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  A film about Asian Women in Palliative Care
Posted by: greengiraffe - 09-03-2013, 11:46 AM - Forum: Others - No Replies

Life is a journey and death is part of it. While we are actively seeking to enhance our wealth for the betterment of our lives and our dependents, it may be good to take a break and ponder over a taboo subject.

Check out the 20+min movie:

http://aftercicely.com/

GG

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  Singapore: The World's Richest City
Posted by: Boon - 09-03-2013, 11:15 AM - Forum: Others - No Replies

Singapore - an order-obsessed Asian version of Wall Street ?

Singapore: The World's Richest City

When most people think of Singapore, an order-obsessed Asian version of Wall Street comes to mind. But lately, Singapore has become a haven for the ultra-rich. WSJ Senior Editor Jonathan Dahl joins Lunch Break. Photo: Darren Soh/Redux Pictures

http://live.wsj.com/video/singapore-the-...79E5E08127

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  Sow early to reap better rewards
Posted by: Musicwhiz - 03-03-2013, 09:22 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (12)

The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on Mar 03, 2013
SMALL CHANGE
Sow early to reap better rewards

A regretful investor looks back and wishes he had started his forays into the stock market earlier

By Jonathan Kwok

There always seemed to be something better to do at university than grapple with my personal finances and try to get to grips with the stock market.

All those numbers and charts flying around were confusing and as was normal with students, why worry about something now when you can put it off for a bit?

There was also the notion that finances and investing were for "adults", and as an undergraduate it was more natural to focus on the various aspects of student life, like hanging out with my friends... and studying, of course.

During those years, I viewed money only as a means to acquire my immediate material wants and needs. Inevitably, I was not careful how I spent it: Splurging on relatively expensive meals in restaurants and taking taxis to get around were the norm.

Goodness knows how many thousands of dollars I wasted during those years when I really should have saved cash by choosing cheaper alternatives like hawker centre meals or taking the bus.

The result was that my bank balance was practically zero at the end of my four-year course.

I had spent all of my army allowance and pocket money that my parents gave me during university while not saving a cent.

It was around this time that I read American author Robert Kiyosaki's best-selling book, Rich Dad Poor Dad.

I quickly took to the idea of making money work for me, to create a source of "passive income" - essentially, money that would flow into my pocket without me having to work for it.

It was only then, right at the end of my schooling life, that my interest in investing was kick-started.

With property so expensive and out of reach, it made more sense for me to focus on the stock market, where I could get started with a few thousand dollars or even less.

Since then I have started to slowly but surely learn more about stocks. After saving part of my salary from one year of work, I finally bought my first lot of shares in 2010, at the age of 26.

That investment cost me $960, excluding brokerage fees.

Many of my friends my age or older have still not started their investment journeys. Their reasons are the same as the ones which I used to have - that the stock market is too opaque, too confusing, too technical.

Compared with them, I started my journey at a relatively young age.

But with the benefit of hindsight, I wish I had started when I was even younger - during university or perhaps during my national service days.

Starting young has several advantages. For one thing, it brings a new perspective to money.

Above and beyond fulfilling my material wants, I see money now as a valuable tool that can earn me handsome returns if I were to deploy it wisely.

There was a fresh impetus to save and I have become much more thrifty. So if I had started earlier, I would have saved more instead of wasting my cash.

Starting young also allows you to harness the powerful magic of compounding that much earlier.

Basically, compounding means the dividends or gains you earn are added to the principal sum initially invested, which in turn generates even more gains.

You can earn a substantial sum by putting money into the market from a young age, reinvesting the dividends and watching the sum grow over the years. Needless to say, the returns will be greater if they are given more time to grow.

Another reason involves the opportunities to time the market. One major school of thought in investment involves trying to "buy low and sell high" to make a profit.

The market moves in cycles, and you will encounter more "dips", or buying opportunities, the longer you are in the market.

The 2008 and 2009 market crash presented a massive buying opportunity for stocks.

The market has dipped on occasion since then but never reached those depressed valuations seen during the global financial crisis. Indeed, stocks may never be as cheap again.

Take blue-chip DBS Group Holdings. It was trading at between $7 and $10 during those years, and I remember a friend urging me to buy at that time.

"It's a good bank, it's a good stock," she said. "Just buy one lot, you are sure to make money."

The problem was that I was only starting to work and had no savings. I also had no brokerage account and no idea how to even buy a stock. So I passed up on the opportunity.

DBS shares are now at about $15 so I would have made at least 50 per cent if I had started saving and investing much younger.

