Sunday 28 November 2010

Behavioural Risks

Sunday, November 28, 2010


Investment Madness

We are all prone to having psychological preconceptions or biases that make us behave in certain ways. These biases influence how we assimilate the information we come in contact with on a daily basis. They also have an impact on how we utilize that information to make decisions.

Our very own psychological biases have an impact on our investment decisions and affect our attempts at building wealth.
Psychological Bias
Effect on Investment Behavior
Consequence
Overconfidence
Trade too much. Take too much risk and fail to diversify
Pay too much in commissions and taxes. Susceptible to big losses
Attachment
Become emotionally attached to a security and see it through rose-colored glasses
Susceptible to big losses
Endowment
Want to keep the securities received
Not achieving a match between your investment goals and your investments
Status Quo
Hold back on changing your portfolio
Failure to adjust asset allocation and begin contributing to retirement plan
Seeking Pride
Sell winners too soon
Lower return and higher taxes
Avoiding Regret
Hold losers too long
Lower return and higher taxes
House Money
Take too much risk after winning
Susceptible to big losses
Snake Bit
Take too little risk after losing
Lose chance for higher return in the long term
Get Even
Take too much risk trying to get break even
Susceptible to big losses
Social Validation
Feel that it must be good if others are investing in the security
Participate in price bubble which ultimately causes you to buy high and sell low
Mental Accounting
Fail to diversify
Not receiving the highest return possible for the level of risk taken
Cognitive Dissonance
Ignore information that conflicts with prior beliefs and decisions
Reduces your ability to evaluate and monitor your investment choices
Representativeness
Think things that seem similar must be alike. So a good company must be a good investment
Purchase overpriced stocks
Familiarity
Think companies that you know seem better and safer
Failure to diversify and put too much faith in the company in which you work

If you want to read more regarding human psychology and how it affects our trading and investment, please read the book “Investment Madness How Psychology Affects Your Investing and What to Do About It” by JOHN R NOFSINGER

Saturday 27 November 2010

Integrax: Change in Shareholdings

Stock Name: INTEGRA
Date Announced:15/11/2010

Name: Mackenzie Financial Corporation

Disposed
03/11/2010
681,700 shares

Circumstances
Stock was sold by Mackenzie Financial Corporation ("MFC") on behalf of its clients, in its role as Portfolio Manager. MFC has voting control over the shares.

Direct (units):15,500,000
Direct (%): 5.15
Total no of securities after change:15,500,000

Date of notice:10/11/2010

Focus on the long term and have the courage to buy more into any dips in the markets."

Dare to be a lone wolf investor

Investors are losing out by chasing performance, according to a new study.

By Paul Farrow 11:27AM GMT 23 Nov 2010

Have you invested in a fund after learning of its stellar gains and thought, "I want a piece of the action"? If so, you are not alone – but it is likely to be costing you dear. A study by The Cass Business School, commissioned by Barclays Wealth, has found that timing decisions by private investors since 1992 have cost them an average of 1.2 percentage points a year because they have chased performance.

Andrew Clare, professor of asset management at the school, says: "A buy and hold strategy would have turned an initial investment of £100 into £311; however, because of the poor market-timing abilities of the average private investor, the typical investment would only be worth £255. The difference of £56 arises because people tend to invest more after periods of strong market performance and withdraw it following periods of weak performance."

Tony Lanser, director, Barclays Wealth added: “Private investors have long been chasing returns by attempting to time the market but our research proves that this hasn’t always delivered."

The study backs up the long-held notion that people have a knack of mistiming their investments. Take gold, for example. Nobody wanted to touch it when it languished around the $265 an ounce mark 17 years ago, but as soon as it broke the $600 mark in 2006, investors began to climb aboard – and they still are climbing, as the price hurtles towards $1,500.

On the other hand, thousands of investors piled into technology funds at the beginning of 2000 after a long period of soaring returns. The bubble burst and technology values fell sharply. More recently, as the Telegraph's Your Money section has revealed, many investors ditched their equity holdings when the stock market dropped sharply in early 2009, and have missed out on its subsequent recovery.

Andrew Baker, chief operating officer at Skipton Financial Services, says: "No one truly knows what will be the next year's top performing fund, and anyone whose financial adviser tells them that they have a crystal ball and can predict the future is being led down the garden path.

"The danger of timing the market is that investors are invariably waiting for the markets to move and then jump on the bandwagon, thus missing out much of the growth they would have had by already being invested. Trying to second guess the markets is a fool's game. The most reliable strategy is to spend time in the market, rather than try and time the market, and to diversify your portfolio."

Indeed, there is the well-trodden argument that "it's the time in the market, not out of it, that counts''. According to Fidelity, if you had invested £1,000 five years ago in the FTSE All-Share, it would be worth £1,316 today.

However, if you had missed the best 10 days of the FTSE performance your sum would be worth just £718; and if you had missed the best 30 days you would be left with just £372. Fund management groups say it is important that investors stay invested for the long term and do not attempt to dip in and out in the hope of avoiding any lows.

The "time in the market" argument makes sense, but it can seem flippant when it comes to the prospect of losing your hard-earned cash, and given the global outlook, a degree of pessimism is understandable.
But you do not have to invest a lump sum and test your powers of buying at the right time. There is another option that is overlooked by most investors: the regular savings plan.

Saving smaller amounts of money on a regular basis reduces the risk of losing a hefty chunk of your savings if share prices take a steep dive. Of course, the opposite is true, too, and you will not make sharp gains if markets shoot up quickly.

