Tuesday, 15 June 2010

Sideway Trends



























When the price of an asset, e.g. a stock moves sideways, it is difficult to trade on momentum and apply the trend-following techniques because a trend reverses shortly after it is established.

Once a sideways trend is identified, one can profit by investing long or short once a stock price touches the lower or upper trend line.

(Another strategy is also to write/sell options to collect premiums.)

Sideways trends can persist for a long time.  Nevertheless, it is also important to know how to stop such a short-term trading technique when longer-term trends return.

Those with long-term goals may or may not wish to incorporate the above short-term trading techniques for a small portion of their selected good quality stocks which are in obvious sideway trends.  However, always remember to buy low, that is, at prices that are closer to the lower price boundary.

Ishak no longer substantial shareholder of Kenmark

Tuesday June 15, 2010

Ishak no longer substantial shareholder of Kenmark

He pares down Kenmark stake

PETALING JAYA: Datuk Ishak Ismail has netted an estimated RM5mil from selling shares in Kenmark Industrial Co (M) Bhd, a company that he had started buying into slightly over a week ago.

Then, Kenmark’s shares had collapsed following the absence of its top officials and what seemed like a cessation of its business.

It is estimated that Ishak paid around 8 sen per Kenmark share and had emerged with around 57 million shares in Kenmark through his vehicles Unioncity Enterprises Ltd and BHLB Trustee Bhd.

In a filing with Bursa Malaysia yesterday, Kenmark said Ishak had ceased to be substantial shareholder of the company as of June 9.

The shares were disposed into the open market on June 9 and June 11. The average share price of Kenmark on those days was 17 sen per share, giving Ishak an estimated gain of 9 sen per share for his 57 million shares.

A senior analyst from a local brokerage said investors were unable to see clear leadership in the running of Kenmark to improve its financial performance. “When the single largest shareholder of a company starts to sell down nearly all of his shares, it does not promote confidence in the company’s future. This turn of events has left many questions unanswered,” he said.

It was earlier reported that Ishak wanted to take the financially distressed furniture maker out of its PN17 classification and restart its operations as soon as possible.

Kenmark’s share price hit a high of 16.5 sen in early morning trade yesterday before dipping gradually to close at 13 sen with 36.5 million shares traded.

----

Ishak makes exit from Kenmark
By Francis Fernandez
Published: 2010/06/15

Datuk Ishak Ismail appears to have sold out of Kenmark Industrial Co (M) Bhd, (7030) a financially troubled furniture maker, in about 10 days, which was also when the stock surged by more than 600 per cent.

As early as June 1, Kenmark was trading as low as 3.5 sen a share, after it emerged that its chief was missing and it was late with its financial results.

But by June 4, Kenmark was trading at 26 sen a share, powered by news that Ishak had bought a 32 per cent stake.

Kenmark told the stock exchange yesterday that it received verbal confirmation from Ishak and BHLB Trustee Bhd, a trust for his family, that nearly 60 million shares linked to him were sold on June 9 and 11.

Unioncity Enterprises Ltd, in which Ishak has an indirect stake, informed Bursa Malaysia that it sold some 27.69 million Kenmark shares on the open market.
With the sale, Unioncity ceases to be a substantial shareholder.

BHLB Trustee owned 30 million shares, or 16.83 per cent, in Kenmark as at June 2, filings to the stock exchange show.

"A representative of BHLB for a discretionary trust for the family of Ishak has verbally confirmed to the company that the trust on June 10 acquired one million Kenmark shares and on June 11 disposed of a total of 31 million Kenmark shares," Kenmark said in a statement yesterday.

Ishak, when asked about the share sale by Business Times, merely answered with a question himself: "Are you sure?"

As at press time, there was no filing to the stock exchange on BHLB selling Kenmark shares.

It is not clear who bought the shares from Ishak. Kenmark also did not mention it in its short statement to Bursa Malaysia yesterday.

Meanwhile, Kenmark executive chairman Datuk Abd Gani Yusof told Business Times that he was still the chairman of the company.

"I was appointed by the company," Abd Gani said when asked if he was representing Ishak or Taiwanese shareholder James Hwang Ding Kuo, who owns 8.41 per cent of Kenmark.

Abd Gani, who is the major shareholder and executive vice-chairman of Metronic Global Bhd, said he did not know who bought the shares from Ishak.

----


Comment:
It's another way of expressing the "Greater Fool Theory." "I may be a fool to buy this stock at this price; but I'll find another fool to buy it from me at a higher price."