Starting early does not mean you need to buy stocks all the time but it does mean you are prepared to strike when the opportunity presents itself.

Of course, all investments entail risks and timing the market can be a nerve-racking game.

Older investors are replete with stories of how they bought shares in 2000 amid the dot.com boom only to see the market crash over the next two years as the bubble burst.

But starting young gives an advantage. It means you have many more years of working life and investing ahead, allowing time to recoup those losses.

That is why financial advisers often recommend that young investors buy "high risk, high return" instruments such as stocks or even commodities, before switching to "low risk, low return" instruments such as bonds as they near retirement.

And this is not just theory for me any more. That first stock investment I made is now worth $1,300, a return of 35 per cent excluding dividends.

Nothing to complain about for sure, but a shame I didn't start a bit earlier.

jonkwok@sph.com.sg

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  Car loan curbs: What were they meant to achieve?
Posted by: Musicwhiz - 02-03-2013, 11:05 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (29)

Amazing the amount of happiness this policy has gennerated!

The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on Mar 02, 2013
Car loan curbs: What were they meant to achieve?

Unclear if aim was about financial prudence or cooling COE prices

By Christopher Tan, Senior Correspondent

THE car loan curbs announced on Monday by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) are befuddling from a policy point of view.

What exactly is the MAS trying to achieve by restricting car loans to 60 per cent of purchase price and repayment period to five years, after a decade of deregulation?

The authority said the restrictions are "necessary to encourage financial prudence among buyers of motor vehicles". In the same breath, it added that the curbs do not apply to loans for commercial vehicles and motorcycles.

Is financial prudence not important for buyers of these vehicles?

It is equally confusing when we consider what the authority, in lifting the previous set of car loan restrictions in 2003, said.

To recap, it said car loans formed a small proportion of financial institutions' total loan portfolio - which is still generally the case today. It added that the level of non-performing car loans was also low. Again, defaults are still relatively low in relation to the number of loans disbursed, even if there is anecdotal evidence of a rise in absolute numbers.

Granted, policies should be reviewed over time to ensure they remain relevant. But the MAS should expend a bit more effort in explaining the change in policy. For instance, give concrete evidence of the damage that an unregulated car loan market has done, or explain why it might now be concerned about it.

The late deputy prime minister Goh Keng Swee - who helped set up the MAS - believed in this. In his book The Economics Of Modernisation, he noted the importance of communicating and explaining policies - no matter how complex - clearly.

As it is, we can only guess at the MAS' real purpose in imposing its latest measures.

Are the curbs aimed at cooling the overheated certificate of entitlement (COE) market? This is the popular theory. In fact, in an appeal to the MAS, motor traders argued that used cars do not contribute to vehicle population growth or influence COE prices, and thus should not face the same punitive curbs. The traders have a valid point.

In any case, will the curbs cool COE prices, which are now near record levels?

In January last year, Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam told Parliament the previous loan restrictions (effective from 1995 to 2003) were "not very effective in influencing COE prices". He added that car loans granted by financial institutions do not pose a threat to financial stability, as they formed a "very small proportion" of total consumer loans.

Obviously, there must have been a fundamental shift in thinking in the last 12 months because, now, the MAS feels car loans must be controlled.

While the merits of prudence are well accepted, should the state be enforcing a responsibility that is considered by many to be personal?

And assuming individuals are spending beyond their means, the banks - with their layers of due diligence, governance and financial discipline - will not disburse money to folks whom they feel are credit risks. Especially after the 2008 sub-prime debacle when banks were over-indulgent.

These policy posers aside, the new rules will have profound and immediate implications for car buyers and sellers alike.

First of all, the financing curbs will be another blow to an already heavily regulated market (the car market has been controlled by a slew of hefty taxes since the 1960s and the vehicle quota system since 1990). This time round though, the impact will be felt more by financiers, as well as motor companies and employees who have come to rely on loan commissions.

On the other side of the fence, consumers will also take a hit. The biggest impact will be felt by the less well-off, as well as those who do not have huge amounts of cash lying around. A check with industry players reveals that the majority of non-luxury car buyers take up loans of 70 per cent or more, spread over seven years or longer.

The figures are even higher for used-car buyers.

Will car buyers see relief in the form of a COE price drop? If there is a premium drop, many should have a tangible gain - if the cars they buy are those with open-market values (OMV) that are $20,000 or less. That's because a newly introduced tiered Additional Registration Fee (ARF) scheme will raise the purchase price of cars with higher OMVs.