For example, if you had put a lump sum of £9,000 in the average UK All Companies fund three years ago, you would be sitting on a fund worth £9,130.43 today. If, on the other hand, you had drip-fed £250 a month over the same period (a total outlay of £9,000) into the same fund, you would be in the money, with its value now at £11,138.94. This is because investors benefit from pound cost averaging – basically, you are buying more shares for your buck as the market falls.

So is it better being a lone wolf investor? Certainly some of the greatest investors have gone against the grain and been handsomely rewarded. John Maynard Keynes is perhaps the most famous contrarian investor of them all. It is worth remembering what he says in the aftermath of the Great Depression in 1937. "It is the one sphere of life and activity where victory, security and success is always to the minority and never to the majority. When you find anyone agreeing with you, change your mind.''

One of the most unfashionable areas, and therefore potentially a winner, is Europe in light of the debt crisis, first with Greece and now with Ireland. Yet these two countries, and Portugal and Spain which also have problems, account for a small proportion of Europe in investing terms.

"Despite a perception of sluggish growth and an inefficient corporate sector, European companies have been transforming themselves over the past two decades, helping drive consistent outperformance from European stock markets," says Stephen Macklow-Smith, portfolio manager at JP Morgan. "Worries about deflation and sovereign debt defaults all appear overblown. Instead, the outlook for European equities appears attractive."

Adrian Lowcock, at Bestinvest, says there are opportunities in Europe, but warned investors that it could be volatile. He recommends Ignis Argonaut European Income or Neptune European Opportunities.

Contrarian investing is certainly not for the faint-hearted, especially when you are putting your cash on the line. It is probably why investors always plump for a fund or stock that has risen the most. Robert Burdett, at Thames River, says: "Consider phasing (drip-feeding), as it also works well in volatile conditions. Focus on the long term and have the courage to buy more into any dips in the markets."


Mark Dampier, at Hargreaves Lansdown, admits it is not easy to be a lone wolf investor. "In truth it's always difficult to go against the crowd. It probably needs to feel intensely uncomfortable for an investment to be 'right', and it may need a lot of patience. Unfashionable areas are Japan, Europe and UK smaller companies."

Mr Dampier put some of his own money in Japan (a perennial unfashionable area) early this year and admits that his contrarian bet has yet to pay off. But he says investors should consider Jupiter Absolute Return, managed by the highly regarded Philip Gibbs, which has had a poor year; and PSigma Equity Income, managed by the experienced Bill Mott, which is full of unfashionable stocks such as telecoms and pharmaceuticals.

"Everyone is buying mining and commodities and many fund managers, through no fault of their own, have been left behind," says Mr Dampier. "There is nothing wrong with investing in the areas that have been performing well. The key is to get off in time."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/8152770/Dare-to-be-a-lone-wolf-investor.html

Market manipulation

Market manipulation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Market manipulation describes a deliberate attempt to interfere with the free and fair operation of the market and create artificial, false or misleading appearances with respect to the price of, or market for, a security, commodity or currency.[1]

Market manipulation is prohibited in the United States under Section 9(a)(2)[2] of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and in Australia under Section s 1041A of the Corporations Act 2001. The Act defines market manipulation as transactions which create an artificial price or maintain an artificial price for a tradeable security.

Examples

Pools: "Agreements, often written, among a group of traders to delegate authority to a single manager to trade in a specific stock for a specific period of time and then to share in the resulting profits or losses."[3]

Churning: "When a trader places both buy and sell orders at about the same price. The increase in activity is intended to attract additional investors, and increase the price."

Runs: "When a group of traders create activity or rumors in order to drive the price of a security up." An example is the Guinness share-trading fraud of the 1980s. In the US, this activity is usually referred to as painting the tape[4].

Ramping (the market): "Actions designed to artificially raise the market price of listed securities and to give the impression of voluminous trading, in order to make a quick profit."[5]

Wash trade: "Selling and repurchasing the same or substantially the same security for the purpose of generating activity and increasing the price"

Bear raid: "Attempting to push the price of a stock down by heavy selling or short selling."[6]

References

^ http://www.asx.com.au/supervision/participants/market_manipulation.htm
^ http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/34act/sect9.htm
^ Mahoney, Paul G., 1999. The Stock Pools and the Securities Exchange Act. Journal of Financial Economics 51, 343-369.
^ Painting The Tape
^ Sanford: Overview
^ Bear Raid: Definition and Much More from Answers.com

The Anxiety and Joy of Selling

It is not possible to sell at the absolute top or to buy at the absolute bottom of the price fluctuations of your stock.  Therefore, do not focus on timing your selling or buying at the absolute extremes of price fluctuations.  Be content that you have sold close to the peak and that you have bought close to the bottom of the price fluctuations.

One of my stock has moved upwards, very much higher than the fair value that I give to it.  It's PE has now exceeded 1.5X its signature PE, granted that its signature PE was a single digit one.  There was no deterioration in its fundamentals.  Its recent quarterly report did not report or suggest any dramatic improvement in its fundamentals.  The price of this stock has climbed with intermittent periods of small corrections over a very short time of less than a month.  This counter has given dividend yearly and at this present high price, the yield is rather low.   I sold off half of my stocks in this counter locking in a very good substantial profit. The other half will be sold gradually should the price continues to move upwards, deteriorating its 'upside potential to its downside risk ratio'.

As the remaining shares are now held virtually cost free, this investment operation is positive NOW and will always be positive in the FUTURE.


