Thursday, May 28, 2009

Bear market rally or real rebound?

BT ROUNDTABLE

Business Times - 28 May 2009 BT ROUNDTABLE?

OVERVIEW

THERE is a great divide among economists on whether the global economy has begun a sustainable recovery from its worst recession in 70 years or is simply slowing its rate of contraction. Are the so-called 'green shoots' of recovery firmly rooted, or just frail seedlings destined to wither again in an economic climate of prolonged stagnation and deflation? For investors, this translates into a question of whether stock prices are poised to enter a new bull market or are simply in a classic bear market rally. BT gets the views of four pundits.

PARTICIPANTS

Moderator: Anthony Rowley, BT's Tokyo correspondent

Panellists:

Eisuke Sakakibara, professor at Waseda University and formerly Japan's vice-finance minister for international affairs

Mark Mobius, executive chairman, Templeton Asset Management

Jesper Koll, president and CEO, Tantallon Research

William Thompson, chairman, Private Capital Ltd, and senior adviser to Axiom Funds

Anthony: Prof Sakakibara, you took a bearish line on prospects for global stock markets when you spoke at an investment seminar in Bali during the Asian Development Bank annual meeting there a few weeks ago. Do you still feel the same way?

Eisuke Sakakibara: After two quarters of very sharp economic decline, it is only natural to have some kind of rebound and that is what is happening now. Stocks have rallied but this is what could be called a bear market rally. Look at the Nikkei - it has gone above 9,000 towards 9,500 but it has now hit the ceiling and is coming down and it will again break 9,000. People try to cling to any sort of good numbers and there are some good numbers here and there after a very sharp decline. But I think this will be a fairly deep and prolonged recession. This is what could be called a 'balance sheet recession'. A financial bubble has accumulated during the course of the past 10 or so years and it burst in 2007. Asset prices have come down, both in real estate and in equities. Although there was a rebound in the equity market, house prices are still coming down and will continue to come down for another year or so. That has really hurt the balance sheets of individuals and corporations. It takes time to adjust balance sheets and this is exactly what we experienced in Japan in the 1990s. It is now happening to the US.

Anthony: Mark, you fired up the audience at the same seminar with your bullish views. How are you seeing things now, and when do you expect a resumption of sustainable growth in the global economy?

Mark Mobius: I think that growth has already begun and that it will continue as long as governments around the world continue to stimulate their economies and to increase the money supply.

Anthony: On which side of the divide do you stand, Jesper?

Jesper Koll: The global economy started a cyclical recovery around March-April 2009. Three factors are at work. First, the cumulative effects of the unprecedented mobilisation of public resources is starting to bite and is now sufficient to counter the negative pull of private demand. Second, the drop in global energy and commodity prices brings a very welcome boost to the terms of trade for industrial countries. And finally, corporate managers are seeing positive results of their very dramatic cost-cutting and restructuring actions taken since last fall - inventories are back under control and breakeven points have been cut. The last point is key because this is why business confidence is beginning to improve. Last autumn, corporate managers did not know what hit them, the shock was unprecedented. Now, they are back in control. Excess debt, excess capacity and excess jobs have been cut. The question now is whether anybody in the private sector will step-up to actually raise investment, build new factories, new call-centres, new supermarkets. Bold entrepreneurs will be much better off buying distressed assets, distressed companies on the cheap, rather than building new facilities from scratch. I expect a boom in mergers and acquisitions, massive industry consolidation, be it steel, shipbuilding, refrigerators or flat panel screens. In other words, the private sector will get 'leaner and meaner', rather than adding new capacity. It will be a golden age for entrepreneurs, but the overall economy will suffer because the public sector will have to start the payback for the massive intervention. Everywhere, from China to America, taxes will go up, interest rates will go down.

Anthony: And you, Bill?

William Thompson: The omens are not good. Sustainable economic recovery in the wake of a banking crisis takes longer than a standard cyclical adjustment. Japan stuttered along for a dozen years before 'enjoying' five years of sustained, substandard growth. In a sense, it has never fully recovered to its pre-crisis conditions. After a dreadful winter, spring has arrived and the US economy seems to have pulled out of its nosedive; however, it is a second derivative phenomenon; the rate of decline has slowed but the direction is still down. With the huge amounts of bailout money being pumped into the economy through both the budget and monetary operations, we are closer to stabilising things. Inventory adjustment is largely complete and restocking at some level must recommence. De-leveraging, unfortunately, still has a way to run. In summary, the road ahead will be bumpy. We may see a positive quarter or two by the end of 2009 or early 2010. But that should not be confused with renewed sustainable growth. We are all Japanese now!

Anthony: How soon is recovery likely to translate into improved corporate earnings and thus higher stock prices - or has the market rally fully discounted improved prospects?

Mark: (The recovery) is already beginning to impact corporate earnings. It is important to note that not all companies are seeing decreased earnings. A number have already announced increased earnings. The market is looking to 2010 and it apparently likes what it sees. Of course, there will be overshooting and corrections along the way.

Jesper: Everywhere, the terms of trade for corporations are improving - wages are being cut, unemployment is rising, commodity prices drop, supply-chains are being streamlined. And even the big Japanese conglomerates are finally beginning to sell off non-core divisions to focus on core-competence. In my view, corporate profits will explode and analysts estimates are far too pessimistic. This is true for the US, for Japan, and especially for the Asia-Pacific. Europe and Latin America will lag behind because corporate managers there are relatively more complacent.

William: The recent rally has been quite strong, as would be expected after the crash of 2008/2009 when the market was dramatically oversold. In my view, it provides investors with a great opportunity to adjust their portfolios and perhaps build liquidity for better opportunities ahead in the coming months. 'Sell in May and go away' continues to have validity. It is too soon to know whether we are in a bottoming process or an interlude before going to new lows. I tend towards the bottoming process viewpoint because the money being printed has to find a home and there are values around for the careful stock picker although the experience of 1929-32 would indicate we could still go to new lows from here. I would expect earnings to be higher in 2010 than this year, more because costs are being reduced so savagely than revenues are rising.

Anthony: How do you view the prospects for new credit creation by banks and non-banks, since this is presumably critical to any pick-up in consumer demand in the US and other advanced economies?

Eisuke: All the major banks have received public money and that is why they are surviving. They have to continue to rely on public money for some time to come. Some of the positive results we are seeing are at least partly the result of change in accounting rules. Mark to market rules have been relaxed somewhat. We should be careful in assessing what is now happening.

Jesper: Bank credit growth is accelerating smartly and the balance sheet constraints are largely an issue of the past. Whether borrowers are credit worthy is really the only constraint we have now. Now, bankers are back to being traditional bankers and, whether you like it or not, a significant part of US households simply do not qualify for a long-term mortgage or loan. Clearspeak - until now, it was the banks' balance sheets that had to get cleaned up. From now, it is the consumer balance sheet that needs to show real improvement. Only when 'Joe Sixpack' has paid back debt and brought liabilities back in line with assets and future income stream, will we see growth in the stock of mortgage credit and consumer credit. Probably, this balance sheet clean-up will take at least another 12-18 months. In the meantime, a big opportunity for banks will be the coming wave of privatisation - the massive purchases of credit by governments and central banks will start to be sold back to private investors. In my view, the valuations of these coming deals will be key to future financial performance.

Mark: The prospects for new credit creation are very high in view of the increased money supply and lower interest rates. Banks will be hard pressed to continue conservative lending policies.

William: Banks have funds to lend but credit has contracted in the economy as a whole largely because of the severe contraction of the shadow banking system. Two years ago, for instance, hedge funds had US$2.5 trillion under management; today, that is about US$1 trillion and de-leveraging is still underway. The result is that banks are now more cautious and requiring larger downpayments as housing prices remain under pressure. In addition, a form of financial protectionism is occurring worldwide. As governments have assumed more influence over their banking systems, they are forcing banks to keep up lending at home with the result that they are reducing their overseas activity.

Anthony: Even if banks become more accommodating, do you think people will be prepared to borrow in order to finance consumption before they have paid down existing debt and cleaned up personal balance sheets?

Eisuke: No, they are now adjusting their balance sheets. They have borrowed too much and they have borrowed against assets, prices of which have risen quite dramatically during the past 10 years. Now, asset prices have come down and they have to repay their debt and that is why the savings ratio is increasing. This will at least continue for another year or two. The corporate sector will remain in a defensive mode. I do not see any dramatic signs of increasing investment on the part of the corporate sector in the US.

Mark: I doubt that people in the US are willing to give up their lending patterns and deprive themselves of the things they see in the department stores and supermarkets. The US is a consuming society and as long as credit cards are available, the spending will continue. Of course, there will be some downturn in view of the banks' more conservative policies.

William: This is very much a balance sheet recession for the consumer. Their jobs have been lost or are under threat, many have lost their homes and their retirement savings have been halved or worse. The glory days of the American (and British) consumer are well and truly gone. Globally, there has been a wealth loss of over US$50 trillion or one times world GDP and in the US, it is more like 1.5 times GDP. There has to be an extended period of savings build-up before new debts can be taken on. It is a new paradigm.