Monday, 14 June 2010

Another look at AhYap's concern over the performance fees of i Capital Global Fund & i Capital International Value Fund

Capital Dynamics aka Tan Teng Boo wrote in his latest newsletter on the performance fees charged for his managed funds.  He elaborated on the 20% performance fee structure of the i Capital global funds.

To earn the performance fee, Capital Dynamics must deliver net returns of 6% on (1) a single year and (2) on a compound bases.  The 2nd hurdle rate is actually on a COMPOUNDED basis.  He pointed out how tough it is to compound 6% per annum PERPETUALLY.

He lamented how some supposedly smart investors do not even know that this 6% compound hurdle rate is a high water mark and that it is the toughest high water mark anywhere in the world.  In his newsletter:  "Any investor who scoffs at 6% compounding is either dangerous gambler or a conman."

There was a recent write-up in AhYap's blog stating his concern over the hurdles used by Capital Dynamics and how these severely impaired the returns of those who are invested in their funds; particularly during periods of high volatilities.

Perhaps, there should be added:  1 further hurdle and 1 extra condition.

(1)  A third hurdle that the performance fee is only charged when the NAV per unit of the fund exceeds the highest reached in previous years.


(2)  Another condition is on how the 20% performance fee is calculated.  This calculation should not be solely based on last year's NAV.  The 20% performance fee can be based on either the excess return above the 1st hurdle, the 2nd hurdle or the 3rd hurdle; always using the lowest excess value of these 3 hurdles in calculating the performance return.

In my opinion, AhYap's argument is sound, reasonable and his concern is valid.  Capital Dynamics has not addressed this concern adequately.  Hopefully, they will.  Will they?


An example using the 3 hurdles approach and calculating the performance fee based on the lowest excess value of these 3 hurdles.
https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AuRRzs61sKqRdFZFTkRqUU1HYWpOeXNaam42OWp2TFE&hl=en&output=html

Also read:

Performance fees warning



Sunday, 13 June 2010

Financial Planners Say BP Is a Gamble

BUSINESS
JUNE 10, 2010, 10:52 A.M. ET

Financial Planners Say BP Is a Gamble
By IAN SALISBURY

Some advisers are concluding that BP PLC, which just a few months ago seemed like a blue chip, is just too risky for their clients.

The giant British oil company, with a 100-year history and a $10.5 billion annual dividend, has seen its shares plunge by roughly half in a matter of weeks as oil from a well deep underwater gushes into the Gulf of Mexico. No one seems able to say for sure when it will stop, much less what the cleanup will ultimately cost.

"Before the oil spill, BP was a good long-term holding," said Keith Amburgey, a financial planner in Cresskill, N.J. "After the spill, the stock became a short-term speculative play."

Mr. Amburgey said his firm began selling BP stock in early May, about two weeks after the rig explosion, eliminating BP holdings some clients had owned for years. By that point, he said, it had started to become clear that questions about the incident were going to influence the price of the stock for a very long time. Although he personally suspects the market has overreacted, BP's legal and political jeopardy changed the risks and rewards of owning its shares for his buy-and-hold clients.

He likened the crisis to ones that have engulfed other seemingly impregnable companies recently, like Toyota Motor Corp., with its headline-making recall because of faulty brakes, and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., tarred by government charges over its business practices.

"This event served as a reminder of the benefits of diversification," he added.

BP's U.S.-listed shares rebounded sharply on Thursday after plunging nearly 16% on Wednesday as investors speculated that the company may suspend its dividend amid strong pressure from the Obama administration. BP is listed in the U.K. -- where it is extremely widely held by investors including large pension funds -- and in the U.S.

Some large brokerage firms have made moves too. Wells Fargo Advisors said it removed BP from its Diversified Stock Income Plan, a list of stocks with attractive yields and good prospects for hiking dividends that it provides to clients. Meanwhile, Wells's sector analyst also advised conservative investors to consider other, less volatile energy stocks, according to a spokeswoman.

UBS AG said it helped arrange a recent discussion between its clients and BP investor relations officials. UBS's United Kingdom research department, which covers BP, published its seventh update on the spill situation Monday. Although UBS still rates BP a buy, the note warned investors should be prepared for BP not to make its July dividend payment if U.S. political pressure intensifies.

For some, the BP debacle is a chance to make lemonade out of lemons. Bryan Wisda, a financial planner with offices in Scottsdale, Ariz., said he has several clients with big positions in BP, such as one accumulated by a longtime employee of Amoco, the U.S. oil company BP acquired in 1998.