Related:

The Anxiety of Selling

Friday 26 November 2010

KFC Holdings (Malaysia) Berhad



Date announced 24/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK KFC C0DE 3492

Price $ 3.95 Curr. ttm-PE 21.87 Curr. DY 1.52%
LFY Div 6.00 DPO ratio 36%
ROE 16.6% PBT Margin 8.9% PAT Margin 6.0%

Rec. qRev 631551 q-q % chg 4% y-y% chq 8%
Rec qPbt 56236 q-q % chg 8% y-y% chq 14%
Rec. qEps 4.82 q-q % chg 7% y-y% chq 9%
ttm-Eps 18.06 q-q % chg 2% y-y% chq 16%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 23.00 Avg. L PE 20.00
Forecast High Pr 5.30 Forecast Low Pr 3.26 Recent Severe Low Pr 3.26
Current price is at Middle 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 66% Downside 34%
One Year Appreciation Potential 7% Avg. yield 2%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 9%

CPE/SPE 1.02 P/NTA 3.62 NTA 1.09 SPE 21.50 Rational Pr 3.88



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy, Hold, Sell, Filed; Review (future acq): Filed; Discard: Filed.
Guide: Valuation zones - Lower 1/3 Buy; Mid. 1/3 Maybe; Upper 1/3 Sell.

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr


Stock Data: Recent Stock Performance:
Current Price (11/19/2010): 4.25
(Figures in Malaysian Ringgits)
1 Week 2.2% 13 Weeks 30.4%
4 Weeks 59.2% 52 Weeks 129.7%

KFC Holdings (Malaysia) Berhad Key Data:
Ticker: KFC Country: MALAYSIA
Exchanges: KUL Major Industry: Recreation
Sub Industry: Restaurants & Fast Food Franchisers

2009 Sales 2,297,431,000
(Year Ending Jan 2010).
Employees: 13,217

Currency: Malaysian Ringgits Market Cap: 3,370,675,000
Fiscal Yr Ends: December Shares Outstanding: 793,100,000
Share Type: Ordinary Closely Held Shares: 594,819,200


Day's Range: 3.92 - 4.00
52wk Range: 2.70 - 11.50
Volume: 727,600
Avg Vol (3m): 2,204,970


Related:

US-based Carlyle makes higher bid for QSR

Thursday 25 November 2010

Genting Malaysia Berhad (GENM)



Date announced 25/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK GENM (Resorts) C0DE  4715 

Price $ 3.38 Curr. ttm-PE 15.12 Curr. DY 2.16%
LFY Div 7.30 DPO ratio 31%
ROE 11.4% PBT Margin 34.6% PAT Margin 28.0%

Rec. qRev 1202916 q-q % chg -2% y-y% chq -10%
Rec qPbt 416262 q-q % chg 1% y-y% chq -12%
Rec. qEps 5.92 q-q % chg 10% y-y% chq -6%
ttm-Eps 22.35 q-q % chg -2% y-y% chq 120%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 13.00 Avg. L PE 11.00
Forecast High Pr 3.71 Forecast Low Pr 2.49 Recent Severe Low Pr 2.49
Current price is at Upper 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 27% Downside 73%
One Year Appreciation Potential 2% Avg. yield 3%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 5%

CPE/SPE 1.26 P/NTA 1.72 NTA 1.96 SPE 12.00 Rational Pr 2.68



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy, Hold, Sell, Filed; Review (future acq): Filed; Discard: Filed.
Guide: Valuation zones - Lower 1/3 Buy; Mid. 1/3 Maybe; Upper 1/3 Sell.

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr


Stock Data: Recent Stock Performance:
Current Price (11/19/2010): 3.46
(Figures in Malaysian Ringgits)
1 Week -1.1% 13 Weeks -3.1%
4 Weeks 12.0% 52 Weeks 18.5%

Genting Malaysia Berhad Key Data:
Ticker: RESORTS Country: MALAYSIA
Exchanges: KUL Major Industry: Miscellaneous
Sub Industry: Hotel & Motel Chains

2009 Sales 4,991,700,000
(Year Ending Jan 2010).
Employees: 13,700
Currency: Malaysian Ringgits Market Cap: 20,447,107,522
Fiscal Yr Ends: December Shares Outstanding: 5,909,568,648
Share Type: Common Closely Held Shares: 2,670,000


Day's Range: 3.37 - 3.40
52wk Range: 2.46 - 3.72
Volume: 4,064,100
Avg Vol (3m): 8,538,920

Genting Berhad



Date announced 25/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK GENTING C0DE  3182 

Price $ 10.4 Curr. ttm-PE 19.38 Curr. DY 0.69%
LFY Div 7.20 DPO ratio 25%
ROE 13.2% PBT Margin 36.3% PAT Margin 19.6%

Rec. qRev 3909209 q-q % chg -4% y-y% chq 63%
Rec qPbt 1418393 q-q % chg -11% y-y% chq 76%
Rec. qEps 20.72 q-q % chg 4% y-y% chq 106%
ttm-Eps 53.65 q-q % chg 25% y-y% chq 192%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 17.00 Avg. L PE 15.00
Forecast High Pr 11.64 Forecast Low Pr 6.20 Recent Severe Low Pr 6.20
Current price is at Upper 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 23% Downside 77%
One Year Appreciation Potential 2% Avg. yield 2%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 4%

CPE/SPE 1.21 P/NTA 2.57 NTA 4.05 SPE 16.00 Rational Pr 8.58



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy Hold Sell Filed Review (future acq): Filed Discard: Filed
Guide: Valuation zones Lower 1/3 Buy Mid. 1/3 Maybe Upper 1/3 Sell

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr


Stock Data: Recent Stock Performance:
Current Price (11/19/2010): 10.22
(Figures in Malaysian Ringgits)
1 Week 0.6% 13 Weeks -2.7%
4 Weeks 18.7% 52 Weeks 43.5%