Anthony: What about the outlook for bond markets given the massive accumulation of government debt in the US and elsewhere and the intense strain on corporate balance sheets. Is there anything to go for in the bond markets?

Mark: Bond market prospects for emerging market bonds are good in view of the declining interest rates and declining interest rate spreads for emerging markets bonds and US Treasuries.

Jesper: Yield curves are steep and particularly long-term bonds offer good value, in my view. The rally in bonds will start the moment the government starts raising taxes or cutting spending. And the Fed beginning to talk about an exit from quantitative ease will, in my view, also be good for long-term bonds. Why? Because it is highly likely that the Fed will do exactly what the BOJ did in Japan - start tightening too early. Timing-wise, I think this will become a very interesting play from this autumn.

William: It seems quite possible that the next bubble that is being created is in government debt. The US went into this recession with a balance sheet debt of around US$6 trillion. It has just about doubled in the last year if you count Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debt, now they are effectively nationalised. Then, you have a further US$45 trillion off-balance sheet liabilities, according to the Peterson Institute, of largely untouchable entitlements such as Social Security, bringing debts to about 350 per cent GDP, which compares with 250 per cent GDP at the peak in 1929. The US budget deficit this year and next is estimated by the Congressional Budget Office to be US$3.1 trillion, or 22 per cent of GDP. The UK is in much the same situation and, indeed, there are sensible voices warning the country may once again be forced into the arms of the IMF. Government bond prices went to unsustainable levels over the winter and spring and are now reacting to the expected flood of issues. Since a bout of inflation is an unspoken, but probably essential, element in working out of the present situation, I would not buy long-term governments. Intermediate term maybe and inflation indexed bonds certainly. For those capable of an analysis of corporate resilience in today's turbulent times, there are opportunities given their unduly large spreads over governments.

Anthony: Which areas of the equity market are likely to see more than a temporary 'relief rally' in advanced and emerging (Asian especially) markets?

Eisuke: Corporate earnings are down. Look at the earnings of major Japanese corporations. Most of them are in deficit. This is the worst experience during the course of the past two or three decades.

Jesper: Prospects for corporate earnings are best in Emerging Asia, Japan and the US. Europe and Latin America are lagging behind. Key here is how aggressive corporate managers are in restructuring their business, much more so than what government policy is doing. This recent rally, in my view, is not a bear market rally, but the beginning of the new reality - markets will be highly volatile and much more range-bound, rather than trending upwards. You have to be stock specific, company specific. While there are many uncertainties, one thing is clear - the gap between the good companies and the bad ones is going to widen dramatically in the next couple of years. This is true for Emerging Asia, China, Japan or the US.

Mark: Most interesting are the consumer and commodity areas. Per capita incomes continue to rise in Asia and emerging markets in general, so the prospects for consumer-oriented stocks is good. With growth continuing in the most populated countries in the world, China and India, commodity prices will continue to recover.

William: Let me start with gold. It remains an essential insurance element in portfolios today as a hedge against inflation, currency devaluation and general chaos. I look for higher prices over the next few years. The US dollar's position as the sole reserve currency is being called into question as never before and the Chinese are putting their heads above the parapet for the first time. They quietly doubled their gold holding between 2003 and 2007 and I believe they have continued to build them since then. It is the same for the Russians and must only be a matter of time before other Asians and Middle East governments do the same. Commodities were dumped in last year's meltdown and prices have recovered somewhat as inventories, especially China's, are rebuilt. They have a place in portfolios, especially agricultural ones where prices remain depressed. Ditto natural gas. I continue to prefer some Asian emerging markets, including the Asean ones which are commodity exporters and do have problems with their banking systems. Taiwan, with its improving relations with the mainland, is an interesting recovery play. I do not like Eastern Europe which still has a horrendous adjustment to undergo. Brazil, with its increasing ties to China, is very interesting. In developed markets, the US is probably further through the recession cycle than Europe. There are probably opportunities there in the areas that Obama's economic policies favour, including green and renewable energy, medical care and biotech and infrastructure.

Anthony: Prof Sakakibara, or perhaps I should address you as 'Mr Yen', I can't resist the temptation to ask you, in closing, for any comments you may have on the outlook for currency markets.

Eisuke: Currency market will be quite volatile. For the time being, the yen will appreciate and it is perceived as a safe haven. Despite the fact that the performance of the Japanese economy and the Japanese market is not good, I see some further appreciation towards 95 in the dollar-yen. The dollar will be strong against the euro. The yen may strengthen somewhat further, both against the dollar and the euro.

Anthony: Thank you all for sharing your wisdom with us.

KEY POINTS

  • Bold entrepreneurs will be much better off buying distressed assets, distressed companies on the cheap, rather than building new facilities from scratch.
  • Sustainable economic recovery in the wake of a banking crisis takes longer than a standard cyclical adjustment.
  • There has to be an extended period of savings build-up before new debts can be taken on.

  • It seems quite possible that the next bubble that is being created is in government debt. Government bond prices went to unsustainable levels over the winter and spring and are now reacting to the expected flood of issues.
  • Blogged with the Flock Browser

    UOB Raises Daphne Target To HK$6.40 From HK$3.80

    May 27 2009
    UOB KayHian raises Daphne International (0210.HK) target price to HK$6.40 from HK$3.80 on lower risk premium, higher expected earnings growth, higher target P/E of 15X vs previous 10X. Keeps at Buy on view TPG Premier's subscription for company's convertible bonds, warrants should be viewed as strategic partnership instead of pure financial investment. "We are positive on the deal as it has triggered an ongoing re-rating on the Group by reducing its risk premium and accelerating its mid- to longer-term earnings growth." Raises 2009-11 profit forecasts by 13%-19% on better-than-expected sales and margins for Shoebox year-to-date, expected improvement in efficiency and faster store openings in 2010-11. Shares end +11.3% at HK$4.03; HSI +5.3%


    Daphne Int'l
    Textiles & Apparel
    Manufacture & distributing of footwear, apparel & accessories in China.
    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    ANALYSIS-S'pore casinos target high-rollers, may hurt Macau 27 May 2009 16:14

    Singapore's tax on high-rollers much lower than Macau's

    * Impact on Malaysia's Genting Highlands will be temporary

    * Singaporeans may travel to Genting because of entry fee

    (Repeats to include link to gaming package)

    By Candida Ng and Kevin Lim

    SINGAPORE, May 27 (Reuters) - Singapore's two upcoming casinos may draw some business from neighbouring Malaysia's Genting Highlands but the city-state's focus on high-rollers will likely have a greater impact on Macau and Australia.

    When up and running next year, Sheldon Adelson's Marina Bay Sands and the Malaysian Genting group's <GENT.KL> Resorts World at Sentosa will pay an effective tax of around 12 percent on net revenue from high-rollers -- compared with 39 percent for Macau -- giving operators more incentive to draw such people to the city-state.

    Macau, which has 31 casinos, derives more than 60 percent of casino revenue from wealthy gamblers. Australia's larger casinos, such as Melbourne's Crown and Perth's Burswood, derive about 20 percent from VIP customers and have a large Asian clientele.

    "Potentially in the VIP -- or higher-end, more premium player segment -- Singapore could have a competitive impact," said Danny Goldberg, an analyst at Select Equities in Sydney.

    Companies with casinos in Macau include Melco Crown <MPEL.O>, which is part owned by Australia's Crown Ltd <CWN.AX>, Macau gaming mogul Stanley Ho's SJM Holdings <0880.HK>, U.S.-based Las Vegas Sands <LVS.N> and Wynn Resorts <WYNN.O>, and Hong Kong's Galaxy Entertainment Group <0027.HK>.

    Crown owns the Crown and Burswood casinos in Australia.

    Australia's effective tax rate -- a combination of gaming and sales taxes -- is between 8 and 15 percent for high-rollers, depending on where the casino is located, but the country loses out to Singapore by being further away from East Asia.

    Edward Ong, a Malaysia-based analyst with Macquarie Research, estimated that high-rollers constitute a $10 billion-a-year market for Asian casinos in revenue terms. Singapore can easily capture 5 to 10 percent of the region's VIP market, he added.

    Singapore legalised casino gaming in 2005 as part of an ambitious plan to make it a more exciting tourism destination and double annual visitor arrivals to 17 million by 2015.

    The first casino, Las Vegas Sands' Marina Bay Sands, is due to open at the end of this year, while Genting's <GNTG.SI> Resorts World at Sentosa will be ready by mid-2010.

    To encourage casino operators to focus on big-time gamblers, the city-state will impose a lower tax of 5 percent on net revenue from high-rollers compared with 15 percent for the mass market. The Singapore casinos also have to pay a 7 percent goods and services tax on net revenue from casino gaming.

    Resorts World will also host Southeast Asia's first Universal Studios, while the casinos will have restaurants helmed by celebrity chefs such as Charlie Trotter and Tetsuya Wakuda to appeal to well-heeled tourists as well as gamblers.