While the BP positions never fit well with Mr. Wisda's passive-oriented investment philosophy, he had been afraid that selling the holdings would generate an unnecessary capital gain for tax purposes. Now Mr. Wisda has been laboriously searching through the clients' accounts for lots of stocks that were purchased at prices equivalent to BP's current one and therefore can be unloaded without a tax hit.

While he concedes BP could snap back, he doesn't think trying to make that risky call is in his clients' best interest.

"It's betting," he said. "Investing isn't really a bettor's game."

Learning to Love Hedge Funds

THE SATURDAY ESSAY
JUNE 12, 2010

Learning to Love Hedge Funds

Hedge funds have been reviled as slick opportunists that fanned the flames of the collapse. Yet Sebastian Mallaby argues that they hold the key to a more stable financial system

The first hedge-fund manager, Alfred Winslow Jones, did not go to business school. He did not possess a Ph.D. in quantitative finance. He did not spend his formative years at Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs or any other incubator for masters of the universe. Instead, he studied at the Marxist Workers School in Berlin, ran secret missions for a clandestine anti-Nazi group called the Leninist Organization and reported on the civil war in Spain, where he hitch-hiked to the front lines in the company of Dorothy Parker. It was only at the advanced age of 48 that Mr. Jones raked together $100,000 to launch a "hedged fund," setting himself up in 1949 in a shabby office on Broad Street. Almost by accident, Mr. Jones improvised an investment structure that will survive for years to come.
[Cover_Main]JT Morrow
Hedge funds account for a huge share of trading in financial markets, and have grown to a scale that would have astonished Mr. Jones, amassing roughly $2 trillion in assets. Success has come with notoriety: the Securities and Exchange Commission is suspicious of hedge funds' fast trading algorithms, which some blame for last month's "flash crash" in U.S. stocks. Reformers in Congress are threatening to bring hedge funds to heel by forcing them to register with the SEC and perhaps to hold more capital. Hedge-fund managers such as Raj Rajaratnam of the Galleon Group are being investigated for insider trading, and recently Art Samberg and his late firm, Pequot Capital Management, settled a complaint with the SEC, agreeing to a fine of $28 million. But although hedge funds are often blamed for excesses, Mr. Jones's investment structure holds the key to a more stable finance, to an extent that Washington's reformers fail to understand.