Currency: Malaysian Ringgits Market Cap: 37,877,353,780
Fiscal Yr Ends: December Shares Outstanding: 3,706,199,000
Share Type: Ordinary Closely Held Shares: 684,598,840


Day's Range: 10.18 - 10.40
52wk Range: 6.20 - 10.82
Volume: 3,081,400
Avg Vol (3m): 7,254,500

Petronas Dagangan


Date announced 25/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 2 FYE 31/03/2011

STOCK PETDAG C0DE  5681 

Price $ 11.1 Curr. ttm-PE 14.64 Curr. DY 5.41%
LFY Div 60.00 DPO ratio 79%
ROE 16.3% PBT Margin 5.2% PAT Margin 3.7%

Rec. qRev 5496313 q-q % chg 1% y-y% chq 7%
Rec qPbt 284250 q-q % chg 3% y-y% chq 3%
Rec. qEps 20.70 q-q % chg 3% y-y% chq 3%
ttm-Eps 75.80 q-q % chg 1% y-y% chq 21%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 13.00 Avg. L PE 9.00
Forecast High Pr 12.58 Forecast Low Pr 8.66 Recent Severe Low Pr 8.66
Current price is at Middle 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 38% Downside 62%
One Year Appreciation Potential 3% Avg. yield 7%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 10%

CPE/SPE 1.33 P/NTA 2.38 NTA 4.66 SPE 11.00 Rational Pr 8.34

The Board has declared an Interim Dividend of 30 sen per share less tax at 25% and Special Interim Dividend of 10 sen per share less tax at 25%.


Decision:
Already Owned: Buy Hold Sell Filed Review (future acq): Filed Discard: Filed
Guide: Valuation zones Lower 1/3 Buy Mid. 1/3 Maybe Upper 1/3 Sell

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr


Stock Data: Recent Stock Performance:
Current Price (11/19/2010): 11.20
(Figures in Malaysian Ringgits)
1 Week 2.9% 13 Weeks 1.8%
4 Weeks 9.2% 52 Weeks 27.4%

Petronas Dagangan Berhad Key Data:
Ticker: PETD Country: MALAYSIA
Exchanges: KUL Major Industry: Oil, Gas, Coal & Related Services
Sub Industry: Miscellaneous Oil, Gas & Coal

2010 Sales 20,687,042,000
(Year Ending Jan 2011).
Employees: 1,311
Currency: Malaysian Ringgits Market Cap: 11,126,684,800
Fiscal Yr Ends: March Shares Outstanding: 993,454,000
Share Type: Ordinary Closely Held Shares: 762,064,700


Day's Range: 10.90 - 11.12
52wk Range: 8.50 - 11.90
Volume: 648,500
Avg Vol (3m): 228,805


6 months ended 30/09/2010
Cash Flow Statement


CFO  1,010.770 m
CFI  (151.474 m)
CFF (335.291 m)
Net Increase in Cash & Eq 524.005 m

Wall Street Regains Its Swagger

Wednesday 24 November 2010

Karambunai 39 trading days: Share hike mainly based on speculation





Karambunai 39 trading days (22/9/10 - 16/11/10)

From 22/9/2010 to 16/11/2010 (39 trading days)

Total (39 days) volume traded 3,194.73 million shares (157.37% of Shares Outstanding)
Average daily volume traded 81.92 million shares (4.04% of Shares Outstanding)

Total (39 days) amount traded RM 634.18 million 
Average daily amount traded RM 16.26 million

Shares Outstanding 2,030.06 million shares
Closely Held Shares 1,472.40 million shares
At 20 sen per share, Market Capitalization was RM 406.012 million.


Related:


Karambunai denies plan to build resort casino

Karambunai in the limelight after budget:  Share hike mainly based on speculation


Quarterly Results of Karambunai
Figures are in MR millions
Revenue, Earnings PAT

26.8.2010
Q1 2011 24.031, -14.386

Q4 2010 45.241, -12.973
Q3 2010 38.213, -2.058
Q2 2010 38.148, -3.559
Q1 2010 22.298, -14.609

Q4 2009 26.021, -41.187
Q3 2009 57.736, 1.396
Q2 2009 67.151, 5.818
Q1 2009 44.481, -2.509

Q4 2008 58.578, -14.421
Q3 2008 38.113, -8.288 
Q2 2008 41.414, -3.689
Q1 2008 30.181, -9.041

Q4 2007 39.702, -3.494
Q3 2007 26.799, 66.736
Q2 2007 33,245, -2.797
Q1 2007 29.425, -7.173

Q4 2006 67.082, -3.969
Q3 2006 51.123, 7.924
Q2 2006 44.336, -6.514
Q1 2006 34.423, -9.130

Q4 2005 45.700, -22.864
Q3 2005 34.444, -12.573
Q2 2005 33.138, -9.228
(26.11.2004)

Tong Herr Resources Berhad



Date announced 24/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK TONGHER C0DE  5010 

Price $ 1.86 Curr. ttm-PE  9.70 Curr. DY 2.69%
LFY Div 5.00 DPO ratio 26%
ROE 8.4% PBT Margin 21.6% PAT Margin 7.7%

Rec. qRev 109005 q-q % chg 71% y-y% chq 125%
Rec qPbt 23498 q-q % chg 135% y-y% chq 499%
Rec. qEps 6.57 q-q % chg 32% y-y% chq 136%
ttm-Eps 19.18 q-q % chg 25% y-y% chq 83%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 10.00 Avg. L PE 4.00
Forecast High Pr 2.45 Forecast Low Pr 1.62 Recent Severe Low Pr 1.62
Current price is at Lower 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 71% Downside 29%
One Year Appreciation Potential 6% Avg. yield 3%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 10%