    For a package of stories on casinos, click [ID:nHKG213363]

    UNTAPPED DEMAND

    On competition with Malaysia, analysts said the impact on Genting Highlands will be minimal since it does not focus on high-rollers and depends on locals for more than 70 percent of its business. Singaporean visitors account for about 20 percent of the clientele at Genting Highlands, which is owned by Genting.

    "You're not going to see Malaysians, who generally go out on a day trip to gamble, go over to Singapore to do the same thing," said Malaysia's RHB, although it added the city-state may attract people initially with the novelty of visiting a new casino.

    Singapore's plan to impose a S$100 daily ($69) entry fee on citizens visiting local casinos will push some residents to journey to Genting. However, a Malaysian ban on its Muslim citizens entering Genting casino will drive some to Singapore.

    Jonathan Galaviz, a partner at Las Vegas-based consultancy Globalysis, said overall Singapore's upcoming casinos will help grow Asia's gaming market rather than cannabalise it.

    "There continues to be a massive undersupply of casino entertainment options in Asia and it will be a very long time before the full demand is met," he said. ($1=1.445 Singapore Dollar) (Editing by Lincoln Feast)

    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Wednesday, May 27, 2009

    Xinyi Glass shareholder sells $126 mln worth of shares 27 May 2009 08:08

    HONG KONG, May 27 (Reuters) - The controling shareholder in China's Xinyi Glass Holdings Co Ltd <0868.HK> is selling $126.4 million worth of shares at a 7.6 percent discount to its last closing price.

    Full Guang Holdings, which had initially planned to sell up to $111.3 million worth of shares in Xinyi Glass, said in a term sheet seen on Wednesday that it was selling 170 million shares, of which 90 million shares were new shares, at the lower end of an indicative range at HK$5.80 per share.

    It increased the number of existing shares it planned to sell to 80 million shares from 50 million.

    The deal was being handled by Citigroup <C.N> and China International Capital Corp (CICC). The company's shares rose 2.11 percent to close at HK$6.28 on Tuesday.
    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Xinyi Glass sells $67 mln in new shares to repay debt 27 May 2009 09:28

    HONG KONG, May 27 (Reuters) - Xinyi Glass Holdings <0868.HK> on Wednesday said it would sell HK$522 million ($66.9 million) in new shares to controlling shareholders, raising capital for debt repayment, to fund production and for working capital.

    The company said it would sell 90 million new shares at HK$5.80 each to controlling shareholders after the shareholders completed a sale of a total 170 million shares at the same price for HK$986 million ($126.4 million).

    The issue price represented a 7.6 percent discount to its last closing price of HK$6.28 on Tuesday.

    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Tuesday, May 26, 2009

    Mainland noodle giant Tingyi reports `best ever' quarterly result


    26/05/2009
     
    Tingyi (Cayman Islands) Holdings (0322), China's biggest maker of packaged food, said first-quarter profit surged 43 percent on increased instant noodle and beverage consumption.

    Net income for the January-March quarter rose to US$93 million (HK$725.4 million) from US$65 million a year earlier, the maker of Master Kong instant noodles said yesterday. Sales jumped 21.3 percent to US$1.18 billion. Instant noodle sales rose 11.9 percent to US$587.7 million in the first quarter from a year earlier and beverage sales gained 36.7 percent to US$525 million, Tianjin-based Tingyi said.

    "The first-quarter result is quite encouraging, it surprised the market on the upside. Tingyi's traditional peak season is summer time," said a local analyst who has a buy rating on the stock.

    Tingyi's gross margin grew by 2.97 percent to 35.37 percent and net profit margin by 1.17 percent to 7.89 percent during the first three months.

    "The result ... is the group's best ever quarter," Tingyi said.

    The company plans to spend US$268 million on boosting noodle and beverage output capacity by 20 percent this year.

    Operating costs were modest with finance costs falling 28.32 percent. The stock eased 0.34 percent to HK$11.56.

    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    BYD & Volkswagen sign MOU

    Volkswagen (VOW XE) said it has signed a MOU with BYD (1211 HK – HK$32.90) for a partnership
    in the area of hybrid and electric car powered by lithium batteries as the management of Volkswagen
    believes hybrid and electric vehicles will pay an increasingly important role in the future, especially in
    China market. The German carmaker is the first major industrial partner for BYD. In March, BYD’s
    chairman unveiled that his company was in talks to supply batteries to carmakers in Europe and US, but
    he did not name them. Lithium-ion batteries are widely recognized as the technology that will ultimately
    work, but it has been hindered by limited durability and over-heated concern. BYD believes it has
    largely resolved the problems through its more cost-effective technology called iron-phospate-based
    lithium-ion batteries.
    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Monday, May 25, 2009

    Xinyi Glass

    According to today's Apple Daily, Xinyi Glass (868 HK - HK$5.65 - BUY) plans to expand the
    production capacity of TCO glass further by investing over HK$100m in a production line with annual
    capacity of 2.75m sq m of TCO glass. The new production line, which is 4x the production capacity of
    the first production line to be commissioned in 2H this year, will commence production in 3Q next year.
    We have highlighted previously that the first TCO line is only a pilot project and the company is likely to
    expand the capacity further, especially in light of the Chinese government's latest policy to stimulate
    domestic demand for solar power by subsidising buildings incorporating the application of solar power.
    The company's own production is capable of supplying PV float glass for 5x the expanded TCO capacity.
    While our current TP and rating are HK$5.60 and BUY, respectively, with increased investors risk
    appetite in the market and the future contribution from the new TCO capacity, we are reviewing our
    earnings forecast, TP and rating for the company.
    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Haier

    Qingdao Haier (600690) +4.2% after the
    government said it will subsidize the purchase of energy-efficient home appliances. The surge was also
    driven after the appliance play said its parent plans to buy back as much as 26.5m shares during the
    next 12 months.
    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    SPC, Keppel Corp shares soar on PetroChina deal 25 May 2009 09:29

        SINGAPORE, May 25 (Reuters) - Shares of Keppel Corp <KPLM.SI> 
    and Singapore Petroleum Company (SPC) <SPCS.SI> soared as much as
    10.6 percent and 24 percent respectively on Monday, after Asia's
    largest oil and gas producer PetroChina <0857.HK> said it will
    buy Keppel's stake in SPC.
    PetroChina is buying Keppel Corp's 45.51 percent stake in SPC
    for S$1.47 billion ($1.02 billion) and plans to make a general
    offer to buy the rest of the firm. [ID:nSIN335305]
    The deal valued the Singapore oil refiner at S$3.2 billion
    and was an equivalent of S$6.25 for each SPC share, compared to
    Friday's closing price of S$5.04.
    By 0120 GMT, SPC was up 21.4 percent at S$6.12 with 2.4
    million shares traded, while Keppel was 7 percent higher at
    S$7.44.
    SPC shares a 285,000 barrels per day refinery in Singapore
    with U.S. energy major Chevron Corp <CVX.N>, and it also owns
    upstream oil and gas exploration and production concessions in
    Australia, Southeast Asia and China.
    It is the first overseas acquisition of a public company by
    PetroChina, and the move for downstream fuel production adds to
    efforts by Chinese oil majors to buy upstream oil exploration
    assets around the world to secure energy supplies.
    Keppel, the world's largest offshore oil rig builder, said in
    the statement that together with PetroChina it plans to explore
    opportunities in the offshore oil industry and in other areas.
    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Friday, May 22, 2009

    Battery maker remains `unattractive' after share sale

    19/05/2009
     
    Morgan Stanley yesterday raised the target price of BYD Company (1211) by 70 percent to HK$16.5, but still maintains an "unattractive" evaluation on its stock performance.

    BYD president Wang Chuanfu on Friday sold all his 11.2 million H shares in the company for HK$280 million, or HK$25 each, about 10 percent below the market price. He still holds 27.8 percent of the total issued share capital.

    "Wang's share disposal was carried out at the behest of Chinese regulators and not due to any concerns over the company's future development." Bank of China International analyst Frank He said. "The company is still awaiting central government approval to sell 225 million shares to Warren Buffett's MidAmerican Energy."

    Buffett last year said he would buy a 10 percent stake in electric vehicle maker BYD - a deal which is still in process. BYD said it is scheduled to launch its first all-electric car, the E6, in the second half.

    "We think intensifying competition in handset components and batteries will put great pressure on BYD's margin outlook in what is a fragile market. We retain our Underweight rating." said a Morgan Stanley research report out yesterday.

    Morgan Stanley said while BYD's move to solar batteries and industrial power storage businesses may offer long-term growth potential, these plans are in their early stages and expected to contribute hardly any immediate revenue in 2009.

    "The share price has almost doubled since April 2009 and the stock now trades at P/E multiples of 41 times for 2009 earnings against our estimate. We see the current valuation as demanding.

    "We believe the near-term catalyst for the stock will be battery shipments to European and North American automakers... we reiterate our "sell" rating for BYD," He wrote. The stock dipped 0.60 percent to end at HK$26.80 yesterday.