A History of Hedging

See a timeline of Alfred Winslow Jones's life and career.
After the 1929 crash, investors had fled the market in droves, and the bustling brokerages had fallen quiet; it was said that you could walk the famous canyons near the stock exchange and hear only the rattle of backgammon dice through the open windows. The few obstinate souls who opted to work in money management joined firms such as Fidelity and Prudential, which behaved as conservatively as their names implied. But Mr. Jones was cut from different cloth and he reinvented capitalism on Wall Street.
Mr. Jones's hedge fund, like most later hedge funds, embraced four features. To begin with, there was a performance fee. Mr. Jones reserved 20% of the fund's investment gains for himself and his team, invoking the Phoenician sea captains who kept a fifth of the profits from successful voyages. Mr. Jones's portfolio managers hustled harder than rivals at traditional money-management firms: They called more people, crunched more numbers and made decisions faster. At the same time, the Jones men were deterred from taking crazy risks. They were required to keep their own capital in the fund, so that mistakes would cost them personally.
Mr. Jones's second distinguishing feature was a conscious avoidance of regulation. In his previous life as an anti-Nazi agent, Mr. Jones had kept a low profile. As a hedge-fund manager, likewise, Mr. Jones escaped the attention of regulators by never advertizing his fund; he raised capital by word of mouth, which sometimes meant a word between mouthfuls at his dinner table. Unhindered by the government, Mr. Jones expected no help from it either. The Jones men knew that if they mismanaged their risks, their fund would blow up—and nobody would save them.
[CovJump2]Harvard University
Alfred Winslow Jones's 1919 Harvard yearbook
Thirdly, Mr. Jones embraced short selling. In the 1950s as now, speculating on the prospect of corporate failure was seen as almost un-American. But Mr. Jones described it as "a little known procedure that scares away users for no good reason." By being "short" some stocks, he hedged his "long" investment in others.
By insulating his fund from market swings, Mr. Jones cleared the way for his fourth distinctive practice, which was later to become the most controversial one. Because he had hedged out market risk, he felt free to embrace more stock-specific risk, and so he magnified, or "leveraged," his bets with borrowed money. Between 1949 and 1968, Mr. Jones's partnership earned a cumulative return of just under 5,000%.
Bloomberg News
James Simons in 2007
Mr. Jones inspired a wave of imitators in the late 1960s, including the compulsive trader Michael Steinhardt, who opened a small operation in 1967, and the Hungarian philosopher-financier George Soros, who started his own Jones-style fund two years later. As the successor hedge funds grew, they ad-libbed their own variations on Mr. Jones's original model. Mr. Steinhardt started out as a long/short stock investor, but he found his niche as a gun-slinging market maker for outsized blocks of stock. He was a human version of today's fast-trading computerized hedge funds—those "flash traders" that excite the SEC's suspicion. Mr. Soros evolved too, triggering a decline in value of foreign currencies from Britain to Thailand by selling them short.
As hedge funds improvised new ways of getting rich, they didn't always need the tools that Mr. Jones had relied on. Julian Robertson's storied Tiger Fund, launched in 1980, began as a faithful imitator of Mr. Jones; but when Tiger negotiated the purchase of the Russian government's entire stock of nongold precious metals in 1998, leverage mattered less than the security around the train that was to bring the palladium from Siberia. Four years later, a swashbuckling West Coast fund named Farallon swooped into Indonesia and bought the controlling stake of the country's largest bank. The chief ingredient for this trade was neither hedging nor leverage but nerves—Indonesia had recently experienced a currency collapse and a political revolution.
Getty Images
Julian Robertson in 1997
Light regulation has allowed Mr. Jones's descendants to seize opportunities as they arise—when Farallon was not buying a bank in Indonesia, it was speculating on corporate mergers, distressed debt or a water project in Colorado. Equally, the freedom to go long and short has permitted hedge funds to express investment views with precision. Rather than simply buying a stock or a bond whose performance will reflect currency shifts, interest rates, trends in the broad market, and so on, a hedge fund can hedge out the risks on which it has no view, isolating the particular risk on which it has a real insight.
In the 1960s, the Jones men would show up at the office of the Securities and Exchange Commission to read key releases the moment they came out, stealing a march on sleepier rivals who waited for the information to arrive in the mail. In the 1980s, likewise, Julian Robertson maintained two giant Rolodexes; when compromised Wall Street salesmen pitched a buy recommendation his way, he would pump information out of his network to get the real story on the company. Once, when a Robertson lieutenant heard that a car maker's latest model was prone to break down, he bought two of the suspect vehicles and had them independently tested. When the mechanic confirmed there was an engine flaw, Tiger took a short position in the manufacturer.
Other hedge-fund innovations have been bracingly complicated. James Simons, who emerged as the industry's top earner in the past decade, built his fortune on mathematics, particularly the sort used in military cryptography. By discerning patterns in price movements that were invisible to others, his team constructed a black box that earns billions of dollars annually.
[Hedge_Soros]Getty Images
George Soros in 2001
