The Next Big Crash - Are You Prepared?

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#11
For property market, it seemed that everyone is jumping into it.. That could be more tricky..
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#12
There is a bit of biasness if you use forum pages to gauge. This is because some forums user base are mainly people who have invested a lot. For one, I do not use VB forum to gauge much for mkt sentiment, cause some of the frequent posters here are rather methodical and are FA-based.

However, I do admit some other forums which cover a wide variety of topics are a good indicator of market sentiments. (e.g. hardwarezone etc)
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#13
(21-05-2013, 10:23 AM)Contrarian Wrote: Can someone tell bros here any website to calculate & determine the equity risk premium for STI now? This ERP figure is quite a good statistic to time market exit and entry.

This bull seems to be driven more by liquidity more than sustained economic recovery. Except for oil n gas where oil drilling and Myanmar & Indonesia new markets, the rest are just in slow growth mode.

Hi Contrarian bro,

Do you mean the difference between STI ETF dividend yield against the Govt Bond yield?

Or is there a specific matrix / yardstick you are comparing for the risk premium? P/B? P/E?

I think i can do this for you
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#14
Stock mkt have not reach the previous peak yet...so no worries.Smile
Maybe a few minor correction along the way. Buy more on dips.
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The thing about karma, It always comes around and bite you when you least expected.
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#15
(21-05-2013, 11:37 AM)Salty Wrote: Hi Contrarian bro,

Do you mean the difference between STI ETF dividend yield against the Govt Bond yield?

Or is there a specific matrix / yardstick you are comparing for the risk premium? P/B? P/E?

I think i can do this for you

When the analyst talks about ERP, it should be the earnings yield minus the bond yield. For me I calculate my own ERP of my portfolio and it is quite different from the STI as I don't own any major STI stock. I track my own ERP and the absolute number is not as important as the trend. If I find that my ERP falls sharply then it is time to unload and keep more cash.
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#16
Straits Times has not published news of students "winning" in stock market.
If published, wait until the story hits the front page.
Radio station has not aired brokers interview at prime time.
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#17
(21-05-2013, 02:27 PM)violinist Wrote: Straits Times has not published news of students "winning" in stock market.
If published, wait until the story hits the front page.
Radio station has not aired brokers interview at prime time.

I did a ERP on bloomberg. Just sharing.
Its inversed as i use STI PE (instead of earning yield) vs 2022 SG Govt Mid yield.

Mean = 9.33
We are now 12.66 which is 3.33 point above median.

Evidence shows bullishness
   

Beware. The data could be distorted because of the period used.
The mean could be distorted and biased towards lower end due to the periods used. (crashed market)

Interpret at own risk.

Better add disclaimer.
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#18
interesting info, thanks
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#19
GIC more cautious in going for higher returns

Chief investment officer prepares for 'end game'




THE Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC), which manages more than US$100 billion (S$125 billion) of assets, said it is more cautious about seeking higher returns as yields remain low ahead of the "end game" in the next five to 10 years.

The average annual return on bond yields will be about 1.9 per cent over the next decade, while equities may offer a 1.6 per cent median real return a year during that period, said the fund's chief investment officer Lim Chow Kiat, citing different portfolio models.

"We are getting more cautious in reaching out for higher-yielding assets," Mr Lim, who assumed his position in February, said yesterday. "No one can predict when the end game will be, but we can prepare for it."

Central banks are pressing down on benchmark borrowing costs, leading investors to seek higher-yielding assets outside of government bond markets. US 10-year rates fell to an all-time low of 1.38 per cent in July, and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rallied to a record this week.

"Central banks will find it hard to exit from this quantitative easing policy," Mr Lim said, adding that "substantial risks remain".

Investors have had "largely good returns" over the past three decades, he said, and they are seeing the latest part of a 30-year credit expansion cycle with low interest rates.

"We see bubbles everywhere," Mr Bill Gross, who runs the world's biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management, said on Bloomberg Television last week. "As long as the Fed and the Bank of Japan and other central banks keep writing cheques and don't withdraw, then the bubble can be supported."

GIC said last July its cash allocation almost quadrupled to 11 per cent of its portfolio in the year ended March from 3 per cent a year earlier. Stock holdings fell to 45 per cent from 49 per cent as it pared equities in developed markets, while bond investments dropped to 17 per cent from 22 per cent, it said in its annual report.

The so-called 20-year annualised real return was 3.9 per cent as of March last year, unchanged from the previous year, it said. The annualised nominal rate of return in US-dollar terms was 3.4 per cent over five years, 7.6 per cent over 10 years and 6.8 per cent over 20 years, it said. GIC does not report an annual return or disclose the actual size of its portfolio, and is expected to release its next performance figures for the year ended March in July.

"As prices of risk assets improve, there are more pressures and temptations to reach out," said Mr Lim, 42, who previously oversaw GIC's investments and relationships in Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

He said there are investment opportunities in technology, such as China's growing online retail market, and the rising middle class in emerging economies. About one in two middle-class consumers will come from Asia in seven years.

"Though valuations are not low currently, longer-term prospects are not to be missed," he said.

GIC is ranked the world's eighth-largest government investment fund by the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute, which estimates it manages US$247.5 billion.

BLOOMBERG
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#20
"We see bubbles everywhere," good highlight haha

GIC said last July its cash allocation almost quadrupled to 11 per cent of its portfolio in the year ended March from 3 per cent a year earlier.
Seems like they having difficulty getting good deals to invest in
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