    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    TOPWRAP 7-US shows signs of weakness; euro zone improves 22 May 2009 05:47

    * U.S. jobless claims hit record, manufacturing contracts

    * S&P downgrades Britain's outlook, AAA rating at risk

    * Fears of U.S. ratings cut weigh on stocks, bonds, dollar

    * Euro zone PMIs show slowing contraction

    * Geithner says U.S. regulatory reforms coming soon

    (For full financial crisis coverage, click [nCRISIS])

    By Caroline Valetkevitch

    NEW YORK, May 21 (Reuters) - Data from the United States on jobless claims and business conditions on Thursday dented hopes of a quick economic rebound but euro zone countries showed that the worst recession in six decades may be easing.

    In Britain, prospects were clouded by a warning over government debt and political uncertainty as Standard & Poor's lowered its outlook to "negative" and said it might cut the country's precious triple-A credit rating. [nLL627240]

    "This is a reality check for the UK government," said Kenneth Broux, an economist at Lloyds TSB Corporate Markets.

    Worries the United States may suffer a cut to its triple-A rating pushed down stocks, bonds and the dollar.

    Investors fear the United States is "going the way of the UK," Bill Gross, co-chief investment officer at bond giant Pacific Investment Management, told Reuters. [nN21294698]

    All three major U.S. stock indexes [.N] closed down more than 1.5 percent, while European shares <.FTEU3> fell 2.1 percent, breaking five straight sessions of gains. [MKTS/GLOB]

    The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note <US10YT=RR> eased and the dollar dropped to its lowest level this year against major currencies <.DXY>.

    "No one wants to admit it but there might be investors nervous enough with the extreme levels of indebtedness of the U.S. government so that just the thought of a downgrade would provide an excuse to sell dollars," said Matt Esteve, a trader at Tempus Consulting in Washington.

    CHINESE RISKS, U.S. WEAKNESS

    Chinese officials highlighted the risks facing the world's third-largest economy -- one of the few still growing.

    Vice Premier Li Keqiang said while the government's $585 billion stimulus plan had yielded initial results, it was too early to hail an economic recovery. [nPEK13801]

    "The international financial crisis is still spreading and its impact on the real economy is deepening," the official Xinhua news agency quoted Li as saying.

    Jobless claims in the United States, the world's biggest economy and epicenter of the global crisis, rose to a record last week while new claims fell by 12,000. [nN21256165]

    Other data showed manufacturing in the U.S. Mid-Atlantic area shrank in May for the eighth straight month.

    Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said the U.S. financial system was steadying from the taxpayer-funded bailout of banks but that care must be taken to ensure normal market forces are allowed to work. [nN21365767]

    Broad regulatory reforms should be unveiled in a few weeks, including protection for consumers, Geithner said, as the Obama administration faces the task of "striking the delicate balance between intervention and allowing market participants latitude to operate."

    The Conference Board research firm suggested more promise for U.S. growth, with its index of leading indicators for April showing the first rise since June 2008.

    In that vein, the Congressional Budget Office said the U.S. economy will likely start growing again in the second half of 2009 but that the jobless rate could peak at more than 10 percent against the current 8.9 percent.

    The new reports came a day after the Federal Reserve, in minutes released from its April policy meeting, cut its outlook for U.S. growth over the next three years and said a full recovery could take five or six years.

    EUROPE OFFERS PROMISE

    Still, the euro zone offered some grounds for cautious optimism.

    Markit's Eurozone Flash Services Purchasing Managers Index, a measure of service and manufacturing activity, rose to 44.7 in May from 43.8 last month, beating the consensus estimate.

    May was the third month in a row the index picked up and took it to its highest level since October. [nLAG003446]

    The PMI index showed France's economy performing more strongly than the euro zone as a whole. Markit said a recovery in France could be earlier than current forecasts of a rebound in the fourth quarter. [nLK37204]

    The rate of decline in the private sector in Germany, Europe's largest economy, was its slowest in seven months.

    Predictions by some economists of a return to growth as early as the last quarter of this year are tempered with concerns that data may yet obscure more complex underlying weaknesses in the economy.

    "It is grounds for hope that things will improve over the next few months," said Peter Dixon, an economist at Commerzbank. "I'm not getting carried away."

    Elsewhere, the outlook was mixed.

    South Africa, Africa's biggest economy, "faces a sharp cyclical downturn" after a prolonged boom, said Treasury Director-General Lesetja Kganyago, with the government having to manage borrowing carefully to avoid overburdening the country with debt. [nLL944902]

    Argentina's economy, Latin America's third biggest, grew a better-than-expected 2.7 percent in March from a year earlier, the government said, but many analysts say official data is downplaying the slowdown. [nN21302995]

    Singapore's economy shrank 14.6 percent in the first quarter at an annualized and seasonally adjusted rate, less than forecast, prompting the trade ministry to talk of signs the country's worst recession is bottoming out. [nSP404487]

    The small Southeast Asian state, a proxy for global trends due to its heavy exposure to international trade, saw its exports slip back in April after two months of growth, reinforcing a view that there is no clear recovery.

    Singapore's April exports to the United States and Europe shrank by more than 30 percent and to China by 15 percent. (Reporting by Reuters correspondents worldwide; Editing by John O'Callaghan)

    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    KEPPEL LAND

        -- KEPPEL LAND LTD <KLAN.SI> 
    - Auerbach Grayson downgraded the rating of Keppel Land to
    "sell" from "buy", saying that a turnaround for high-end
    developers and the recovery of the office market would still take
    some time. It maintained the fair value of S$1.61.
    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Tuesday, May 19, 2009

    China Mobile aims for home listing in near term 19 May 2009 13:10

    By Joanne Chiu and Nerilyn Tenorio

    HONG KONG, May 19 (Reuters) - Hong Kong-listed China Mobile <0941.HK> on Tuesday said it would like to make a second listing in its home market as early as possible, as Beijing tries to make more top Chinese companies available to domestic investors.

    The company, China's top mobile carrier by subscribers, would prefer to make the listing using China Depositary Receipts (CDRs), Chairman Wang Jianzhou said.

    "We intend to issue CDRs and this is the right time," Wang told reporters on the sidelines of the company's annual general meeting in Hong Kong.

    "China Mobile has been listed in Hong Kong and New York for nearly 12 years and the management is eager to seek a listing on the mainland as soon as applicable so that domestic investors will have a chance to invest in the company," he added.

    Shares of China Mobile jumped more than 4 percent at midday to HK$75.50, beating a 3 percent rise in the blue chip Hang Seng Index <.HSI>.

    But the stock has eased about 2 percent this year on concerns about slowing demand and growing competition from rivals China Unicom <0762.HK> and China Telecom <0728.HK>.

    Earlier this month, China agreed to allow qualified foreign companies to list on its stock exchange through issuing shares or depository receipts.

    The agreement, signed last week during Chinese Vice-Premier Wang Qishan's meeting with British Finance Minister Alistair Darling in London, will pave the way for large British companies like HSBC <0005.HK> to be listed in Shanghai.

    Wang said this would cover all overseas companies, including so-called red-chip companies, such as China Mobile, which are controlled by Chinese owners but incorporated outside China.

    China Mobile hopes to become one of the first batch of overseas-listed China companies to issue CDRs and would apply as soon as the government provided a framework for such listings, he said.

    M&A

    Separately, China Mobile said it was open to acquisitions that could provide synergy and value for shareholders, weeks after announcing plans to buy 12 percent of No.3 Taiwan mobile carrier Far EasTone <4904.TW> for $529 million. [ID:nLT876587]

    "We are still focused on the domestic market," Wang said. "At the same time, we are looking out for possible acquisitions. Assets were very expensive two years ago, but now they're not as expensive," he said.

    China Mobile and Far EasTone both operate second-generation (2G) mobile networks based on the GSM standard popularised in Europe. But for more advanced third-generation (3G) services, China Mobile is using a homegrown technology known as TD-SCDMA.

    Wang said China Mobile would soon announce winners for the third tender of TD-SCDMA bidding as it extends its network to an additional 200 cities.

    The company recently awarded tenders for high-end TD-SCDMA handset to six producers including LG Electronics <066570.KS>, Motorola <MOT.N>, and Taiwan's HTC <2498.TW>, and to five suppliers including ZTE <0763.HK>, Huawei [HWT.UL] and LG to produce low-end handsets.

    The company was still in talks with Apple <AAPL.O> about selling the U.S. company's popular iPhone in China, Wang said. The on-again-off-again talks have dragged on for more than a year without any results. [ID:nBKK173772]

    More recently, Chinese media have reported that Apple was also in talks to offer the iPhone in China through China Unicom <0762.HK>, China's No.2 wireless carrier, which operates a GSM network and is building a 3G network based on WCDMA, the globally accepted successor to GSM.

    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Monday, May 18, 2009

    Stock market rally - bull or bear?

    Business Times - 18 May 2009

    Is the stock market surge since March a bear market rally, or is it likely to be sustained?