Because they are largely free of regulatory impediments, and because their reward structure has attracted the best brains, hedge funds have continued in the Jones tradition of outperforming rivals. Whereas mutual-fund managers, as a group, do not beat the market, the best analysis suggests that hedge funds deliver value to their clients. In a series of papers, Roger Ibbotson of the Yale School of Management has examined the performance of 8,400 hedge funds between 1995 and 2009. After correcting for various biases in the data, and after subtracting hedge funds' large fees, Mr. Ibbotson and his co-authors conclude that the average fund generates positive "alpha"—that is, profits that could not be earned from exposure to a market index. In the United States, only rich individuals and institutions are allowed to reap the benefits of hedge funds. But in Europe and Asia, they are increasingly marketed to ordinary savers.
Of course, neither endowments nor individuals should put all their money in hedge funds; like any investment, they can blow up spectacularly. The most famous hedge-fund collapse came in 1998, when Long-Term Capital Management lost almost $6 billion. Eight years later, a Ferrari-driving 32-year-old trader at a fund called Amaranth lost $6 billion on disastrous gas bets; a year after that, several quantitative funds hit trouble all at once, setting off a panic known as the "quant quake."
But even these exceptions to hedge funds' generally good performance serve to underline one of their virtues. When Amaranth failed, another hedge fund named Citadel swooped in to buy the remains of its portfolio—one hedge fund had caught fire, but a second stabilized markets by acting as the fireman, and taxpayers did not have to cover any of the losses. Likewise, the quant quake of 2007 was over even before the public realized it had begun. The one partial exception was Long-Term Capital, whose failure was destabilizing enough to cause the New York Fed to broker a $3.6 billion rescue. But even in this case, public resources played no part in the bailout: The Fed convened Long-Term's bankers and told them to cough up the money to stabilize the fund.
The independent culture of hedge funds stood them in good stead during the recent mortgage bust. Spurred by the carrot of the performance fee, a then-obscure manager named John Paulson created a $2 million budget to buy the largest mortgage database in the country and hire extra analysts to figure out patterns in default rates. Meanwhile, because of the stick of having their own savings at risk, hedge funds that did not undertake similar research at least had the wit to avoid buying subprime paper. Lazier investors piled into collateralized debt obligations on the strength of their triple-A seal of approval. But most hedge funds were too careful to rely on the advice of ratings agencies.
In 2007, the year the mortgage bubble burst, hedge funds were up 10%—not bad for a crisis. Even more remarkably, the subgroup of hedge funds specializing in mortgages and other asset-backed securities was flat for the year—in other words, the hedge funds that might have been expected to get hit generally dodged the bullet. In 2008, admittedly, the turmoil following the collapse of Lehman Brothers hurt hedge funds' returns. But even then, they did better than their peers. They were down 18 % by the end of the year, a decline half as severe as that of the stock market.
The real humiliation of 2008 did not befall hedge funds. It befell banks, insurers, government-chartered housing lenders, and money market funds—and especially the mightiest of all Wall Street titans: investment banks. Until the financial crisis, the brain-power of these behemoths was presumed to be the force that made global markets work. If you were impertinent enough to ask how trillions of dollars of exotic trades could slosh across borders without risking a breakdown, the answer was that Lehman Brothers and its ilk had designed the instruments, modeled the risks, and had all bases covered.
Now that this answer has been exposed as a lie, the puzzle is how to erect a new scaffolding for global finance. The leading answer in Washington, expressed in the reform package emerging from Congress, is to regulate the investment banks and other traditional risk takers. This is a worthy project that must be attempted, but it would be naïve to expect too much from it. The crisis proved the fallibility of regulators from the Securities and Exchange Commission to the respected Financial Services Authority in London to the highly professional Federal Reserve. When multiple overseers fail in multiple places, one must accept that even smart reforms may not change the pattern decisively.
The crisis also demonstrated flaws in large financial firms. These start with the too-big-to-fail problem. Large banks cannot be allowed to go down; knowing that, their creditors lend without monitoring their risks; as a result, their risk-taking is undisciplined. At the same time, each trading desk within a large banking supermarket has strong reason to load up on risk. If its bets come good, huge bonuses will ensue. If they go bad, the losses will be spread across the whole institution.
Given the difficulties with financial reform, legislators should embrace a complementary approach: As well as struggling to tame financial behemoths, they should promote boutique risk takers. With only a few exceptions, hedge funds have the powerful virtue of being small enough to fail; indeed, some 5,000 went out of business in the course of the past decade, and none imposed losses on taxpayers. Mythology notwithstanding, the average hedge fund's leverage is more sober than that of banks and investment banks.
The question for policy-makers is what kind of financial institution will absorb risk most efficiently—and do so without a backstop from taxpayers. The answer awaits discovery in the story of A.W. Jones and his descendants. The future of finance lies in the history of hedge funds.
Sebastian Mallaby is the Paul A. Volcker Senior Fellow for International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations, where he directs the Maurice R. Greenberg Center for Geoeconomic Sudies. This article is adapted from "More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite," to be published by the Penguin Press next week.