CPE/SPE 1.39 P/NTA 0.81 NTA 2.29 SPE 7.00 Rational Pr 1.34



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy Hold Sell Filed Review (future acq): Filed Discard: Filed
Guide: Valuation zones Lower 1/3 Buy Mid. 1/3 Maybe Upper 1/3 Sell

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr


Stock Data: Recent Stock Performance:
Current Price (11/19/2010): 1.81
(Figures in Malaysian Ringgits)
1 Week -1.6% 13 Weeks -1.6%
4 Weeks -3.7% 52 Weeks 7.7%

Tong Herr Resources Berhad Key Data:
Ticker: TONGHER Country: MALAYSIA
Exchanges: KUL Major Industry: Machinery & Equipment
Sub Industry: Miscellaneous Machinery & Equipment

2009 Sales 211,554,410
(Year Ending Jan 2010).
Employees: 183
Currency: Malaysian Ringgits Market Cap: 230,434,720
Fiscal Yr Ends: December Shares Outstanding: 127,312,000
Share Type: Ordinary Closely Held Shares: 78,455,794


Day's Range: 1.84 - 1.88
52wk Range: 1.65 - 2.04
Volume: 50,100
Avg Vol (3m): 54,798


Prospects for the current financial year (from its quarterly report)
Barring any unforeseen circumstances, the Group expects its business prospects for the current financial year to remain positive.

IJM Corporation Berhad



Date announced 23/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 2 FYE 31/03/2011

STOCK  IJM  C0DE  3336 

Price $ 5.69 Curr. ttm-PE 18.77 Curr. DY 1.93%
LFY Div 11.00 DPO ratio 44%
ROE 8.0% PBT Margin 25.3% PAT Margin 15.2%

Rec. qRev 785504 q-q % chg -20% y-y% chq -25%
Rec qPbt 198363 q-q % chg 11% y-y% chq 52%
Rec. qEps 8.86 q-q % chg 31% y-y% chq 74%
ttm-Eps 30.32 q-q % chg 14% y-y% chq 58%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 18.00 Avg. L PE 14.00
Forecast High Pr 6.97 Forecast Low Pr 4.43 Recent Severe Low Pr 4.43
Current price is at Middle 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 50% Downside 50%
One Year Appreciation Potential 4% Avg. yield 3%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 7%

CPE/SPE 1.17 P/NTA 1.51 NTA 3.78 SPE 16.00 Rational Pr 4.85



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy, Hold, Sell, Filed; Review (future acq): Filed; Discard: Filed.
Guide: Valuation zones - Lower 1/3 Buy; Mid. 1/3 Maybe; Upper 1/3 Sell.

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr


Stock Data: Recent Stock Performance:
Current Price (11/19/2010): 5.69
(Figures in Malaysian Ringgits)
1 Week 3.5% 13 Weeks 3.8%
4 Weeks 13.6% 52 Weeks 22.6%

IJM Corporation Berhad Key Data:
Ticker: IJMS Country: MALAYSIA
Exchanges: KUL SIN Major Industry: Construction
Sub Industry: Miscellaneous Construction

2010 Sales 4,013,530,000
(Year Ending Jan 2011).
Employees: 4,320
Currency: Malaysian Ringgits Market Cap: 7,687,203,753
Fiscal Yr Ends: March Shares Outstanding: 1,351,002,417
Share Type: Ordinary Closely Held Shares: 413,013,832


Day's Range: 5.64 - 5.64
52wk Range: 4.28 - 5.72
Volume: 0
Avg Vol (3m): 4,512,800

Ajinomoto



Date announced 23/11/2020
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 2 FYE 31/03/2011

STOCK Ajinomoto C0DE 2658

Price $ 4.22 Curr. ttm-PE 10.26 Curr. DY 4.27%
LFY Div 18.00 DPO ratio 46%
ROE 12.0% PBT Margin 9.2% PAT Margin 6.9%

Rec. qRev 77686 q-q % chg -5% y-y% chq 13%
Rec qPbt 7129 q-q % chg -38% y-y% chq -6%
Rec. qEps 8.85 q-q % chg -38% y-y% chq -10%
ttm-Eps 41.15 q-q % chg -2% y-y% chq 23%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 10.00 Avg. L PE 6.00
Forecast High Pr 5.25 Forecast Low Pr 3.29 Recent Severe Low Pr 3.29
Current price is at Middle 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 53% Downside 47%
One Year Appreciation Potential 5% Avg. yield 6%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 11%

CPE/SPE 1.28 P/NTA 1.23 NTA 3.43 SPE 8.00 Rational Pr 3.29



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy, Hold, Sell, Filed; Review (future acq): Filed; Discard: Filed.
Guide: Valuation zones - Lower 1/3 Buy; Mid. 1/3 Maybe; Upper 1/3 Sell.