    Loh Hoon Sun
    Managing Director
    Phillip Securities Pte Ltd

    THE unprecedented measures taken by governments all over the world should help economies recover. Recent US economic indicators are already showing signs that the pace of recession in some sectors is slowing down, while other sectors have early signs of recovery.

    The Singapore stock market dropped 62 per cent in 17 months, from the high in October 2007 to the low in March 2009. This is about the average depth and length of a bear cycle. It has now rebounded more than 50 per cent from the low.

    My call is that the market bottomed out in March and should stay above that level. In the coming months, we can expect conflicting economic indicators which will cause market volatility.

    Stefanie Yuen Thio
    Head, Corporate
    TSMP Law Corporation

    THE cracks in the world economy started with the problems with collateralised debt obligations (CDOs). The big collapse came when banks started to crumble under the sheer weight of toxic assets. However, it was the panic from watching the fallout that I think really drove markets down. Government leaders, international agencies and CEOs were all quoted as saying that no one knew how deep the hole was, and that caused widespread pandemonium. Corporate frauds that were hidden during bull years suddenly came to light, making matters worse.

    We are now seeing a return to some semblance of calm. When investors stare out into the darkness, the outlook is still grim but they don't feel that it's a black hole anymore. Markets seem to think that they have hit bottom, or close to it. More significantly, I think that market participants are just tired of the bad news and believe it is time for some optimism. I think that some of the panic and loss of confidence has been put behind us, and that is what's driving the present rally.

    That said, we cannot escape the reality that the systemic problems still have to be fixed. We may have started on that journey but we have a way to go before we can say we have turned the corner.

    My concern is that investor memories may be short. We may try to bounce back from this turmoil without having either fully fixed the problems or really learnt the lessons we should have. And those who do not learn from (the mistakes of) history are destined to repeat it.

    Matt Beath
    Chief Executive, Asia
    Talent2 International

    AS business leaders we would all like to mark this as the end of the stock market decline that began in late 2007 - perhaps more for the positive sentiment that market rallies bring to the business climate than anything else. However, we are probably still in bear market territory, though my guess is as good as the next person's. Bull or bear, I strongly believe that we will continue to see extreme volatility for the rest of this year at least, as investors flip flop between greed and fear.

    The good news is that the employment market has finally begun to demonstrate some of the stability that we have not seen for the best part of a year. It does finally appear that the rapid deterioration in sentiment has bottomed out as fears of a systemic economic meltdown have subsided. Realising this, employers are emerging from a period of paralysis and steadily getting back to business, setting about working through this recession. We are not back to the heady 2007 levels by any means and may never be. However, a prolonged period of sensibility and sustainability would be a good thing for us all.

    Philip Seah
    Chief Executive Officer
    Prudential Assurance Company S'pore Pte Ltd

    RECENT rallies have prompted speculation that the worst is over. This might be true, but it is not synonymous with a recovery as we have yet to see emerging data that suggest it. The US stimulus package will take time to show any impact.

    Moreover, there is talk that a second stimulus package might be needed to supplement the first. While falling inflation, subdued economic activity and low interest rates augur well for credit markets in the near term, equities and bonds both offer good long-run value. However, I believe more is needed, such as a rally in credits, before we see a sustained equity rally.

    Ron Mahabir
    Managing Director
    Asia Cleantech Capital

    YEARS of monetary excess cannot be cleaned up in a matter of months. The current dead cat bounce smells like a technical rally based on dramatically oversold conditions and does not appear to be based on any significant improvement in business conditions or structural improvements to the financial system.

    The rate of decline has slowed, but this does not imply a recovery has started or is even near. Global labour markets are still weakening - in the first four months alone, the US lost over 2.5 million jobs - and until we see some signs of stabilisation in employment, I would not get excited about the equity markets.

    Lim Soon Hock
    Managing Director
    PLAN-B ICAG Pte Ltd

    WHILE we are seeing some green shoots out there in the economic terrain, I would be cautious as there is currently no rampant new growth to indicate that the stock market surge can be sustained. Moreover, these early green shoots have yet to display any resilience in a hostile environment.

    Based on this, I believe that the stock market surge is more of a bear rally. Until more green shoots emerge and can weather the turbulent economic storm, I do not think that the stock market surge is likely to be sustained. All this takes time and should there be any upturn, it would be very slow, if not volatile.

    The financial sectors are still not out of the woods, as shown by the stress test reports of the major banks in the US. Elsewhere in the world, major banks are also reporting significant losses. In addition, there are other factors such as the uncertain duration of the current swine flu spread, rising global unemployment, weak consumer spending and a depressed property market that will cause the stock market to remain uncertain.

    All these problems would have to be resolved first, in order for the stock market rally to be sustained.

    Teng Yeow Heng Michael
    Managing Director
    Corporate Turnaround Centre Pte Ltd

    THE current stock market surge is a bear rally and not sustainable. There are lessons that we can draw from the physical tsunami in 2004. There was a period of calm after the first tsunami wave hit the shores.

    The first wave of the financial tsunami was triggered by the sub-prime mortgage problem in the US last year. The current period of calm is the result of liquidity and fiscal stimuli pumped into the financial system by the central banks a couple of months ago. But it will not last.

    Watch out for the second wave of the financial tsunami, which is Europe's financial crisis. Several Eastern European countries are going to go bankrupt and default on the loans from Western Europe. The Europeans are going to be slower and less transparent than their US counterparts in solving their economic problems. If the US economy does not recover, there is going to be a loss of confidence in the US dollar and a collapse in US Treasury bills - the third wave of the financial tsunami. This is because there is a price to pay for printing dollars to pump-prime the US economy without any economic and productivity basis.

    The second and third waves of the financial tsunami are going to be more deadly than the first. To make matters worse, if the H1N1 flu becomes a pandemic, it is going to be the straw that will break the back of any possible global economic recovery. There is currently no engine of growth left for global demand: US consumerism is decimated with the unemployment rate increasing, the Europeans and oil-rich Gulf states are economically too weak to spend and the Asians are not spenders by culture. There is little hope of a speedy economic recovery in the near term.

    Stephen Grundlingh
    Regional Head for South-east Asia
    Franklin Templeton Investments

    WE are now seeing the market react to recent positive economic data as a sign that the downturn is no longer accelerating - as markets tend to lead real recovery by six months to a year. Asia's banking sector, compared to the US and Europe, is not as heavily leveraged and we expect China and India to help lead this region to recovery.

    There will be more volatility ahead and market corrections along the way, but we have started to see cash flowing back into equities and we believe that the market is on a jagged upward trend.

    Adrian Tan
    CEO
    The Ad Planet Group

    SINCE early March, the S&P 500 has risen 37 per cent and the Dow by over 30 per cent. Asia was more spectacular, with the Nikkei up 34 per cent, and the STI and Shanghai gaining as much as 54 per cent.

    These returns would have been remarkable if achieved over a 12-month period but when they occur over two months, it is quite overdone. Although there is a huge amount of pent-up liquidity raring to invest, I will describe this as a sentiment-driven rally rather than a bear or bull rally.

    I attribute this huge rally to the amazing power of the Obama PR machine in managing the psyche of the market. They have done a splendid job in taking away fear and injecting confidence (or false confidence) into the market. The real economy is still badly bruised.

    When the market comes to its senses and invests in equities based on price-earnings and fundamentals, there will be a reality check and it will become less emotional, which I prefer. Investment decisions would then be more rational. This rally has more downside than upside.

    Goh Yang Chye
    Managing Director
    GYC Financial Advisory

    QUESTIONS abound as to whether the current rally heralds the end of the bear market or is just another dead cat bounce that will force investors to face the harsh reality in the next few months that the worst is not over.

    In our opinion, the answer to the question, while interesting, is not as important as our belief that the healing process for injured and over-fed global financial markets will probably be completed by the end of the year. By October 2009, it would have been 18 months since we witnessed the collapse of the first victim, Bear Sterns.

    When we look at the fundamentals of the US, emerging markets, the Asia Pacific and China; the massive policy stimulus, low valuation and an eventual economic recovery in early 2010; we will look back on a year where global stocks performance will be positive.

    Global equities have risen substantially since March 9. It is unlikely that they can continue to climb without any hiccups. The crisis of confidence appears to have simmered down but it will probably be a bumpy ride ahead with most risks already priced into the markets. It is highly improbable that markets will spiral into unknown territory unless new risks emerge.

    Liu Chunlin
    CEO
    K&C Protective Technologies Pte Ltd

    THERE is a certain amount of restless pre-emption on the stock market, like a runner too quick off the running block. My sense is that the fundamental problems still need some time to sort out, whether it is detoxing the toxic assets on balance sheets, facilitating credit lines, re-structuring manufacturing companies or pump-priming the economy.

    The evidence is that this shakedown consolidation is still taking place and the stimulus effort needs time to work its course. Anecdotal evidence suggests that business is still slow to take off and people are still losing jobs. Hence my take is that the stock market surge will be hard to sustain in the near term.

    Anton Ravindran
    CEO & Founder
    Rapidstart Pte Ltd

    THE old Wall Street saying, 'a rising tide lifts all boats' is true.

