Others
Tracking "4 star stocks"
Post Reply
1-20 of 109
For this morning, only UPP(S22c, up from S17.5c) and SMRT (S$2.13).
SIA(S$15.66, up from S$15.42 as at 23 Mar 2010).
4. EZRA(S$2.43, up from S$2.36),
6. GP Bat(1.78, up from 1.60),
7. GE(15.70. up from 14.60),
8. KepCorp(9.37, up from 8.65) and
9. KepLand(3.72, up from 3.64).
Some other stocks that are on the move in recent days includes :-
1. F&N(S$4.72, up from S$4.60),
2. Hengxin(0.465),
3. HTL(0.83, up from 0.805),
4. SembCorp(4.14, up from 3.47) and
5. SembMar(4.24, up from 3.63).
SIA?
crazy_fave ( Date: 23-Mar-2010 13:20) Posted:
Be selective, be very selective...F&N(S$4.60) and HTL(S$0.805). |
|
nOte bOOk is made in CHiNA
Be selective, be very selective...F&N(S$4.60) and HTL(S$0.805).
yA lOr!!!
mUz b hIs/HeR kEybOaRd gOT pRobLeM... oR hIS pC/lAptOP mAdE iN tAiwAN?
('',)
blackstreams ( Date: 10-Mar-2010 20:45) Posted:
Dear Pharoah88, wHy dO yOu typE likE thiS? it'S verY harD tO rEAd yOUr pOsts.
pharoah88 ( Date: 10-Mar-2010 18:42) Posted:
|
CHiNA has 30 years Lease-Hold residential properties.
because Of the shOrter leases, it is gOOd market fOr develOpers.
KepLand is a develOper.
Singapore Land Authority LEARNT frOm CHiNA and iNtrOduced the 60 year lease fOr private prOperties iN Singapore (ten years agO).
Singapore developers at that time were nOt familiar with this cOncept and refuse tO bite.
nO BiD fOr the 60 year lease land and Singapore gOvernment abandOned that DREAM tO enRiCH themselves LiKE iN CHiNA.
shOrter lease may nOt wOrk iN Singapore because mOre buyers may SHiFT tO JB fOr cheap FREEHOLD prOperties WHiCH are nOt availabe in hOng kOng. |
|
|
|
Dear Pharoah88,
wHy dO yOu typE likE thiS? it'S verY harD tO rEAd yOUr pOsts.
pharoah88 ( Date: 10-Mar-2010 18:42) Posted:
|
CHiNA has 30 years Lease-Hold residential properties.
because Of the shOrter leases, it is gOOd market fOr develOpers.
KepLand is a develOper.
Singapore Land Authority LEARNT frOm CHiNA and iNtrOduced the 60 year lease fOr private prOperties iN Singapore (ten years agO).
Singapore developers at that time were nOt familiar with this cOncept and refuse tO bite.
nO BiD fOr the 60 year lease land and Singapore gOvernment abandOned that DREAM tO enRiCH themselves LiKE iN CHiNA.
shOrter lease may nOt wOrk iN Singapore because mOre buyers may SHiFT tO JB fOr cheap FREEHOLD prOperties WHiCH are nOt availabe in hOng kOng.
niuyear ( Date: 03-Mar-2010 12:43) Posted:
|
China's property is only 77yrs leashold depend on district. Though its government is looking into lengthening the yrs of ownership, but, it takes a while. Unless staying there or doing business there, otherwise, is it wise to invest property in china at this moment.? |
|
|
|
CHiNA has 30 years Lease-Hold residential properties.
because Of the shOrter leases, it is gOOd market fOr develOpers.
KepLand is a develOper.
Singapore Land Authority LEARNT frOm CHiNA and iNtrOduced the 60 year lease fOr private prOperties iN Singapore (ten years agO).