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr


Stock Data:
Current Price (11/19/2010): 4.26
(Figures in Malaysian Ringgits)

Recent Stock Performance:
1 Week -2.7% 13 Weeks 5.2%
4 Weeks 2.9% 52 Weeks 31.9%

Ajinomoto (Malaysia) Berhad Key Data:
Ticker: AJI Country: MALAYSIA
Exchanges: AMN Major Industry: Food & Beverages
Sub Industry: Miscellaneous Food

2010 Sales 284,616,880
(Year Ending Jan 2011).
 Employees: 380

Currency: Malaysian Ringgits Market Cap: 259,003,740
Fiscal Yr Ends: March Shares Outstanding: 60,799,000
Share Type: Ordinary Closely Held Shares: 34,430,813

Day's Range: 4.22 - 4.30
52wk Range: 3.18 - 4.97
Volume: 76,400
Avg Vol (3m): 63,365

Malaysian Bulk Carriers Bhd



Date announced 23/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK Maybulk C0DE  5077 

Price $ 2.95 Curr. ttm-PE 11.39 Curr. DY 5.08%
LFY Div 15.00 DPO ratio 62%
ROE 15.7% PBT Margin 80.8% PAT Margin 80.5%

Rec. qRev 109027 q-q % chg 13% y-y% chq 11%
Rec qPbt 88069 q-q % chg 164% y-y% chq 25%
Rec. qEps 8.77 q-q % chg 178% y-y% chq 26%
ttm-Eps 25.91 q-q % chg 8% y-y% chq 63%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 3% Avg.H PE 11.00 Avg. L PE 10.00
Forecast High Pr 3.30 Forecast Low Pr 2.13 Recent Severe Low Pr 2.13
Current price is at Upper 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 30% Downside 70%
One Year Appreciation Potential 2% Avg. yield 6%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 9%

CPE/SPE 1.08 P/NTA 1.78 NTA 1.65 SPE 10.50 Rational Pr 2.72



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy, Hold, Sell, Filed; Review (future acq): Filed; Discard: Filed.
Guide: Valuation zones - Lower 1/3 Buy; Mid. 1/3 Maybe; Upper 1/3 Sell.

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr


Stock Data: Recent Stock Performance:
Current Price (11/19/2010): 2.89
(Figures in Malaysian Ringgits)

Recent Stock Performance
1 Week -2.0% 13 Weeks -3.3%
4 Weeks 0.3% 52 Weeks -10.8%

Malaysian Bulk Carriers
Bhd Key Data:
Ticker: MAYBULK
Country: MALAYSIA
Exchanges: KUL
Major Industry: Transportation
Sub Industry: Shipping

2009 Sales 303,707,000 (Year Ending Jan 2010).
Employees: 371

Currency: Malaysian Ringgits
Market Cap: 2,890,000,000
Fiscal Yr Ends: December Shares Outstanding: 1,000,000,000
Share Type: Ordinary Closely Held Shares: 745,849,550

Monday 22 November 2010

UMW Holdings Berhad



Date announced 22/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK UMW C0DE  4588 

Price $ 6.8 Curr. ttm-PE 12.89 Curr. DY 2.94%
LFY Div 20.00 DPO ratio 59%
ROE 14.7% PBT Margin 11.0% PAT Margin 4.8%

Rec. qRev 3087276 q-q % chg -6% y-y% chq 10%
Rec qPbt 340922 q-q % chg -23% y-y% chq 18%
Rec. qEps 13.17 q-q % chg -30% y-y% chq 15%
ttm-Eps 52.76 q-q % chg 3% y-y% chq 49%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 12.00 Avg. L PE 8.00
Forecast High Pr 8.08 Forecast Low Pr 5.50 Recent Severe Low Pr 5.50
Current price is at Middle 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 50% Downside 50%
One Year Appreciation Potential 4% Avg. yield 6%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 10%

CPE/SPE 1.29 P/NTA 1.89 NTA 3.59 SPE 10.00 Rational Pr 5.28



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy, Hold, Sell, Filed; Review (future acq): Filed; Discard: Filed.
Guide: Valuation zones - Lower 1/3 Buy; Mid. 1/3 Maybe; Upper 1/3 Sell.

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr

Integrax Berhad



Date announced 22/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK Integra C0DE  9555 
Price $ 1.6 Curr. ttm-PE 11.01 Curr. DY 1.88%
LFY Div 3.00 DPO ratio 21%
ROE 8.1% PBT Margin 61.6% PAT Margin 44.4%

Rec. qRev 24918 q-q % chg 6% y-y% chq 4%
Rec qPbt 15340 q-q % chg -15% y-y% chq 9%
Rec. qEps 3.68 q-q % chg -19% y-y% chq 13%
ttm-Eps 14.53 q-q % chg 3% y-y% chq 26%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 8.00 Avg. L PE 4.00
Forecast High Pr 1.48 Forecast Low Pr 0.94 Recent Severe Low Pr 0.94
Current price is at Upper 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside -21% Downside 121%
One Year Appreciation Potential -1% Avg. yield 2%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 1%

CPE/SPE 1.84 P/NTA 0.89 NTA 1.79 SPE 6.00 Rational Pr 0.87



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy Hold Sell Filed Review (future acq): Filed Discard: Filed
Guide: Valuation zones Lower 1/3 Buy Mid. 1/3 Maybe Upper 1/3 Sell

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr

PPB Group Berhad



Date announced 22/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK PPB C0DE  4065 

Price $ 18.8 Curr. PE (ttm-Eps) 10.70 Curr. DY 3.88%
LFY Div 73.00 DPO ratio 54%
ROE 15.9% PBT Margin 55.2% PAT Margin 50.1%

Rec. qRev 574531 q-q % chg -1% y-y% chq -38%
Rec qPbt 317086 q-q % chg -3% y-y% chq -51%
Rec. qEps 24.29 q-q % chg -9% y-y% chq -52%
ttm-Eps 175.67 q-q % chg -13% y-y% chq 28%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 10.00 Avg. L PE 7.00
Forecast High Pr 22.42 Forecast Low Pr 16.00 Recent Severe Low Pr 16.00
Current price is at Middle 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside 56% Downside 44%
One Year Appreciation Potential 4% Avg. yield 6%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 10%

