Let's talk stocks & IPO

Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

ipoh-horfun;888379 said:
Draghi fully delivered his new bazooka, the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) program, but didn’t exit the stage without seeing a
hefty round of EUR selling. Buy the rumor, sell the fact.

EURUSD is still v stable for now, n didnt stop snp500 frm reaching new highs. Its a bull run bro no doubt until US president elections r over.

lots of stocks hit 52wk highs last night which is bullish sign.

i wld say its fairly easy for eurusd to fill the down gap back up to 1.2646 if tonights NFP confirm mkt expectations.
 
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Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

Crude oil tanked last nite..it was up almost 2% at 1 stage before closing negative.....could be a prelude to come in future....Crude oil did a similar stunt in March this yr...before the market rolled over in april.......
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

golfgti;888533 said:
EURUSD is still v stable for now, n didnt stop snp500 frm reaching new highs. Its a bull run bro no doubt until US president elections r over.

lots of stocks hit 52wk highs last night which is bullish sign.

i wld say its fairly easy for eurusd to fill the down gap back up to 1.2646 if tonights NFP confirm mkt expectations.

eurusd has hit 1.28... way above expectations despite crap NFPs... Its not abt the price, its abt wat the mkt is doing. If it shows bullish signs, theres nothing to stop further gains. Watch for the signs, the price is just wat it is, a price. Signs include volume, options ratios, n technical breakouts.
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

golfgti;888909 said:
eurusd has hit 1.28... way above expectations despite crap NFPs... Its not abt the price, its abt wat the mkt is doing. If it shows bullish signs, theres nothing to stop further gains. Watch for the signs, the price is just wat it is, a price. Signs include volume, options ratios, n technical breakouts.

i would short eur at 1.28.

soon, the party will be over, very soon
 
Let's talk stocks & IPO

Now 1.2815... started you shorts yet? I am also sharpening my "shorts knives" now.
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

The Edge Magazine Weekend Comment Sept 7: Market looks to spillover from China stimulus.
Written by Goola Warden
Friday, 07 September 2012 22:18

THE CHINESE GOVERNMENT has announced a RMB1 trillion ($196 billion) stimulus, targeting at infrastructure spending. According to Nomura Securities, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) announced on Sept 7 that it has approved the construction of 13 highways from June to August. The total length is 1,976 kilometers. “We estimate the amount of total investment to be RMB59 billion,” Nomura says. The NDRC also approved 13 other projects on water management and water transportation although no value was indicated. A day earlier on Thursday, also as part of the stimulus, the commission announced the approval for 25 subway lines in 20 cities, with a total investment of RMB700 billion.

“We think this is another sign that the government is pushing infrastructure investment aggressively,” Nomura says. “These signals suggest to us that policy action by the government is picking up speed. We expect fixed asset investment growth to rise in the coming months.”

So who benefits? “We are reinstating our buy recommendation on Midas Holdings after having downgraded it to hold in mid-July this year as we believe that the China government’s announcement yesterday means that it is a question of “when” and not “if” the two-year drought in high-margined high-speed rail contracts ends,” notes Lim & Tan in a research report.

Midas’ 32.5%-owned associate company Nanjing SR Puzhen Rail Transport Co (NPRT) managed to clinch some RMB3.25 million of contracts this year, bringing its order book to RMB847 billion, to be delivered over the next three years. Since Midas is the preferred aluminium extrusion supplier to NPRT, the metro train contract wins will benefit Midas.

Separately, Midas is also winning contracts from the maiden power industry in China with RMB123 million worth of new contracts announced earlier this week, increasing their order books by 21% to RMB723 million. According to Lim & Tan, Midas’ earnings is expected to rebound 133% in 2013 to RMB182 million, translating to a prospective PE of 12 times, down from 2012’s 27 times.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the world, European policy-makers have agreed to an unlimited bond purchase programme to regain control of interest rates in the Euro area and fight speculation of a currency breakup. Although the move triggered a strong rebound in the US and Asian markets, whether they can do better than a one-week rebound remains to be seen.

FUNDS FLOW OUT
In the past week, Barclays points out that Emerging Market (EM) dedicated bond funds saw US$679.7 million ($845 million) of inflows (0.41% Assets Under Management), while EM dedicated equity funds saw US$1.8 billion of outflows (–0.27% AUM), according to data tracked by EPFR Global for the week ending Sept 5.