Will there be a meaningful correction to COE premiums? Logically, COE prices should retreat in the near to medium term - if nothing else, then from the shock effect of the loan restrictions and ARF hike. If so, lightly geared buyers of budget cars should come out of recent developments with a smile on their faces.

But given the tight COE supply (which is expected to remain tight for another year or more) and Singapore's growing population, premiums are unlikely to stay depressed for a prolonged period.

For COEs to remain "reasonable", a number of long-term measures need to be in place. As simplistic as it sounds, top of the list is curbing demand - by monetary as well as non-monetary means.

Right now, we are relying too heavily on the former. As the market has amply shown, demand for cars remains strong even though prices keep heading north.

Clearly, steps will also be needed to curb demand for cars via non-monetary means. Again, the obvious thing to do is to have an excellent public transport system. Alas that is not quite the case yet,and getting there is going to take some time.

Less obvious is to make driving less of a joy. Perverse as that sounds, that is effective in showing the demerits of car ownership. That is precisely what many cities do.

Singapore, however, has a strong aversion to congestion and keeps building and widening roads and ensuring there is ample parking. On the other hand, it curbs loans to reduce demand for cars. Surely, a rethink is in order here.

christan@sph.com.sg

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  In-N-Out Burger
Posted by: CityFarmer - 19-02-2013, 05:30 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (16)

This is a US private company, so i think it is more appropriate to post under others, rather on US listed company

I read article on this private company in latest The Edge, on the new youngest US billionaire owner. It started way back in 1948, and went thru 3 generations of owners.

I am more interest to know its success story. Its estimated EV is much more than Yum!Brand and McDonald.

Anyone tried its burger in US? There is one outlet in Singapore too. Anyone tried?

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  Reader’s Digest files for bankruptcy as iconic magazine falters
Posted by: CityFarmer - 18-02-2013, 09:10 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (7)

One more casualty of media's digitization. Sad to hear that, Reader Digest was one of my favorite magazine during schooling time.

Reader’s Digest files for bankruptcy as iconic magazine falters

NEW YORK — The publisher of the 91-year-old Reader’s Digest magazine, RDA Holding, has filed for bankruptcy to cut US$465 million (S$575 million) in debt and focus on North American operations as consumers shift from print to electronic media.

The company is the latest in a line of iconic businesses to have recently sought court protection from creditors, after Hostess Brands, maker of Twinkies and Wonder Bread, and Eastman Kodak, inventor of Kodachrome and the Instamatic camera.

http://www.todayonline.com/business/read...ne-falters

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  ADVERTISING RULES
Posted by: RBM - 15-02-2013, 11:13 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (4)

To the Moderators,

Thank you for your continued excellent work moderating the postings on the VB website. I am sure that other VB forummers are at least as appreciative.

One subject that I would like to revisit is advertising. Some months ago it was agreed that an Advertising VB thread would be set up. I note this has been used on several occasions for advertisement postings. Good.

However, I also note that we continue to get blatant advertising posted either on new threads or on existing threads. An example is the "Village" real estate advertisement posted in the early hours of this morning, 15th February 2013. The forummers making such postings are simply not abiding by the rules.

My proposal:
1. We continue to have a dedicated Advertising VB thread for the use of forummers for placing their advertisements.
2. Any postings which are placed on other VB threads, i.e. including new VB threads, which in the judgement of the moderators are Advertisements, are immediately deleted. Decisions in this regard shall be solely made by the moderators (we won't get into debates).
3. Paid advertisements, of a non-pornographic, "non-adult", non-offensive nature, will be welcomed.

- The principle being that if you abide by the rules the advertisement stays, if you don't its deleted.
- The purpose being to maintain the very high quality of this Investment Forum.

Just a suggestion. If this approach already applies, then I apologise for wasting everyone's time.

Again - my sincere thanks to the moderators.

Respectfully stated,
RBM

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  Chinese zodiac report: Most of Singapore's wealthiest born in Year of Rooster
Posted by: pianist - 14-02-2013, 10:09 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (7)

Wealth-X, the ultra high net worth (UHNW) business development solution for global private banks, luxury brands, educational institutions and non-profits, has released its Chinese zodiac special report on global UHNW individuals.

Based on findings from the report, the zodiac sign of the Rabbit has the largest UHNW population globally and in most regions except for the US.