Singapore developers at that time were nOt familiar with this cOncept and refuse tO bite.
nO BiD fOr the 60 year lease land and Singapore gOvernment abandOned that DREAM tO enRiCH themselves LiKE iN CHiNA.
shOrter lease may nOt wOrk iN Singapore because mOre buyers may SHiFT tO JB fOr cheap FREEHOLD prOperties WHiCH are nOt availabe in hOng kOng.
niuyear ( Date: 03-Mar-2010 12:43) Posted:
|
China's property is only 77yrs leashold depend on district. Though its government is looking into lengthening the yrs of ownership, but, it takes a while. Unless staying there or doing business there, otherwise, is it wise to invest property in china at this moment.?
pharoah88 ( Date: 02-Mar-2010 18:07) Posted:
Analysts fOrecasting cOming lOwer PALM Oil PRices.
CHiNA prOperties WiLL REMAiN iN DEMAND.
tOO few CHiNESE Owning prOperties.
CHiNESE pOpulatiOn iS grOwing
KEPPEL LAND has gOOd prOfits and BiG PLAN |
|
|
|
6. GP Bat, probably the best performing stock in my list recently...(S$1.60, up from S$1.43).
I am not sure of this, may be some proprety guys can comment? But i heard that those Flatted facotry (30 over yrs) got extended by government before though, i dont know exactly how . Need some property experts to comment. :)
des_khor ( Date: 03-Mar-2010 12:56) Posted:
What to do if the 99 lease end in Singapore and unable to extend ?? let say a condo... will they tear down the whole block and will the owner get any compensation ?
niuyear ( Date: 03-Mar-2010 12:43) Posted:
|
China's property is only 77yrs leashold depend on district. Though its government is looking into lengthening the yrs of ownership, but, it takes a while. Unless staying there or doing business there, otherwise, is it wise to invest property in china at this moment.? |
|
|
|
What to do if the 99 lease end in Singapore and unable to extend ?? let say a condo... will they tear down the whole block and will the owner get any compensation ?
niuyear ( Date: 03-Mar-2010 12:43) Posted:
|
China's property is only 77yrs leashold depend on district. Though its government is looking into lengthening the yrs of ownership, but, it takes a while. Unless staying there or doing business there, otherwise, is it wise to invest property in china at this moment.?
pharoah88 ( Date: 02-Mar-2010 18:07) Posted:
Analysts fOrecasting cOming lOwer PALM Oil PRices.
CHiNA prOperties WiLL REMAiN iN DEMAND.
tOO few CHiNESE Owning prOperties.
CHiNESE pOpulatiOn iS grOwing
KEPPEL LAND has gOOd prOfits and BiG PLAN |
|
|
|
China's property is only 77yrs leashold depend on district. Though its government is looking into lengthening the yrs of ownership, but, it takes a while. Unless staying there or doing business there, otherwise, is it wise to invest property in china at this moment.?
pharoah88 ( Date: 02-Mar-2010 18:07) Posted:
Analysts fOrecasting cOming lOwer PALM Oil PRices.
CHiNA prOperties WiLL REMAiN iN DEMAND.
tOO few CHiNESE Owning prOperties.
CHiNESE pOpulatiOn iS grOwing
KEPPEL LAND has gOOd prOfits and BiG PLAN |
|
twO DECADES Of BUDGET DEFiCiTS tUrned SPAINS intO PAINS.
singapOre iS iN One Quarter Of iT.
singapOre had PLANNED fOr BUDGET DEFiCiT Over a FiVE year duratiOn.
One Of the years' BUDGET DEFiCiT tUrned Out tO be sUrplUs by CHANCE Only.
singapOre's HEAD iS nOw tOO fOr iTS small bOdy to bear.
The FAINT in SPAIN started twO DECADES agO.
iT was Only a small RAIN.
16 EurOpeans thOught they ALL cOuld GAIN a lOt by getting intO an uniOn.
MAIN benefits are fOr thOse whO fly arOund and eat and party during all the meetings which never resOlve any prOblems.
