Monday, December 21, 2009

Bought KELADI


I bought keladi maju 0.15 today. Balance sheet is strong and net profit also improving. This company selling below its NTA and book value price, sitting on net cash and paying a good dividend.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

SCOMI MARINE AND MAHSING

I bought Scomi Marine 0.38 last monday and mah sing 1.77 yesterday.
Both companies fundamentaly strong and very confortable to invest in. Since i have no time to monitor market daiy, i think it is a safe bet as i dont need to monitor them everyday. Praying hard now!

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Understanding capital terms


Saturday November 7, 2009

By FINTAN NG


There is always an element of risk where investing is concerned. It is just a matter of whether people take the time to read the fine print and understand the risks they are exposed to when they invest.

Most investors in financial products would have come across the terms “capital guaranteed fund” and “capital protected fund”, but whether they understand these terms well is another matter, even if these terms are explained in the prospectus.

Basically, a capital guaranteed fund is a fund where the investor’s principal is fully protected. The fund usually invests most of the money in low-risk instruments such as government bonds, with only a small amount in riskier assets. Consequently, the returns are lower.

In a capital protected fund, the protection may involve a variety of instruments, the performance of which will determine whether investors retain, lose some or all of the principal amount invested.

In many instances, capital protected products have been sold to investors, with the impression – perhaps unintentionally – that they will not lose the principal sum at maturity.

However, the fine print will inform the investor on how the banks or other financial institutions intend to protect the sum invested. In the years before the global financial crisis, this usually involve securities known as options, swaps or collateralised debt obligations (CDOs).

Unfortunately, many investors, including seasoned ones, do not understand the risks involved when such assets are used to securitise their investments.

There are those who cannot even differentiate between capital guaranteed and capital protected.

We now know that CDOs, especially those with asset-backed securities linked to subprime mortgages, were among the chief culprits in the collapse of the US financial system.

The stark reminder of what can happen when people invest their money with only half an understanding of the risks involved, hit closer to home when the financial crisis peaked more than a year ago with the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, which also saw the near collapse of insurer American International Group Inc.

Among those affected were investors in Hong Kong and Singapore, who invested in the Lehman minibonds, which were first issued in 2002. Investors of Singapore-based DBS Group Holdings Ltd’s “high notes” as well as Merrill Lynch & Co’s “jubilee notes” were also affected.

These people invested in what is known as structured deposits or structured notes, which were capital protected not capital guaranteed.

Anecdotal evidence gleaned from news reports from last year show that often these investors do not understand what they were investing in or have been misled into believing that they had invested in risk-free products.

Most of them, whose demonstrations outside the banks were captured on television, saw a significant part of their life’s savings evaporate in the wake of the financial crisis.

One consequence of the massive losses incurred by investors last year was the banning of the term “capital protected” by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).

In a statement in early September, MAS said the ban on the term would apply to mass-market products familiar to retail investors, including structured notes, unit trusts and investment-linked life insurance policies.

According to Singapore’s Straits Times, financial institutions in Singapore now have to provide customers with simple, user-friendly ‘product highlights sheets’ and providing ‘health warnings’ on complex investments in appropriately large font.

There are those who will also post the question of how sound the financial institution providing the guarantee for capital guaranteed products are, especially since the financial services industry have seen so many banks get in trouble or go bust between July 2007 (when the subprime crisis began) and now.

One way to find out is to look at the credit rating and balance sheet of these guarantors, which are usually public information.

Otherwise, information on the guarantors are also available on the prospectus of the fund.

A website on investment education had this to say about capital guaranteed funds: “When we invest with little or no risk, we pay for it by compromising on potential returns.”

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Pelikan..sigh

Just diposed Pelikan 1.47. Damn right issue. Not that i'm surprised looking at current cash flow. Time to move to the next counter, scomi marine. Bought 0.59.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Happy Deepavali


Crude rallies again


Published: Saturday October 17, 2009 MYT 9:19:00 AM

NEW YORK (AP): Oil prices finished above $78 per barrel for the first time in a year, marking the largest weekly percentage increase in the cost of crude since the height of the U.S. summer driving season.

Benchmark crude added 95 cents to settle at $78.53 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. In London, Brent crude for December delivery climbed 76 cents to settle at $76.99 on the ICE Futures exchange.

An Energy Department report sent a ripple through the markets midweek when it revealed a huge and unexpected drawdown in gasoline supplies. Energy prices surged Friday, even though the country continues to sit on an enormous supply of petroleum.

"I think this rally is based more on hope than reality," said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research. "There's so much oil out there that people are going to start using it for their pancakes."

Gasoline futures rose as well as the run-up over the past seven days on Nymex began to spill over into the retail market and push pump prices higher.

Demand for gasoline edged higher, more than 5 percent in the last month, but there are enormous supplies, too. The amount of gasoline in storage is still well above average for this time of year.

All one needs to do is look at oil refiners to see where the industry stands. U.S. refiners are shutting down facilities and production has thinned to levels that are usually seen only after a hurricane tears up the Gulf Coast energy complex.

Americans, as a whole, are not traveling like they used to, either because of a lost job or concern over losing one. Demand for jet fuel is down 3.5 percent over the past four weeks, according to the Energy Information Administration.

The rise in energy prices is all about the dollar, which hit a 14-month low on Thursday. Crude is bought and sold in the dollar, so it gets cheap for investors when the U.S. currency falls.

Oil prices jumped more than 9 percent during the past week as the dollar floundered. The last time crude futures rose so fast was the week of Aug. 24, when tourists crammed the highways during what's typically the busiest travel period of the year.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil added 1.16 cents to settle at $2.0297 a gallon, while gasoline for November delivery added 3.44 cents to settle at $1.9793 a gallon. Natural gas for November delivery rose 29.9 cents to settle at $4.781 per 1,000 cubic feet.


Sunday, October 11, 2009

Proton



I just booked Proton's Persona SE last friday using my friend staff price scheme. can't wait. ;)

Monday, October 5, 2009

Hmm...

Bought back SAAG 0.205..woaa ~

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Sigh



Disposed / Cut loss SAAG at 0.235...sigh. Btw, so busy lately...sigh again!

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Bought SAAG 0.25

I bought SAAG 0.25. Praying hard now. amen
Sold TM-CI @ 0.11. No comment