dangers to the global economy and as worries escalated contagion could hit larger European nations.


In what has become a familiar "risk off" trade, cyclical sectors of the stock market that are more sensitive to signs of economic weakness were among the worst performers. The S&P materials sector fell 1.1 percent.

"The U.S. economic numbers are starting to improve, but it's all being trumped by what's going on in Europe. The contagion of spreading into other countries is what's worrying us," said Alan Lancz, president of an investment advisory firm based in Toledo, Ohio.

The Dow Jones industrial average was down 65.61 points, or 0.54 percent, at 12,030.55. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index slipped 6.86 points, or 0.55 percent, at 1,250.95. The Nasdaq Composite Index dropped 13.02 points, or 0.48 percent, at 2,673.18.

U.S. economic data showed consumer prices fell in October for the first time in four months.

Overseas, the yield spread of 10-year French government bonds over their German equivalents widened to a euro-era high on fears the crisis was moving to economies that had been considered more isolated from the problems.

Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said the crisis was already affecting emerging nations and Japan in multiple ways, while the Bank of England forecast Britain was on the brink of a contraction and warned against inaction.



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