CPE/SPE 1.26 P/NTA 1.70 NTA 11.03 SPE 8.50 Rational Pr 14.93



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy Hold Sell Filed Review (future acq): Filed Discard: Filed
Guide: Valuation zones Lower 1/3 Buy Mid. 1/3 Maybe Upper 1/3 Sell

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr

Sunday 21 November 2010

KPJ Healthcare Berhad



Date announced 30/08/2010
Quarter 30/06/2010 Qtr 2 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK KPJ C0DE  5878 

Price $ 3.73 Curr. ttm-PE 17.50 Curr. DY 2.14%
LFY Div 8.00 DPO ratio 41%
ROE 16.4% PBT Margin 10.1% PAT Margin 7.1%

Rec. qRev 410237 q-q % chg 9% y-y% chq 11%
Rec qPbt 41305 q-q % chg 9% y-y% chq 15%
Rec. qEps 5.54 q-q % chg 7% y-y% chq 16%
ttm-Eps 21.32 q-q % chg 4% y-y% chq 32%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 12.00 Avg. L PE 9.00
Forecast High Pr 3.26 Forecast Low Pr 2.67 Recent Severe Low Pr 2.67
Current price is at Upper 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside -78% Downside 178%
One Year Appreciation Potential -2% Avg. yield 3%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) 0%

CPE/SPE 1.67 P/NTA 2.87 NTA 1.30 SPE 10.50 Rational Pr 2.24



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy, Hold, Sell, Filed; Review (future acq): Filed; Discard: Filed.
Guide: Valuation zones - Lower 1/3 Buy; Mid. 1/3 Maybe; Upper 1/3 Sell.

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr

TSH Resources Berhad



Date announced 18/11/2010
Quarter 30/09/2010 Qtr 3 FYE 31/12/2010

STOCK TSH C0DE  9059 
Price $ 2.6 Curr. ttm-PE 16.84 Curr. DY 1.92%

LFY Div 5.00 DPO ratio 28%
ROE 8.7% PBT Margin 12.7% PAT Margin 8.5%

Rec. qRev 214265 q-q % chg 3% y-y% chq 5%
Rec qPbt 27131 q-q % chg 53% y-y% chq 1%
Rec. qEps 4.45 q-q % chg 61% y-y% chq -22%
ttm-Eps 15.44 q-q % chg -8% y-y% chq 83%

Using VERY CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES:
EPS GR 5% Avg.H PE 10.00 Avg. L PE 8.00
Forecast High Pr 1.97 Forecast Low Pr 1.73 Recent Severe Low Pr 1.73
Current price is at Upper 1/3 of valuation zone.

RISK: Upside -262% Downside 362%
One Year Appreciation Potential -5% Avg. yield 2%
Avg. Total Annual Potential Return (over next 5 years) -3%

CPE/SPE 1.87 P/NTA 1.46 NTA 1.78 SPE 9.00 Rational Pr 1.39



Decision:
Already Owned: Buy, Hold, Sell, Filed; Review (future acq): Filed; Discard: Filed.
Guide: Valuation zones - Lower 1/3 Buy; Mid. 1/3 Maybe; Upper 1/3 Sell.

Aim:
To Buy a bargain: Buy at Lower 1/3 of Valuation Zone
To Minimise risk of Loss: Buy when risk is low i.e UPSIDE GAIN > 75% OR DOWNSIDE RISK <25%
To Double every 5 years: Seek for POTENTIAL RETURN of > 15%/yr.
To Prevent Loss: Sell immediately when fundamentals deteriorate
To Maximise Gain & Reduce Loss: Sell when CPE/SPE > 1.5, when in Upper 1/3 of Valuation Zone & Returns < 15%/yr

Gruesome Company

Saturday 20 November 2010

World's Greatest Investors

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These investors differ widely in the strategies and philosophies they applied to their trading; some came up with new and innovative ways to analyze their investments, while others picked securites almost entirely by instinct. Where these investors don't differ is in their ability to consistently beat the market.

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World's Greatest Investors

20 Tools For Building Up Your Portfolio

20 Tools For Building Up Your Portfolio

The concept of a portfolio and the birth of individual investing have opened up possibilities for everyone. The only real difference between you and Warren Buffett is a few well-chosen stocks - the billion-dollar fortune is the result. Stocks, while important, aren’t all there is to investing. Keeping your portfolio divided between the different investment vehicles reduces your overall risk while still generating returns. Here are 20 investment tools you can use to increase your portfolio’s diversity. Read: 20 Investments You Should Know

Friday 19 November 2010

Inflation does matter in China and the world

Inflation does matter in China and the world
By Huang Shuo (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2010-11-15 16:58

The growth rate of China's consumer price index (CPI) was 4.4 percent year-on-year in October, a 25-month high. The rate is up 0.8 percentage points from September. This is an alarming statistic for a country that for the past three decades has had steady economic growth. Inflation risks do matter for China.

In particular, the new factor of a rise in prices, main promoter for CPI growth, took up 3 percentage points of the 4.4 percent surge. Prices of agricultural products and food have been playing major roles in contributing to the CPI hike. Food prices surged by 10.1 percent compared with the same period of last year as a result of the price hike in international agricultural products, and the recent flood in South China’s Hainan province affected vegetable prices and oil prices, adding to the product costs, said Sheng Laiyun, spokesman for the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

In addition, daily essentials such as eggs and vegetables are leading the price increases in China's consumer market, followed by meat, oil and white sugar.

As the industry generally expected that about 4 percent would be the proper answer for CPI, the final data released by the NBS on Nov 11, 2010, was 0.4 percentage points higher than estimated, which astonished the public and drew lots of attention from domestic and foreign experts.