STAINTS remain in all 16 EEC members.
Always PAINT a bUsy PiCTURE but actually nOthing iS dOne.
fOr twO DECADES, everything was iN VAIN.
Over TiME the NiCE PAINT in SPAIN became its PAINS....
crazy_fave ( Date: 02-Mar-2010 17:50) Posted:
"The Pain in Spain"
|
![]() |
| |
 |
![]() |
While
all eyes have been on the Greek tragedy that is playing out in Europe,
Spain could prove to be the spoiler of whether or not the 16-nation
currency stands or falls. Spain , with the fourth-largest euro zone
economy, is grappling with big debts, a yawning budget deficit and a
deflating housing bubble.
|
| |
 |
| |
John Stephenson - Money Focus Editor. |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
| |
A
potent combination of too much spending and too little saving and
investment have put Spain between a rock and a hard place. As part of
the European monetary union, Spain can't devalue its currency to make
its exports more attractive or its beach resorts cheaper since the
value of euro is largely driven by the much-larger German economy.
But
unlike Greece , which experienced runaway government spending, Spain 's
government had been running surpluses until the last few years. But in
Spain it was the private sector that went on a debt-fuelled bender that
has hobbled the economy and left Madrid with few options out of the
crisis.
Because of the massive spending by the
private sector, Spain now faces a total debt of $4.9 trillion, or
around 342 percent of GDP. This is a higher percentage of total debt
than that faced by the U.S. or most other major economies. The only
major economies with higher total debt burdens are Britain and Japan .
At the center of the crisis are millions of
unemployed Spaniards and a deflating housing bubble. The unemployment
rate is 19% and among young people it is running close to 45 percent.
In the last two years, one in nine working Spaniards have lost their
jobs.
Full employment in Spain has proved
illusive. Even in good times, unemployment never got below about 8
percent. The Spanish employment market is deeply flawed. Wages are set
through a complicated system of negotiating in this highly unionized
country where wage increases are often foisted on companies whether or
not they can afford them. Many workers are hired on so-called
indefinite contracts and are entitled to 45 days of severance per year
of service. This has led to labor market rigidity that will likely act
as a drag on future economic growth.
Spanish
house prices more than doubled from 1998 to 2008. And at the peak,
Spain , a country with just 45 million people, was building more houses
than Germany , Italy and France combined. Already, house prices are off
more than 15 percent from their highs and there are more than 1.3
million homes unsold.
The Spanish government is
left with three unpalatable choices forward. They could choose to do
nothing and wade through years of debt defaults and shy-high
unemployment. They could slash spending and try to overhaul the badly
flawed labor market or they could withdraw from the common currency and
try and devalue the Spanish peseta.
The problem
with abandoning the euro is that this is a very costly route. The
minute the Spanish government even hinted at leaving the monetary
union, a likely run on Spanish banks and an effective default of every
euro financial contract in that country would occur.
Already,
the market is betting that Spain will continue to face tough times. The
cost of insuring against a Spanish default has begun to rise. Just
three years ago, you could insure €10 million in Spanish bonds for a
five year period for just €2,350. Today, that same insure will cost
€125,000 or more—a fifty-threefold increase.
Investors,
worried about a possible collapse of the euro zone, should avoid
European investments for the time being. Instead, there are better
investment opportunities in the resource-rich economies of Canada and
Australia , whose growth is tied to global growth.
|
John Stephenson
Money Focus Editor | |
|
|
Analysts fOrecasting cOming lOwer PALM Oil PRices.
CHiNA prOperties WiLL REMAiN iN DEMAND.
tOO few CHiNESE Owning prOperties.