With event risk the theme of September trading, EM dedicated equity funds saw their first big outflow of the quarter Barclays says. “These outflows were attributable to sizeable outflows from Chinese (US$354 million) and Taiwanese funds (US$365 million), which we interpret as a negative response to the counter-seasonal declines in China’s NBS and HSBC August PMIs. These data support the view that China’s economic growth has likely slowed further in Q3,” the report adds.

This outflow was contributed by both ETFs and non-ETFs, driving MSCI Asia ex-Japan down by 2.1% this week, says Citi Research.
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

The price of silver reached a 5-month high this past week as investor interest seems to have been rekindled in both gold and silver as belief in financial markets increases that the latest round of monetary easing from the Federal Reserve - QE3 - will soon be on its way. Many investors had largely stayed away from silver in recent months after some had got caught up in its volatility. Silver had touched a 30-year high in April 2011 before plunging 35 percent in a few short weeks
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

ipoh-horfun;889350 said:
i would short eur at 1.28.

soon, the party will be over, very soon

I wld rather wait for end of this week considering 2 major ero positive event risks this wk. eur testing 1.28 now forming bullish test pattern. Final trigger wld tomorrow German court approve esm.

Other thing Eurusd cot doesn't top until november onwards...
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

golfgti;890710 said:

I wld rather wait for end of this week considering 2 major ero positive event risks this wk. eur testing 1.28 now forming bullish test pattern. Final trigger wld tomorrow German court approve esm.

Other thing Eurusd cot doesn't top until november onwards...

i think no QE yet
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

ipoh-horfun;890789 said:
i think no QE yet

Eurusd already 1.2842. Mkt is expecting QE. I rather react to the thurs event instead of getting burnt now. If no QE, plenty of time to setup shorts
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

toiletsiao;890918 said:
nothing seems to be "undervalued" to buy now.......

a short term trade idea wld b US$ cash no margin. Shld correct back up against S$ soon?
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

LONDON, Sept 12 (IFR) - The preliminary verdict is in denying an injunction
against the ESM but with conditions, most critically specifying that German
liability for the ESM does not exceed EUR190 bln without the approval of
the Bundestag. This is about as expected, though the markets still may not
like to hear the EUR190 bln tentative cap to German commitment. Regardless,
it is about what should have been expected, where the ESM will be allowed
to proceed with German participation, but with stipulations granting
oversight to Germany's parliament.


Longer term, IFR among others suspects the stipulation for German oversight
will keep markets on edge given it increases the focus on becoming data and
situationally dependent. Essentially, German commitment to the ESM has been
granted, but it remains tentative depending on future developments with
respect to economic growth and reform in aid-receiving countries, and also
domestic and European politics too. Regardless, these longer term
considerations are not today's trade -- at least not at the moment -- with
markets extending their "risk-on" move at present
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

for all perma bears, this wk may b a decline... if u still have your pants left after getting your shorts burnt recently, the SNP500 hourly chart looks to b forming a HNS... just need the right shoulder form.

In line w EURUSD at multi mth technical resistance, theres prob a short term consolidation period before things turn up again.

Dollar index + US 10yr treasury yields all at technical support/resistance too. These r some things i look for an idea where things r headed.
 
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Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The financial system is "rigged" to benefit big banks, Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Richard Fisher said on Wednesday, repeating his belief that the five largest U.S. banks should be broken up to protect the economy from another crisis.

Fisher, speaking at the Harvard Club of New York City, said big banks should not have a funding advantage over smaller, regional banks. He pointed, for example, to the interest that the Fed pays large banks for leaving their excess reserves at the U.S. central bank
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

QE was launch too soon ? smlj

The Federal Reserve should have waited for clearer signs of a flagging economy before launching its new bond-buying program, the head of the St. Louis regional Fed bank said, adding that he would have voted against it.

James Bullard, president of the St. Louis Fed, also told Reuters that he is sufficiently concerned about the risk of future inflation that he backs a controversial proposal by congressional Republicans for the Fed to return to having only a single mandate: preventing inflation.

The Fed currently has a dual focus on full employment and stable prices.

Editor's Note: Economist Unapologetically Calls Out Bernanke, Obama for Mishandling Economy. See What They Did

In discussing his views on more monetary stimulus, Bullard said, "We should take a little bit more (of a) wait-and-see posture." His comments, in an interview with Reuters Insider, highlight potential dissent on the Fed's policy committee next year when he will be a voting member.

