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Let the bull charge!


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Mid-term trendline support at 1,766
By KEN TAI,
senior technical strategist,
KELIVE RESEARCH
(part of the Kim Eng Group)

DESPITE the recent pullbacks, the local bourse remains within wave-4 of the primary downtrend. In a complex wave-4 structure like the current one, the Straits Times Index (STI) may stage a correction before pushing up to complete the formation.

Unless the STI falls below the 1,766 support trendline, we consider the bear rally to be intact. On this premise too, we see scope for the STI to recover this week as it is still trading above the mid- term support trendline established over the past two months.

We would advise investors to cut loss only if this mid-term support trendline is breached, a scenario that would negate the recovery view and one that could potentially send the market towards the next support at 1,711. Although the upcoming Jan 22 Budget remains a possible re-rating catalyst in the very short term, it would be prudent to hedge some risks by going long on Reits.

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You may dislike negative view during rally time. However, whoever long in 2008 during rally (except end Oct/ beginning Nov. rebound) will know what exactly is 'Bear Rally' (of course, after being trapped only!).

By R SIVANITHY
SENIOR CORRESPONDENT
Source: Businesstimes.com

FOR most of 2008, the advice given in this column was to selectively buy the dips but to always sell into strength because all bounces would eventually turn out to be bear traps.

As 2009 kicks off, we see no reason to change this - as the economic data worsens and it becomes clear that the recession could be worse than expected and last probably for most of this year. Investors will find it increasingly difficult to justify continued buying, especially as earnings head south and profit warnings become the norm.

One reason for this assertion is that 2008 demonstrated very graphically the folly in believing that the market discounts information efficiently. It does not. Every time there was a bounce there was no shortage of calls that the 'worst is over', only for this to be later proven wrong.

The main problem, of course, is asymmetrical bias introduced by analysts, most of whom always want to call a 'buy' because of momentum, fear of losing out, and a need to keep clients invested in order to generate business.

There's also bias introduced by the US government with its bailout packages that are funded by the printing presses. Goldman Sachs estimates that the Fed's balance sheet will be US$4 trillion-US$5 trillion when this is over, double the present figure.

So it is that a year after the market started correcting, it's very likely that urgings to buy will soon be issued based on the argument that after so long, the worst must surely be discounted because market inefficiency cannot last this long.

This is highly unlikely, with the present bounce being yet another bear market rally since it has come despite the Singapore government downgrading 2009's growth forecast to possibly as low as -2 per cent. There's also news that local property prices are in free fall (possibly as much as -30 to -35 per cent in the high end) and as US manufacturing chalked up its worst performance in 30 years.

On the latter point, it's also worth noting that the US Institute of Supply Management's estimate of national manufacturing conditions at 32.4 was way below the consensus estimate of 35.4, suggesting that the pace of contraction is accelerating and that analysts are still under- appreciating the risks to the US economy.

Unlike some of its competitors, research outfit Ideaglobal, however, has been consistently spot-on in its assessment of economic conditions, and over the weekend it pointed to a deterioration in most of the underlying components of the US manufacturing numbers as probably marking the next leg down for months to come.

'In our estimation, the data confirms that weakness in the domestic side of the ledger is complementing deteriorating global conditions. The weakness in new orders, alongside weakness in production, is another indication of the soft demand for new goods on the back of a deteriorating labour market ...' said Ideaglobal.

In its US Economics Analyst report dated Dec 31, Goldman Sachs said it expects the massive fiscal and monetary stimulus to end the technical recession some time in the second half of 2009.

'This should set the stage for a very sluggish recovery that keeps the unemployment rate on an upward trajectory and the federal funds rate near zero per cent through late 2010. But the uncertainty is large. In the housing and credit markets, our main questions are how far home prices will fall, what this means for credit losses and how far banks will reduce their leverage. Downside risks predominate in all of these areas.'

Most interestingly, Goldman said even if policymakers manage to stabilise economic activity in 2009-10, the risk of unwanted deflation is likely to be substantial thereafter.

Of course, the present play on the major indices could continue for a while longer. Much of the Straits Times Index's (STI) rise over the past week, however, has come from gains in a few large caps, in particular UOB whose gains illustrate perfectly the current disconnect between market sentiment and economic/earnings reality.

This disconnect, however, shouldn't last too long, so those who bought a fortnight ago when this column highlighted a possible window-dressing play on the STI should soon sell into strength - or risk being caught in yet another bear trap.

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Most of the over sold signal is present. Target set at $1.10.




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The uptrend is well supported and still young!




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The following paragraph is the best to sum up the great achievement of American in 2008. Indeed, we realized that American has channeled most if not all of their resources and effort in creative (but proven failure) financial engineering product. It is so complex that they themselves don’t even understand it.

We've cleaned the sewage system in the finance industry; we've purged the subprime mortgage bankers, brokers, and borrowers; we've blown open the biggest Ponzi scheme ever; we've uncloaked the automobile industry; we've admitted there never was nor is there a good reason for the war in Iraq; we've woken up to the war in Afghanistan; we've owned up to torture and unlawful rendition; we've discovered politicians' affairs, payoffs, and bribes; we've quashed gay marriage rights; we've unprotected protected parks and land areas; we've changed federal documents that show climate change is true; we've allowed genocide to rise and continue; we've been lied to (again) by a best-selling memoirist; we've experienced natural disasters and manmade ones; horses were slaughtered; bees went extinct; oceans suffocated; glaciers receded; and entire countries went bankrupt.

The full article link:
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/these-best-times----no/story.aspx?guid=%7BF38F005A%2D2759%2D48B3%2DA135%2DAB6F59E3AC19%7D&dist=TNMostRead



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SAIZEN Reit has proposed a renounceable non-underwritten rights issue with free detachable and transferrable warrants. All these hinge on the issue price of 9 cents each, which represents a discount of about 30% of last-traded price of 13 cents.

Saizen has top the reit in Singapore as the worst performing reit in share price. It dropped by 85% (from $0.89 to $0.13) and distributing historical dividend of more then 40% now.

It dropped further 7.37% this morning to $0.12, after the announcement made.
Any investor with sound mind will not expect a 40% dividend payout to be sustainable in long term. The high level of gearing is worrisome under credit crunch environment. A better development now is for Saizen to find a substantial shareholder to sponsor the reit instead of currently fragmented shareholding.

It may be good for it to crash below 9 cents and to force all committed shareholders to subscribe all rights shares to increase their stake.

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