We embrace ‘inclusive politics’, says Khairy

We embrace ‘inclusive politics’, says Khairy

UPDATED @ 10:45:05 PM 12-06-2010
By Asrul Hadi Abdullah Sani
June 12, 2010

KUALA LUMPUR, June 12 — Barisan Nasional Youth Chief Khairy Jamaluddin said today that the ruling coalition could no longer depend on racial politics.

He said that Barisan Nasional Youth understood the importance of inclusive politics.

“This rally is to show that we not only support inclusive politics but also that we no longer identify ourselves with Umno, MCA, MIC other component parties but with Barisan Nasional.

“There is no place for racial and narrow politics,” he said at a 1 Malaysia Rally here today.

BN Youth brought in the stars today as young people from across the country almost filled up the 15,OOO capacity Putra Indoor Stadium.

Earlier local artists Sasi The Don, Yise Loo, and Aizat Amdan entertained the crowd while popular TV personality, Sarimah Ibrahim, hosted the rally.

Khairy added that the recent Hulu Selangor by-election showed that young voters are returning to BN.

“Our win in Hulu Selangor has shown that young voters have returned to Barisan Nasional. We are all ready to face change to ensure that 1Malaysia becomes a reality and we pray to God that we will experience a huge win in the next general election,” he said.

In press conference held later, Khairy said that BN must change its approach and become more inclusive.

“In the past, BN youth we moved very much on our own and in those days we defined courage very differently. For Umno, you have to be an ultra-Malay champion and courage for MIC is defined as champion for Indian issues. It gradually become very extreme and community centric.

“For us, courage is different. Courage is about fighting for everybody. We have to face criticisms from within and extreme groups. They don’t understand because you have to fight for all Malaysians,” he said.

He added the importance of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s message of 1 Malaysia to not be lost in translation.

“I think the time has come and we are willing to stick our necks out. I have spoken to all the component’s youth chief and said that if we are not there are the forefront then who is going to help the prime minister,” he said.

He also admitted Najib’s 1 Malaysia’s main obstacle is the racist elements within and outside the party.

“We must sure that the center is bigger than the fringe and the fringe are the extremist at the side. It is not going to be easy but we want to tell everybody that the sum is greater than its parts and that together we are stronger,” he said.

He also stressed the government to make its stand on the sports betting controversy.

“That is why we are waiting and I hope the government could provide an explanation as soon as possible because of conflicting reports from the government and the concerned company,” he said.

The Finance Ministry has recently denied in parliament that it has awarded a sports betting license to tycoon Tan Sri Vincent Tan’s Ascot Sports Sdn Bhd.

However, Berjaya Corporation confirmed that the Finance Minister has awarded the license to Ascot in its announcement to Bursa Malaysia in its acquisition of the betting group.


----


Walk the talk, Encik Khairy — The Malaysian Insider
June 12, 2010

JUNE 12 — It could be World Cup fever but Umno Youth leader Khairy Jamaluddin today declared at a 1 Malaysia youth rally that there is no place for “racial and narrow politics”.

It is of course commendable that Khairy, who is also Barisan Nasional (BN) Youth chief by virtue of his Umno post, feels that way.

The reality is otherwise.

BN Youth like its parent organisation is made up of many parties, especially the race-based ones from the Malay peninsula.

At least some like Gerakan, PPP and those from Sabah and Sarawak actually eschew race in the make-up of their membership.

But these non-racial parties are weak.

The thing is, Encik Khairy, organising a rally, giving a few soundbites doesn’t mean everything is okay. It isn’t.

Ask K. Vasanthakumar who was briefly held by police earlier today when he wanted to pass a memorandum to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak about getting more government scholarships for high-achieving Indian students.

The ex-Hindraf leader and one-time ISA detainee felt he had no choice but approach the PM about the plight of Indian students.

And that is the reality of racial quotas in Malaysia.

See, Encik Khairy, the more skeptical among Malaysians will see your statement today as nothing more than that of an Umno youth chief trying to jump on the 1 Malaysia bandwagon and score some points with Najib.

And even the more charitable will be unwilling to accept that political parties which owe their existence to race politics have suddenly decided to be inclusive as you had said today.

“This rally is to show that we not only support inclusive politics but also that we no longer identify ourselves with Umno, MCA, MIC other component parties but with Barisan Nasional.

“There is no place for racial and narrow politics,” you said at the 1 Malaysia Rally.

Again, we applaud you for what you say. It is something the other parties have said over the years but BN has rejected saying its system is the best.

But it’s just rhetoric until Malaysians see that the reality of what you say is displayed by the BN through its socio-economic policies.

Encik Khairy, you have to walk the talk first.

Otherwise, we’ll just put it down to the idle chatter most people engage in between the FIFA World Cup 2010 games in South Africa.

Saturday, 12 June 2010

Beautiful South Africa

South Africa is located on the southern tip of Africa.

South Africa has 9 provinces: Eastern Cape, Free State, Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumulanga, Limpopo, Northern Cape, North West, and Western Cape.

The current flag of South Africa was adopted on April 27th 1994.



* The capital of South Africa is Pretoria
* The president of South Africa is Jacob Zuma.
* The largest diamond in the world (named The Star of Africa) was found in South Africa.
* The national anthem of South Africa is a combined version of two evocative but quite different songs, Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika (God Bless Africa) and The Call of South Africa (Die Stem van Suid-Afrika).
* South Africa has eleven national languages.
* South Africa's population is ranked 26th from the top in the world!
* The population is 44,344,136. (2005)





Pictures denoted above:
  1. Table Mountain
  2. When it is cloudy, the layer of clouds over the mountain is known as it's "Table Cloth"
  3. The national flower of South Africa: The King Protea
  4. The national animal of South Africa is the Springbok
  5. The national bird of South Africa is the Blue Crane
  6. The national fish of South Africa is the Galjoen
  7. The national tree of South Africa is the Real Yellowwood

Is our society changing for the better?