Zodiac
% of total UHNWIs
Rabbit
9.5%
Monkey
8.7%
Goat
8.6%
Horse
8.5%
Dragon
8.4%
Ox
8.2%
Snake
8.2%
Rat
8.1%
Pig
8.0%
Tiger
8.0%
Rooster
8.0%
Dog
7.8%

According to a Shin Min report, the survey was conducted in 2012 and only included those whose wealth is more than $30 million; that amounted to 187,380 people.

The Shin Min report also stated who were the dominant wealthy zodiac signs in each country:

Country
Zodiac
Taiwan
Snake
Thailand
Dragon
India
Rat
Japan
Horse
China
Rabbit
South Korea
Rabbit
Singapore
Rooster
Malaysia
Ox


UHNWIs in the zodiac sign of the Goat have the highest average net worth at US$157.9 million (S$195 million) while those under the zodiac sign of the Dog have the lowest average net worth at US$104.6 million.

Contrary to traditional beliefs, UHNWIs in the zodiac sign of the Rabbit are the most decadent in terms of luxury spend and those in the zodiac sign of the Pig are the most conservative in their spending on luxury.

The Shin Min report also pointed out that those born in the year of the Rabbit earned alot and spent alot as well.

UHNWIs in the zodiac sign of the Monkey are most likely to be billionaires while the UHNWIs in the zodiac sign of the Dog are least likely to be billionaires.

Commenting on the report, Wealth-X CEO, Mykolas D. Rambus noted, "Our analysis clearly debunks popular beliefs that see the Dragon as the most prosperous zodiac sign."

"No particular zodiac sign offers a significant financial advantage over another nor acts as a predictive symbol of the propensity for wealth. However, this report does point to trends associated with certain zodiac signs, such as education and luxury spend, which could well prove useful to business development professionals," he added.

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  Senior CPIB officer being investigated: TNP report
Posted by: cfa - 14-02-2013, 10:37 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (1)

CPIB vs CPIB ;

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/senior-cpib-off...59522.html

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  Investors enthused by rising market, especially among lower-cost punts
Posted by: Musicwhiz - 06-02-2013, 07:16 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (32)

As a sentiment indicator, we should probably all be wary when we start reading articles like these in the news! I am very cautious in my approach now that optimism is rearing its head - not a good environment at all for purchasing securities with a margin of safety!

The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on Feb 06, 2013
Investors enthused by rising market, especially among lower-cost punts


By Jonathan Kwok

TRADING volumes have gone through the roof this year as investors flock back to the share market, many with the hope of making a quick buck on penny stocks.

About 4.88 billion shares are changing hands during every trading session, more than twice the 1.78 billion average in the same period last year, Bloomberg data shows.

The value of those trades has risen too. The daily average of $1.8 billion this year is more than 40 per cent higher than the $1.28 billion in the same period last year.

The much greater jump in volume figures than the value reflects the lower average values of the units being traded, indicating that investors are keener on penny stocks and lower-cost punts.

"From December, I already had some clients that came in. Because January was such a good start, a few more of my clients came back," said remisier Desmond Leong. "The market volume reflects this."

He notes that January is usually a good month for the stock market as people start to position themselves for the rest of the year. The market - and trading volumes - also performed well in December compared with previous years so there had been some momentum leading into the new year.

While the general market has been on the rise, the really impressive gainers have been among the penny stocks that investors are focusing on.

The FTSE ST Catalist Index, which tracks stocks on the secondary Catalist board, has jumped 13.1 per cent this year while the FTSE ST Fledgling Index - it contains the mainboard's smallest stocks by market value - is up 15.3 per cent.

By contrast, the behemoths on the blue-chip Straits Times Index (STI) have had a much more muted showing. The index is up only 3.3 per cent for the year, while trading volumes of STI member stocks have actually dropped compared with last year.

An average of 262 million shares of STI stocks have changed hands each session this year, compared with last year's 360 million shares.

Still the market has had a strong showing, especially last month.

Singapore Exchange (SGX) figures out yesterday showed that the bourse's market capitalisation at Jan 31 hit a record for end-of-month values.

The combined value of all primary and secondary listings was $985.8 billion at the end of last month, SGX data shows.

That topped the previous record of $934.5 billion set at the end of December, which had in turn beaten the $921.5 billion value at the end of October 2007 - the market's peak before the global financial crisis.

Observers said the market has recently been boosted by rounds of money-printing by central banks in the United States, Japan and Europe.

There were 776 listed securities at the end of January, unchanged from December, SGX data shows.

There was one delisting during the month but also one new listing, so the number of securities listed remained unchanged.

There are more listed stocks now than at January last year, when there were 772 securities on the SGX.

jonkwok@sph.com.sg

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