Consumer prices associated with social stability are the top concern of the public in China. The increase of CPI indicates that the surge in commodities prices is ongoing in the consumption market, closely linked with the daily lives of ordinary people. China’s income per capita still lags behind the United States, the European Union, and even some other emerging economies. How to increase income and stabilize or lower the prices in the market, especially for daily essentials, should be attached great importance by the government.

Livelihood is like the basis for constructing a building, which lays the firm foundation for a harmonious society. Whether people can lead a good life decides the quality of governance by central and local authorities. High consumer prices pose an unstable economic factor to improving the living standard of people.

More regulations are expected for the soaring Chinese CPI. As to that situation, the People’s Bank of China, the central bank of China, has noticed and adopted a measure increasing the required reserve ratio by 50 basis points and coming into effect on Nov 16, 2010, in order to ease the pressure from the second round of quantitative easing policy (QE2) by the Federal Reserve of the US and increasing liquidity caused commodity prices to rise in China. But is it enough to merely depend on national economic regulatory authorities?

Every economy released loose monetary policies to conquer the challenges brought by the international financial crisis in 2008 and get out of the recession. But side effects are inevitable. Rising inflation is one of the consequences. As a result, countries with expansion policies on issuing more currencies should work together and reach agreements to confront the emerging side effect -- inflation.

The author can be reached at larryhuangshuo@gmail.com.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2010-11/15/content_11552427.htm

China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser

China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser
(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-11-18 11:06

China should not solely rely on interest rate rises to curb inflation, an academic adviser to the People's Bank of China said in remarks published on Thursday.

Zhou Qiren, who is also a professor at Peking University, said the government must take steps to tackle supply-side strains that have been a key factor pushing consumer prices.

Loose monetary policy in 2009 has created excessive liquidity and helped fuel prices of various products, he said.

"Much liquidity and fewer goods are the reasons behind inflation. Raising interest rates cannot change such a situation," he was quoted by the China Securities Journal as saying.

Zhou warned that liquidity had been channeled from the real estate market to other sectors of the economy, after Beijing took harsh measures to prevent a property bubble.

China's CPI hit a 25-month high of 4.4 percent in October, fuelling expectations of further tightening measures.

The PBOC has ramped up its efforts to tighten monetary conditions in the past month, increasing bank reserve requirements and surprising markets on Oct 19 by announcing the first rate rise in nearly three years.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2010-11/18/content_11570306.htm

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China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser Oct consumer confidence falls due to inflation, rate hike

Rise of the middle class

Rise of the middle class
By Tang Jun (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-11-18 15:12

Society will be more stable when one third of the Chinese population has material means to become social backbone

Many scholars and individuals are showing concern about what kind of social structure will bring the best stability.

According to sociological theories, a modern society can be divided into four ranks: the wealthy, the middle class, labor and the disadvantaged. The middle class creates the ladder between the well-to-do and the poverty-stricken, thus easing the antagonism between them, by granting those at the bottom the hope of rising to a higher level.

Generally speaking, in a modern society, the middle class contains 60 to 70 percent of the population, leaving about 15 to 20 percent at either end of the ladder. Such a large middle class ensures stability for a society.

How do we define the middle class? There are three standards: material wealth, job status and self-identity.

Concerning material wealth, a middle income, sufficient to maintain a comfortable but not luxurious lifestyle, is the first pursuit of the middle class. In the present social situations, a typical middle-class family tends to own a car and a house, together with certain financial products.

The xiaokang (literally moderate prosperity) standard introduced by the government is essentially the Chinese version of the middle class. Sufficient wealth accumulation is the first prerequisite to be xiaokang.

Job status is another essential. In this society, a salary is still the most important income source for most individuals; therefore a stable job is the pursuit.

With the rise of knowledge capital, intellectuals and technicians are taking more pride in gaining a position through their knowledge or technical skills.

Self-identity is also indispensable. Being middle class means having access to a decent and relatively comfortable life and having the will to strive forward. This is beneficial to both the people and society.

During the past 30 years, a middle class has come into being in China. According to Professor Lu Xueyi of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, 23 percent of the population belong to the middle class; five years ago it was 18 percent. He estimates that the number will increase by 1 percent every year. If that growth rate can be maintained the middle class could reach 40 percent of the population by 2020.

However, that will not be achieved without problems. Ever since reform and opening-up in late 1970s, our changes in social structure have lagged 15 years behind economic development; that's the origin of many of our social problems.

The middle class, with a strong sense of social responsibility, should be the backbone of society. The awareness of being a responsible citizen offers strong support for society. However, the middle class in China is still immature in this respect and society needs them to meet their social obligations.

Of course, the rise of the middle class in any society is in dire need of rational support from the government. On their road to industrialization and modernization, many developed countries offered support or subsidy to blue-collar workers, helping them to own and accumulate capital. After World War II, many countries also used the policy "houses for residents", which proved very successful.

Owning a house has long been considered a prerequisite of entering the middle class, and when more and more people find it hard to reach this standard, it is impossible for them to remain silent.

The present tendency of economic growth is unfriendly to many people, especially to the supporting pillar of industry - migrant workers, whose number has reached 200 million. We hope the "inclusive growth" in the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) will solve these problems.

Three decades ago, Deng Xiaoping said: "Let one part of the people get rich first." Today might we make a similar statement for the 12th Five-Year Plan period - let one third of the Chinese people become middle class first.

The author is a researcher and secretary general of the Social Policy Research Center of the China Academy of Social Sciences.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2010-11/18/content_11571957.htm


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