An important plan was released in the form of the 10 MP yesterday.  Yet browsing the news today in the Star, there is hardly any relevant news of note to read.  There isn't any intelligent views reported.  If there were views expressed, perhaps the reporting was rather inadequate or superficial.

How can Malaysians hope to improve their society and their quality of living when news that are central to their living are being suppressed or alternate opinions kept away from intelligent scrutiny?  Is this the society our present PM hope to nurture?  It takes a brave and great leader to initiate change in society for the better and for all.  Has such a man or woman appeared in our political scene?

Friday, 11 June 2010

Obligations of independent directors - Kenmark eye opener

Friday June 11, 2010

Obligations of independent directors - Kenmark eye opener

Whose business is it anyway - by John Zinkin

IN conversations since Sime Darby Bhd and Kenmark Industrial Co (M) Bhd hit the headlines, I was struck forcefully by how often the people I met did not realise fully what the obligations or liabilities of independent directors actually are.

Perhaps it is timely to restate in simple terms what independent directors are supposed to do; and why being an independent director should not be seen as a reward for past services that does not require an active involvement in the deliberations of the board.

It is a serious duty that requires much more than just being honest and attending the required number of board meetings. As such, directors must continuously upgrade their skills and understanding of the environment in which their companies operate, investing in training to do so.

Directors must act honestly and in good faith in the best interests of the company on whose board they sit. This means that if there is conflict between the interests of the company and the people they represent as nominees, they are required by law to think of the best interests of the company and not of the people who nominated them. This is easy to say, but often difficult to do.

Ethical behaviour does not just require directors to behave ethically personally; it also requires them to see to it that the company conducts its business in accordance with the law and with a high standard of commercial morality.

This raises interesting issues about whether a company should break the law and pay the associated fine because it costs less to do so in the short term than complying with the law. Ethical behaviour would suggest not breaking the law even if it was cheaper to do so.

It is also important to remember that directors’ fiduciary duty means that they must comply with the spirit of the law and not just the letter of the law – which explains why Goldman Sachs looked so bad when they were testifying to Congress, justifying their actions on the grounds that they were legal only. As the cross-examination demonstrated, fiduciary duty of directors is not just to shareholders, but also to customers and clients as well; all the more so, if what is being offered is highly technical, complex and opaque with the potential to lose clients their money.

Directors should remember this and insist on a wider fiduciary duty if they are serious about preserving the company’s “licence to operate” in the long term.

Being diligent

This does not just mean attending the requisite number of board meetings and preparing for each board meeting by reading the board papers. Directors must devote enough time to remain familiar with the changing nature of the company’s business and environment, including mastering the impact on the business and its risk profile of the evolving political, legal, social and competitive context in which the company operates.

At a minimum this means directors must understand the make-up of the revenues and costs in the profit and loss account and be able to ask probing questions when the ratios show signs of changing as these are early warning indicators of eroding profitability.

They also must understand the asset intensity of the business and how it changes over time by being able to relate the balance sheet items to the amount of business they generate: for example, how much working capital is needed to generate a dollar of sales, how does it compare over time and with the competition?

Are there legitimate ways of reducing the asset intensity of the business and improving the return on capital employed, or are the means by which this is being done through the use of off-balance sheet items merely a form of dangerous financial engineering?

It also means that directors must personally know the first- and second-line managers of their company well enough to be able to contribute intelligently to the succession planning process for which they are responsible. They need to know this if they are to undertake that most difficult role of all – terminating the non-performing CEO without causing a major disruption to the business.

One of the most difficult roles is to ensure that minority shareholder rights are respected when there is a controlling shareholder – be it the founding family or the government. There are the obvious issues raised by differing perspectives on strategy caused by different risk appetites and time horizons of majority and minority shareholders.

There is also the issue of related party transactions which need to be vetted carefully to ensure that money invested by public shareholders is not being “upstreamed” or siphoned off to the advantage of the controlling shareholder via a related party transaction.

Directors must avoid all conflicts of interest wherever possible. Should a conflict arise, they must adhere scrupulously to the provisions laid down by the law and the constitution of the company in dealing with such conflicts. Should the conflict be continuous or material, the director involved should consider resigning after taking into account the impact of resignation on the other members of the board.