The U.S. central bank launched a potentially massive policy-easing effort last week to try to help the struggling U.S. economy. Under the program, dubbed QE3 by Wall Street, the Fed will purchase $40 billion a month in mortgage-backed debt until the outlook for the labor market improves substantially.

Bullard said the state of the U.S. economy was not dire enough for such a program. Financial stress is pretty low and measures of inflation are right about on target, he said.

Equity markets also seemed to indicate a lot of faith in the U.S. economy, he said, saying he would have waited to see what actions were taken in Europe in the fall to fight the region's debt crisis.

"I would have voted against it based on the timing. I didn't feel like we had a good enough case to make a major move at this juncture," said Bullard, who has been viewed as a centrist on the spectrum of Fed officials, though in recent months he has sounded opinions that have sounded more hawkish as he has expressed doubts about the need for further stimulus.

Nevertheless, Bullard made clear he was concerned about the potential fallout on the United States from a global economic slowdown. "I just would have wanted to wait to see a little bit more about how that's going to develop," he said.

But he was not a fan of the European Central Bank's announcement that it would make unlimited purchases in euro zone government bond markets to ensure the common currency survives.

"I am concerned about the strategy. I think it has embroiled them (the ECB) in a political situation in Europe. ... I think this conditionality in exchange for bond purchases is a dangerous precedent for central banks around the world."

The U.S. central bank, which cut overnight interest rates to near zero in 2008, has already bought $2.3 trillion in government and mortgage-liked debt in a bid to drive other borrowing costs lower and spur a stronger recovery.

Last week's Fed action sparked an uproar among Republicans, who have complained for months the Fed was risking inflation through the unprecedented aggression of its actions. Bullard said he viewed inflation as under control, but said QE3 added to inflation risks.

"There is a global slowdown and normally you would think of containing U.S. inflation pressure. I do think we're at risk in the medium term and the longer term for inflation in the U.S., and we're taking more risk on for pursuing this policy," he said in a longer Reuters text interview after his remarks on Insider.

He also voiced concern that QE3 could spill over into higher commodity prices, as happened with the previous rounds of Fed bond-buying, although he said the soft tone of the world economy would help curb price rises.

Even so, Bullard said some of the contours of the plan, which has no set end date, were in keeping with how he thinks monetary policy should be conducted with interest rates already near zero. Leaving end dates off a bond buying program can make the policy "more effective," he said.

"We should go meeting by meeting with any balance sheet policy," Bullard said.

QE3 comes on top of an existing stimulus program in which the central bank buys about $45 billion a month in long-term Treasuries while selling the same amount of short-term Treasuries. That program, dubbed Operation Twist and designed to bring down long-term borrowing costs, runs to the end of 2012.

Bullard was not alone on Tuesday in voicing doubts over whether QE3 was needed. Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher, a noted inflation hawk, also said he would have voted against the policy if he were a voting member of the Fed's policy committee this year. Two other policymakers - William Dudley of the New York Fed and Charles Evans of the Chicago Fed - voiced strong support for the central bank's decision.

The Fed's statement in which it unveiled QE3 last Thursday sparked some controversy by saying monetary policy would likely be kept very easy until long after the economic recovery strengthens. This was seen as a signal policymakers would tolerate higher inflation, which some economists say could help the economy by goading spending and helping to slowly reduce the country's debt load.

Bullard said he was not in that camp. "I don't think there's a lot of benefit from inflation," he said.

In fact, he was worried enough about the prospect of inflation down the road that he backed a proposal from congressional Republican critics to curb the Fed's dual mandate of seeking low unemployment in the context of price stability for a solitary focus on preventing inflation.

"Anything that the Fed does is going to only have temporary effects," he said. "We have to get back to that notion. Too much is creeping in about the ideas of permanent trade-offs, which I regard as a misunderstanding of what monetary policy could do. So I would back going to a single mandate."

Editor's Note: Economist Unapologetically Calls Out Bernanke, Obama for Mishandling Economy. See What They Did

Read more: Fed's Bullard: QE3 Launched Too Soon, 'I Would Have Voted Against It'
 
Re: Let's talk stocks & IPO

Dun come make noise, come liao still make noise, angmo are hard to please too.
 

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