    Bear market rallies are seen as an immediate remedial factor by most policy makers. All stock indicators show a very strong upswing and are lasting longer than initially anticipated by most. It's not an easy call to make at this point whether the rally is sustainable, or whether we are advancing still further into a bear market.

    Most analysts believe the sector (banks, homebuilders, commercial real estate, and so on) that started this whole economic mess eventually must lead the market back into recovery.

    Bear market rallies are by their very nature powerful and impressive. But in the past, bear markets have collapsed after the initial glimmer of hope. Most analysts feel that the current stock market surge is due to the rally. Time is the only factor that can confirm if the market is ready for a more secular change in trend, thus creating a launch pad for a new bull market.

    Until then, it is wiser for investors to believe that we are still in a bear market and be cautious rather than get carried away by the 'green shoots' that bear market rallies offer.

    Harish Nim
    Chief Executive
    Emerio Corporation Pte Ltd

    IN my opinion, the surge in the stock market is probably due to external fund managers who are pumping in large amounts of money to drive up the market, take their profits and exit, leaving innocent local punters to suffer more setbacks.

    Otherwise, the share prices of some of the companies with the worst fundamentals would not have gone up as they have. There is little change in fundamentals globally and we are all still looking at a bleak 12 to 18 months. Hence, there is no reason for the STI to go up.

    Karsono Kwee
    Executive Chairman
    Eurokars Group of Companies

    THIS recent market rally was sparked by earlier positive economic indicators coming from the world's major economies like the US, Europe and China. In the US, pending home sales rose 3.2 per cent in March after a 2 per cent increase in February, while construction spending increased 0.3 per cent in March after five months of declines. US consumer spending also improved in January and February. At the same time, the positive results of the stress test of 19 major banks also brought relief to the markets.

    In other parts of the world, Germany's manufacturing orders saw an increase in April while China's Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) also rose sharply in the same month.

    Such positive news coincided with easing fears of a global flu pandemic which set the stage for the rally in equity markets.

    While recent economic indicators seem to suggest that the economy may have bottomed out and green shoots of recovery are sprouting in some segments, we should take note that the indices are measured against a very low base. The global housing market is still soft and unemployment rates will continue to rise as companies remain in cost-cutting mode. A tighter credit market will also constrain corporate activity.

    Hence, I believe the markets will remain volatile. We are not yet at the threshold of a sustained market rally.

    Benedict Soh
    Executive Chairman
    Kingsmen Creatives Ltd

    MOST stocks had been oversold before this recent rally. Investors spoke about the numerous value stocks of good companies, but few had the confidence to take a position. The few weeks of solid gains are a reflection of the herd instinct. The latest quarterly results have led some to think the worst is over. Excess cash, low interest rates and pent-up buying added fuel to the market.

    This rally will have to pull back in the coming weeks. However, I am of the opinion that the current uptrend will be the beginning of a bull market that may take many more months to reach its previous peak.

    Peter Barge
    Chairman
    Jones Lang LaSalle

    I AM more confident than I have been for some time that the bottom is getting close. I am less confident that a recovery is under way.

    To me, the stock market has got ahead of itself with much of the uptick initially being fuelled by the covering of short positions. Seeing an uptick and not wanting to miss the turn, less sophisticated investors have piled in. I am expecting another adjustment downwards and I can see this 'bouncing along the bottom' continuing for the rest of this year.

    Gary Harvey
    CEO
    ipac wealth management Asia

    YOU would have probably read my previous discussions about market timing. The latest market rally had investors hurrying into equities over the past weeks, as evidenced by the multi-month peaks in markets from Australia to Singapore and Taiwan. Markets have moved up considerably from their early March level. This would have benefited most of those investors who chose to remain in the markets for the long term, since they would have captured the gains of the recent rally.

    The most likely reason for the market's rise is that many investors have been sitting on cash and just as we saw 'Fear' in markets when they were falling, we are seeing the early signs of 'Greed' as people think they might be missing out. As the Dalbar survey from the US shows, most people fail to achieve the market return because rather than staying invested they sell out. Such movement is precisely why we get these results because there are still large amounts of funds sitting in cash.

    I would be very cautious about timing the market at any stage. The question of a recovery or a bottoming of the markets remains unanswered and it is only in retrospect that we would be able to identify a market bottom. Ideally, investors should focus their investment strategies on their long-term goals, which would not be affected by the short-term direction that the market takes. The most important thing is to own a plan that is built on advice that complements their personal position and objectives.

    Loi Pok Yen
    Group CEO
    CWT Ltd

    IN the Bible, Joseph (viceroy over Egypt) advised the pharaoh that seven years of famine will follow seven years of abundance. Predicting the weather nowadays is a lot more scientific and accurate. Unfortunately, I cannot say the same for stock markets. People are a lot more unpredictable. The two main views are that (1) it is a bear market rally or (2) it is the start of a multi-year bull market. Each side has presented its arguments, supporting data and even 'divine' guidance in the form of feng shui indexes. Frankly, this is all too confusing.

    I prefer a simpler approach. The markets cater to a host of participants that include retail investors, corporates, funds, government-linked entities, and so on. The name of the game is to buy low and sell high. For you to sell higher, someone else has to pay an even higher price. Last one out is the 'sucker'. That's why a bear market rally is also known as a suckers' rally. The more money waiting to go into the market, the better your odds of making profits. News flow also affect sentiment and the actions of market participants. The recent sharp jump in prices is probably due to the above reasons and the fact that short-sellers are getting squeezed.

    I do not like making predictions since I am not a prophet. However, since I have been asked for my opinion, I think there will be a pullback which could happen at current levels or the market could go higher before it falls. It is unlikely that the market will collapse to the extreme lows that we have seen.

    I have too many friends telling me that they missed this 'bull run' and will buy when there is a significant retracement. Don't ask me what 'significant' means - I don't think they know either. The markets could repeat this process a few times but they will probably trend higher in the next few years. There is still a lot of money on the sidelines and there is even more that is going to be printed. It is, however, not important what I think or what the 'prophets' are saying. Just know that some of us will get it right but most will probably be wrong. If you are in the stock market, it is best to have a strategy in case you get it wrong. The same principle applies to running a business.

    David Leong
    CEO
    PeopleWorldwide Consulting Pte Ltd

    IS the crisis really averted since we are seeing emerging uptrends on all the global indexes? The temptation is to follow the bull's tail and charge ahead but that would be dangerous. I suspect that this rebound is a bear market capitulation or 'selling the bottom'.  The Straits Times Index rebounding more than 50 per cent since early March was enough to bring cheer to stock chasers.

    Those of us who are deeply underwater will hope that confidence is finally restored and that any market gains will be more enduring than the gyrations we see with each release of economic data. All eyes will be on the earnings and guidance announcements and macroeconomic indicators in the first half of 2009. With that, we should have better visibility on whether the prescriptions of fiscal and monetary dosages and injections by the Federal Reserve are working to thaw credit markets and restore confidence to the US consumer. Any positive upturn there will have ramifications for an ultra-sensitive Singapore which is so plugged in globally.

    I see a range-bound market with more upside than downside from here. If the market does show some signs of flagging, my gut feel is that it will not fall back to the March trough.

    No need for crystal ball gazing or reading tea leaves. I am just betting with my gut that we are about to have some fresh air and I am not holding my breath anymore.

    Dora Hoan
    Group CEO
    Best World International

    THE current bear market rally is a fascinating subject of debate. While no one has seen into the future, we can glean interesting parallels from the past.

    An economist has said that we are currently mimicking the 'bad bear' in the 1930s which ended up as the Great Depression. But there are other parallels to be drawn from years past. For instance, the net percentage of rising stocks on the New York Stock Exchange over the last 10 sessions has been noted to be the highest since August 1982. That was the month when the 1980s bull market was born.

    I believe that the velocity of negative news has slowed down. Instead, we are seeing the backlash by both investors and consumers to revive the economy. Some may argue that this bear market rally is nothing more than a case of short covering by some investors. But I have observed conditions in new growth markets like Brazil and Russia and how they have had rising stocks. In Asia, China has been holding up pretty well.

    The case is this: If we have fallen on really bad times and there is no indication that we are in for a crash, with consumers still buying and investors still confident, then we have reason to hope for a turnaround soon.

    I believe that the rules and dynamics of markets in a global world have changed. Markets are no longer dependent on any fixed set of indicators nor reliant on one country's currency to bounce back.

    Investment portfolios are also more diversified and companies too have tapped into hidden levers of growth. My hopeful assessment is that the bear may be dying and a new bull is rising.

    Ron Sim
    Chairman & CEO
    Osim International

    I DON'T believe anyone knows the answer.

    Let's look at facts. If we look at the causes of this structural and systemic financial collapse, it is that the US financial market is over-leveraged, the companies are over-leveraged and the consumers are over-leveraged. A US with a higher cost base and less hungry consumers will take a longer time to recover.

    But the Asian markets, excluding Japan, are under-leveraged in terms of their companies and consumers, and this applies especially to China, with its humongous and hungry companies and consumers, and its lower cost base. This might just be the fuel for growth.