CHiNESE pOpulatiOn iS grOwing
KEPPEL LAND has gOOd prOfits and BiG PLAN
"The Pain in Spain"
|
![]() |
| |
 |
![]() |
While
all eyes have been on the Greek tragedy that is playing out in Europe,
Spain could prove to be the spoiler of whether or not the 16-nation
currency stands or falls. Spain , with the fourth-largest euro zone
economy, is grappling with big debts, a yawning budget deficit and a
deflating housing bubble.
|
| |
 |
| |
John Stephenson - Money Focus Editor. |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
| |
A
potent combination of too much spending and too little saving and
investment have put Spain between a rock and a hard place. As part of
the European monetary union, Spain can't devalue its currency to make
its exports more attractive or its beach resorts cheaper since the
value of euro is largely driven by the much-larger German economy.
But
unlike Greece , which experienced runaway government spending, Spain 's
government had been running surpluses until the last few years. But in
Spain it was the private sector that went on a debt-fuelled bender that
has hobbled the economy and left Madrid with few options out of the
crisis.
Because of the massive spending by the
private sector, Spain now faces a total debt of $4.9 trillion, or
around 342 percent of GDP. This is a higher percentage of total debt
than that faced by the U.S. or most other major economies. The only
major economies with higher total debt burdens are Britain and Japan .
At the center of the crisis are millions of
unemployed Spaniards and a deflating housing bubble. The unemployment
rate is 19% and among young people it is running close to 45 percent.
In the last two years, one in nine working Spaniards have lost their
jobs.
Full employment in Spain has proved
illusive. Even in good times, unemployment never got below about 8
percent. The Spanish employment market is deeply flawed. Wages are set
through a complicated system of negotiating in this highly unionized
country where wage increases are often foisted on companies whether or
not they can afford them. Many workers are hired on so-called
indefinite contracts and are entitled to 45 days of severance per year
of service. This has led to labor market rigidity that will likely act
as a drag on future economic growth.
Spanish
house prices more than doubled from 1998 to 2008. And at the peak,
Spain , a country with just 45 million people, was building more houses
than Germany , Italy and France combined. Already, house prices are off
more than 15 percent from their highs and there are more than 1.3
million homes unsold.
The Spanish government is
left with three unpalatable choices forward. They could choose to do
nothing and wade through years of debt defaults and shy-high
unemployment. They could slash spending and try to overhaul the badly
flawed labor market or they could withdraw from the common currency and
try and devalue the Spanish peseta.
The problem
with abandoning the euro is that this is a very costly route. The
minute the Spanish government even hinted at leaving the monetary
union, a likely run on Spanish banks and an effective default of every
euro financial contract in that country would occur.
Already,
the market is betting that Spain will continue to face tough times. The
cost of insuring against a Spanish default has begun to rise. Just
three years ago, you could insure €10 million in Spanish bonds for a
five year period for just €2,350. Today, that same insure will cost
€125,000 or more—a fifty-threefold increase.
Investors,
worried about a possible collapse of the euro zone, should avoid
European investments for the time being. Instead, there are better
investment opportunities in the resource-rich economies of Canada and
Australia , whose growth is tied to global growth.
|
John Stephenson
Money Focus Editor | |
Only 3. Chinese Ess(S44.5c up from S41c).
"When the market is rising, diversification increases profit; and vice versa."
Only 3. Chinese Ess(41c up from S37.5c) and 6. GP Bat(S$1.43 up from S$1.40).
"When the market is rising, diversification increases profit; and vice versa."
4. EZRA(S$2.43, up from S$2.36),
5. First REIT(S87c, up from 86c),
10. Noble(S$3.39, up from S$3.31),
Add F&N(S$4.49, up from S$4.41)),
Golden Agri (64, up from S60c,
UPP(S17.5c, up from S16.5c) and
Wilmar(S$7.12 up from S$6.92).
I wish all who look at my postings would get/have gotten an early fat ang pow(red packet) this year! 2010 huat ah!
des_khor ( Date: 08-Jan-2010 20:32) Posted:
| WoW... you got huge portfolio !! |
|
WoW... you got huge portfolio !!