Directors cannot disclose confidential information without prior agreement from the board even if the people who nominated them require it – this is because their primary duty is to the company on whose board they sit.

It goes without saying that directors cannot abuse their access to confidential information and use such information for “insider trading”.

# The writer is CEO of Securities Industry Development Corp, the training and development arm of the Securities Commission.

Benefits Of Trailing Stops

Benefits Of Trailing Stops

Jun.08, 2010

One great way of playing the market is by using a trailing stop to simply follow the stock up. A trailing stop is ideal because it follows the stock up when the stock does go up, but it does not pull back as the stock pulls back. This allows you to limit your losses and secure your gains.

There are a ton of advantages to using trailing stops.

1. It Limits Your Losses

Everybody has wins and losses. They key is to limit any losses that you do have. This way any loss you do have will play a minimum role in your overall return.

If you decided to place a 10% stop for instance you would be risking only 10% of the investment that you just made. If the stock suddenly pulled back 50% you would get out near the top and could wait for it to turn around before getting back in.

2. It Does Not Limit Gains

A second advantage of using trailing stops is that it does not limit the potential gain of the position. If you bought a stock and placed a 10% stop loss on it you would not be limiting your gains, only your losses. The stock could double and you would still be in it. Only once the stock starts to turn around 10% or more would your stop be activated and your position would be sold.

3. Takes Emotions Out

Emotions have a big impact on our trading. We want to hold onto a stock when it is going up and we want to keep holding on and convince ourselves everything will be ok when it is crashing.

Sometimes you can create your own plan of action and end up side stepping that plan because you got scared. Well the great thing about trailing stops is that they are automated. You just have to set them up and then forget about them.

The trailing stop will follow the stock up and the trailing stop will eventually get you out of the position (hopefully for a profit). The only thing you need to do is to figure out how far behind you want to trail the stock and then walk away.

This is a perfect way to “stick to the game plan” when you cannot trust yourself to do it.

3 Questions to Ask Yourself When Buying a Stock

3 Questions to Ask Yourself When Buying a Stock

May.03, 2010

Trading in the stock market can be a very emotional experience. It can be hard to focus on logic and actually make rash decisions when your money is on the line. That is why, whenever you are thinking about investing into a stock you should ask yourself these three questions.

1. Why Am I Getting Into This Stock


Why are you actually getting into the stock? Is it because you heard somewhere that it is going to go up and you didn’t want to “miss out”? Or you have some fundamental or technical reason for getting into the stock. Unless there is something solid backing your decision it may be better to just walk away.

2. How Am I Going to Limit My Risk


Even if you have found a stock which you believe with 100% confidence will make you money, you may be wrong. Something may change. It happens, a lot of successful traders invest into bad stocks the trick is limiting your losses.

Maybe you want to only risk a small portion of your account on that one stock, or maybe you want to place some sort of stop to get you out of the position if the stock falls against you too much. Either way, it is important to limit your risk; otherwise you will lose all of your money on the first bad trade you make.

3. When Will I Get Out?


Something that people often forget is their exit strategy. Sure it is important to know when to enter, but even the best entry signal in the world will not help you out that much if you lose it all by holding onto the stock for too long. Figure out what you are trying to accomplish beforehand.

Why Would Someone Start Trading Stocks

Why Would Someone Start Trading Stocks

Apr.20, 2010

Trading in the stock market is a fantastic way to gain some extra money, grow your long term wealth, and to keep your mind sharp. There is basically no limit to the amount of money that a stock trader can make off of their investment and this can translate into unbelievable wealth.

What are the reasons to trade in the stock market? Below are the 4 reasons why someone would want to trade in the stock market.

1. It Can Be Very Profitable


There is no limit to the amount of money that someone can make in the stock market. There is also really no limit to how fast someone can make money. This is why you hear stories about people turning small amounts of money into millions of dollars in just a couple years.

Of course that is not the norm, but it does happen from time to time.

2. Extra Cash Flow


It is always nice to have some extra income and the stock market is one of those places that people can go about getting it. The only thing to remember is that it the extra income it brings is a byproduct of months or even years of experience. If you need the extra income tomorrow this is not the best way to get it.

3. Early Retirement


The Stock Market can make you a lot of money and in many cases it can even lead to financial freedom. All you need is the ability to make a decent return on the money and the ability to get enough money together and you can trade away living off of the money that you make off of the market alone.

4. Keeping Your Mind Sharp


When you trade the stock market you are constantly learning from your mistakes. This helps to challenge you a little bit and keep your mind sharp, which can actually be a good thing and help you have a quicker mind well into old age.