    I believe that if you put these facts in place, we could very well be looking at a sustainable rally with some corrections along the way.

    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Friday, May 15, 2009

    SE Asia Stocks-S'pore, KL at one-week low, MSCI hits Thailand 14 May 2009 18:35

    SOUTHEAST ASIAN STOCK MARKETS 
    Change on the day
    Market Current Prev Close Pct Move
    Singapore 2122.11 2185.29 -2.89
    Kuala Lumpur 1011.99 1022.84 -1.06
    Bangkok 526.55 552.71 -4.73
    Jakarta 1785.00 1851.33 -3.58
    Manila 2264.23 2283.60 -0.85
    Ho Chi Minh 376.75 378.25 -0.40

    Change on year
    Market Current End prev yr Pct Move
    Singapore 2122.11 1761.56 +20.47
    Kuala Lumpur 1011.99 876.75 +15.43
    Bangkok 526.55 449.96 +17.02
    Jakarta 1785.00 1355.40 +31.70
    Manila 2264.23 1872.85 +20.90
    Ho Chi Minh 376.75 315.62 +19.37

    Stock Market Volume (shares)
    Market Current Volume Average Volume 90 days
    Singapore 425,668,500 386,191,468
    Kuala Lumpur 623,401,500 280,976,340
    Bangkok 6,710,934 2,770,607
    Jakarta 27,090,949,000 4,598,406,350
    Ho Chi Minh 52,842 20,716
    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    GRAPHIC-Inventory restocking boosts Asia stock markets, for now 14 May 2009 18:14

    By Eric Burroughs and Kevin Plumberg

    HONG KONG, May 14 (Reuters) - Asian producers of everything from LCD TVs to notebooks have suddenly been caught short of inventory and have had to ramp up production, a turnaround that has powered a rally in regional stocks to a seven-month peak.

    China's nearly $600 billion of stimulus spending has proved a timely boon to hard-hit Asian factories, particularly those making hi-tech goods, but it may not last unless consumers in major economies start spending more on a sustained basis.

    The unexpected drop in U.S. retail sales last month showed how households are still suffering blows from heavy layoffs, falling house prices and banks tightening how much credit they extend to households.

    Some analysts believe the 45 percent stock rally since early March has run too far too quickly, and investors may be disappointed at the slow pace of economic recovery that could force manufacturers to cut back on output later in the year.

    Below are graphics explaining the inventory restocking trend and how it is taking shape. Click on the URL to see the charts.

    For a related analysis, click on [ID:nHKG167204]

    SOUTH KOREA SHIPMENTS TURN AROUND

    http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/059/KR_INVT0509.jpg

    South Korea is one of the most highly leveraged Asian economies to China's growth. Plunging Korean exports to China slowed at the beginning of 2009 and have been improving ever since.

    The Korean inventories-to-shipments ratio, which reached a seven-year high in November 2008 when they scrambled to start slashing inventories, appears to have bottomed in February when restocking began.

    South Korea's LG Display <034220.KS> said last month TV panel demand has stayed strong and led to a shortage that will continue until the end of June, adding that it was cautiously hopeful. But world No. 1 LCD panel maker, Samsung Electronics <005930.KS>, said it was premature to expect a near-term recovery in the global economy and consumer demand.

    KOREA LEADS WAY, BOOSTS MSCI ASIA EX-JAPAN

    http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/059/MKT_KRSTX0509.jpg

    South Korea has thus led the way in the inventory restocking, which has also been seen in the sharp recovery in export growth and industrial production.

    On a three-month basis, Korean production surged in April to post the biggest such percentage change since the mid-1980s after having suffered the biggest such contraction since the early 1908s in December.

    That sharp bounce back has coincided almost exactly with the turnaround in the benchmark MSCI Asia-Pacific ex-Japan index <.MIAPJ0000PUS>, which has been driven by tech and consumer discretionary shares.

    ISM NEW ORDERS AND CHINESE EXPORTS

    http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/059/MKT_ISM0509.jpg

    While some economists were disappointed in that Chinese exports fell at a slightly faster pace in April compared with March, there are reasons to expect that pace to slow in coming months.

    One of the most closely followed leading indicators -- the new orders index from the Institute for Supply Management's monthly U.S. manufacturing survey -- has surprised by snapping back to near the 50 growth/contraction dividing line from the record low hit in December for the 61-year-old survey.

    The jump in the ISM new orders is one factor driving the optimism about the global growth accelerating later in the year.

    The ISM new orders index also has a very close link with Chinese export growth. When looking at the ISM index's correlation with Chinese export growth, it tends to lead changes in the Chinese data by about four months -- suggesting that Chinese exports should start to look better from May onward.

    ALL ABOUT CONSUMER SPENDING

    http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/059/MKT_G3SPND0509.jpg

    Whether the turn in the inventory cycle and rally in stocks have legs depends almost entirely on consumer demand from the United States and other major economies.

    The hope is that layoffs will slow and government stimulus will kick in to spur spending. But that remains a big if. So far, on a annual three-month basis, consumer spending is still shrinking in the United States, euro zone and Japan. Wednesday's U.S. retail sales data shows the contraction is still the sharpest on record.

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    Thursday, May 14, 2009

    -SingTel Q4 net falls 17 pct, beats forecast 14 May 2009 07:17

    Q4 net profit down 17 percent, beats forecast

    * Singapore revenue seen growing by single digits

    * Singapore, Australian operation "resilient"

    * Says earnings impacted by strong Singapore dollar

    (Adds details)

    By Harry Suhartono

    SINGAPORE, May 14 (Reuters) - SingTel <STEL.SI>, Southeast Asia's largest telecommunication firm, said on Thursday quarterly net profit fell 17 percent, hurt by a strong Singapore dollar, but said its domestic and Australia operations were "resilient".

    The company said on Wednesday its total number of mobile phone subscribers grew 34.6 percent at the end of March to 249.4 million from a year ago, but it warned on Thursday that its Singapore revenue is only expected to grow at single digits.

    "This quarter, Australia and Singapore continued their strong momentum and showed resilience with their impressive revenue and earnings growth despite the economic uncertainties," Chua Sock Koong, SingTel Group Chief Executive Officer, said in a statement.

    The company derived more than two-thirds of its revenue and EBITDA from its operations outside Singapore. Facing a saturated domestic market of just 4.6 million people, SingTel has spent S$18 billion in the past few years to capture a slice of the market in high-growth Asian countries such as India, Indonesia, and in the bigger Australian market.

    SingTel, 55 percent-held by state investor Temasek [TEM.UL], logged January-March attributable net profit of S$903 million compared to S$1.09 billion a year ago. The earnings came above analysts' forecast for S$836.5 million by Reuters Estimates

    Fourth quarter revenue fell 5.1 percent to S$3.57 billion, while a stronger domestic currency saw full year 2008/2009 revenue up by only 0.6 percent.

    SingTel, Singapore's biggest listed firm with a market value of nearly $30 billion, booked a quarterly underlying net profit before goodwill and exceptionals of S$959 million, down from S$968 million a year ago.

    SingTel shares fell nearly 1 percent in January-March versus a 3.5 percent fall in the broader Straits Times index <.FTSTI>.

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    Wednesday, May 13, 2009

    HKEx Q1 dives 49 pct; analysts say shares overvalued 13 May 2009 14:46

    * Q1 net lower than analysts' estimates

    * Net down for 4th straight qtr; worst qtr since 2006

    * Stock market turnover improved in April

    * Shares up 2 pct ahead of results

    (Adds details, analyst comments)

    HONG KONG, May 13 (Reuters) - Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing <0388.HK>, Asia's largest listed bourse operator, posted a fourth straight drop in quarterly profit as the global crisis battered trading volumes, though turnover picked up last month as funds bought into China's growth prospects.

    Market turnover, which accounts for the bulk of HKEx's earnings, improved in April as hefty fund inflows flooded the local market on optimism that the global economy is about to turn the corner, driven in part by China's continued growth.

    HKEx said persistent negative market sentiment had a significant impact on both the primary and secondary markets in the first quarter.

    "Despite glimmers of hope that global fiscal policy stimulus may be working, with the economy sinking into recession, HKEx's financial performance is likely to be adversely affected," it said in a statement.

    HKEx, valued at $15.2 billion, three times its Asian rivals Singapore Exchange <SGXL.SI> and Australia's ASX Ltd <ASX.AX>, said it will work more closely with Chinese authorities and exchanges to seek mutual benefits for their securities markets.

    January-March net profit fell to HK$834.24 million ($107.6 million) from HK$1.65 billion a year earlier, lagging two analysts' forecasts for HK$891 million and HK$918 million.

    Revenue dropped 41 percent to HK$1.34 billion as average daily share trading more than halved to HK$44.7 billion.

    But the value of trading rebounded 39 percent in April to a daily average of about HK$62 billion, analysts said.

    Singapore Exchange last month said its quarterly profit fell 46 percent on lower trading volumes and a dearth of new share issues.

    For a related Graphic, click

    http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/059/HK_STKEX0509.jpg

    HKEx shares were up 2.3 percent at HK$111.90 by 0636 GMT.

    The pick-up in turnover has triggered earnings upgrades by analysts and fuelled a strong rally in HKEx shares, which have risen nearly 53 percent since April, outperforming the benchmark Hang Seng Index's <.HSI> 27 percent gain.

    Trading at about 32 times 2009 earnings, HKEx remains the most expensive of Asia's three big listed bourse operators, versus Singapore Exchange's 29 times and ASX's 18 times, according to Reuters Estimates.

    Only one leading brokerage has a buy rating on HKEx, while 13 rate the stock a sell or hold, according to Reuters Estimates.

    "HKEx is too expensive against its historical PE of around 20 times," said Ivan Li, an analyst at Kim Eng.

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    CCB investor sells $488 mln in shares-source 13 May 2009 10:37

    HONG KONG, May 13 (Reuters) - An investor in China Construction Bank <0939.HK> has sold $488 million worth of shares at HK$4.88 each, according to a source on Wednesday.

    The price of the shares being sold is just under CCB's closing price of HK$4.98 on the Hong Kong stock exchange on Tuesday.

    UBS AG <UBSN.VX> was the bookrunner on the sale, according to a term sheet.

    Bank of America <BAC.N> on Tuesday sold $7.3 billion worth of shares in CCB <601939.SS> to a group of investors at HK$4.20 each, or a 14.3 percent discount to their closing price on Monday.

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    SingTel mobile users rise to 249.4 mln at end-March 13 May 2009 12:40

         SINGAPORE, May 13 (Reuters) - Singapore Telecommunications 
    Ltd <STEL.SI> <SGT.AX>, Southeast Asia's largest phone company,
    released the following mobile subscriber numbers on Wednesday.
    SingTel's Aggregate Subscriber Base (in millions)
    March 2009 Dec 2008 March 2008
    Optus 7.79 7.63 7.14
    SingTel (domestic) 2.98 2.94 2.57
    Total 249.4 232.4 185.3
    (Reporting by Kevin Lim, editing by Neil Chatterjee)
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    HKEx Q1 net dives 49 pct as stock trading shrinks 13 May 2009 12:57

    HONG KONG, May 13 (Reuters) - Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing <0388.HK>, Asia's largest listed bourse operator, on Wednesday said its first-quarter earnings fell 49 percent on lower trading volumes and fee income as the global financial crisis pummeled stock values and damped investor interest.

    HKEx said it earned HK$834.24 million ($107.6 million) in the January-March period, down from HK$1.65 billion a year earlier, marking its fourth consecutive quarterly profit decline.

    The numbers lagged behind two analysts' forecasts for HK$891 million and HK$918 million.

    HKEx did worse than its rival Singapore Exchange <SGXL.SI>, which reported a 46 percent drop in third-quarter profit, hurt by lower trading volumes and a dearth of new share issues.

    ($1=HK$7.749)

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    Wilmar says to list 20-30 pct of China business 13 May 2009 13:01

    SINGAPORE, May 13 (Reuters) - Singapore's Wilmar International <WLIL.SI>, the world's largest palm oil firm, said on Wednesday it plans to list 20-30 percent of its China business in an initial public offering in either Hong Kong or Shanghai.

    CEO Kuok Khoon Hong said at a post-results briefing that the firm had started meeting bankers last week for the IPO and it might use the IPO proceeds to fund acquisitions.
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    Wilmar Q1 net up, may list China operations 13 May 2009 07:44

    * Net profit up 11 pct despite falling revenue

    * May list China operations in Hong Kong or Shanghai

    * Remains "cautiously optimistic" on prospects for 2009

    (Updates with outlook, listing plans)

    SINGAPORE, May 13 (Reuters) - Wilmar International <WLIL.SI>, the world's largest palm oil firm, posted an 11 percent rise in its first-quarter net profit as higher processing and trading margins offset a decline in palm oil prices.

    The company said it was looking at the possibility of listing its China operations in Hong Kong or Shanghai, but did not give more details.

    "We remain cautiously optimistic on our group's prospects for the year," Kuok Khoon Hong, Chairman and CEO of Wilmar said in a statement.

    Wilmar, which owns oil palm plantations and runs milling, crushing, refining and processing plants in Indonesia and Malaysia, earned $380 million in the January-March quarter, up from $343 million a year ago.

    The company, which has a market capitalisation of $18 billion, is expected by analysts to book a net profit of $1.2 billion for the full year, according to Reuters Estimates. That compares with $1.5 billion made in 2008.

    Wilmar's first-quarter revenue fell by 31 percent to $4.96 billion, as palm oil prices dropped due to falling demand as a result of global economic slowdown.

    Malaysia's benchmark palm oil price dropped from a record high of 4,486 ringgit ($1,278) per tonne in early March 2008 to 2,000 ringgit at the end of the first quarter this year.

    However, prices have recovered and are now trading at around 2,700 ringgit a tonne.

    Wilmar had said earlier this year it had $1 billion available which could be used for acquisitions.

    Its shares have risen 49 percent so far this year, compared with a 24 percent rise in Singapore's main stock index <.FTSTI>.

    ($1=3.510 Malaysian Ringgit)
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    WILMAR 1Q Result, Sembcorp Industries 1Q Result

       -- WILMAR INTERNATIONAL <WLIL.SI> 
    - Wilmar International, the world's largest palm oil firm,
    posted on Wednesday an 11 percent rise in its first-quarter net
    profit as higher processing and trading margins offset a decline
    in palm oil prices. [ID:nSP404727]



    -- SEMBCORP INDUSTRIES LTD <SCIL.SI>
    - Sembcorp Industries Ltd posted an 8.6 percent increase in
    first quarter profit to S$133.6 million, boosted by its rig
    building and ship repair businesses.
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    Tuesday, May 12, 2009

    FUND VIEW-Samsung Inv likes water infrastructure, wind stocks 12 May 2009 16:10

    Prefers water-related infrastructure stocks over utilities

    * Wary of Chinese solar stocks; prefers wind sector

    * To launch new eco fund by end of year or early 2010

    By Leonora Walet

    HONG KONG, May 12 (Reuters) - Water infrastructure stocks such as Flowserve Corp <FLS.N> and Geberit AG <GEBN.VX> are a good bet to capitalise on growing investment to address water scarcity and wind is more promising than solar, a fund manger said.

    Stocks of water companies that make pipes and meters are good investments for the long term as governments look to conserve the prized resource, said Philip Seong, who helps manage $370 million in green-themed funds at Samsung Investment Trust Management.

    "In 30 years, water will be the most precious resource," Seong told Reuters in a phone interview. "Water scarcity will push industries and economies to review their water infrastructure, so there will be a very big market for it."

    Samsung Investment, which manages $100 billion worth of assets, is a unit of Samsung Group [SAGR.UL].

    The $270 million Samsung Investment Trust Water Fund owns stakes in energy systems company Roper Industries Inc <ROP.N>, environmental engineering firm Tetra Tech Inc <TTEK.O>, and French utility giants Suez Environnement SA <SEVI.PA> and Veolia Environnement <VIE.PA>.

    Within the water sector, Seong said he expects limited upside for utility stocks because of investor concerns that governments will hold back on water price increases amid a global recession.

    Since its launch in April 2007, a euro-denominated version of the fund fell 26.4 percent by the end of March, broadly in line with the MSCI World Index <.MIWD0000PUS>.

    SOLAR SUBSIDY

    Samsung's other green fund, the $100 million Alternative Energy Fund Trust Account, was down 33.7 percent since inception in June 2007, underperforming the MSCI index's 29 percent fall.

    Solar stocks should be approached with caution, given the sector's heavy reliance on government subsidies, said Seong.

    "I'm more optimistic about wind because solar still needs subsidies to be competitive," he said.

    Seong favours Denmark's Vestas Wind Systems <VWS.CO> and American Superconductor Corp <AMSC.O>, which makes wind turbine equipment.

    "It gets 80 percent of its revenue from China. So it benefits from growth within the U.S. and China," he said of American Superconductor.

    Among solar stocks, Seong prefers U.S.-based First Solar <FSLR.O>, which he reckons will benefit from President Barack Obama's drive for alternative energy development. He likes Chinese solar companies least, saying their stock prices are highly volatile and trading volumes relatively thin.

    Seong, who co-manages the funds with KBC Asset Management, said Samsung planned to launch a new fund before the end of the year or early next year focused on energy efficiency and smart grid stocks, and including some waste control firms.

    "Energy efficiency, R&D (research and development) and smart grids are emerging themes in the clean technology sector which are good long-term bets," said Seong, declining to give examples of potential investment targets.

    Smart grid is a technology that promotes the use of intelligent meters to monitor electricity use while energy efficiency companies offer services aimed at cutting electricity use in buildings, malls and homes.

    Samsung Investment closed a similar fund in February, the $10 million Global Eco Fund, due to weak market conditions. The fund was launched in 2008.

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