how relevant is the middleman role in 2023?
https://www.exchangerates.org.uk/data/currencies/live-sgd-cnh-exchange-rate
 
https://www.investing.com/currencies/usd-sgd-chart
 
https://www.hindustantimes.com/ht-insight/international-affairs/singapores-diplomacy-outreach-on-the-us-china-rivalry-101631021401989.html
Joelton ( Date: 27-Dec-2022 09:29) Posted:
|
OCBC said to hire ex-Goldman&rsquo s Jason Moo as its private bank CEO
 
JASON Moo, who spent more than two decades at Goldman Sachs Group, will become the new chief at the private banking unit of Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC), according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
 
Moo, a Singaporean, will start at Bank of Singapore next year, said the person, who declined to be identified discussing confidential details. The executive left Julius Baer Group in mid-December and will succeed Bahren Shaari, who is set to retire at the end of 2022 after seven years in his current role.
 
Moo and a Bank of Singapore spokesperson declined to comment.
 
Bank of Singapore is among the top 10 private banks in Asia-excluding China, according to Asian Private Banker&rsquo s rankings, and manages about US$114 billion in client assets.
 
The new chief executive officer will need to navigate a highly competitive industry where global wealth managers from UBS Group to Credit Suisse Group and Citigroup are vying for more market share in Asia. Meantime, the anticipated global economic slowdown and volatile markets are contributing to lower transaction volumes among wealthy clients.
 
Moo was most recently head of private banking in South-east Asia at Julius Baer, which he joined in 2020 after his time with Goldman Sachs. At the US bank, he held roles including head of private wealth management for South-east Asia and Australia, as well as head of Asia-Pacific alternative capital markets in Hong Kong.
https://www.twpen.com/%E5%AE%B6.html
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7h0Yqv3JRug
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 15:43) Posted:
|
https://www.globaldata.com/media/business-fundamentals/temasek-investments-showcase-minimal-impact-of-ftx/
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIflkJHzhq0
 
https://journeytothewestresearch.com/2019/12/30/the-origin-of-sun-wukongs-cloud-somersault/
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 15:34) Posted:
|
will liquidity dry out as all money goes to yield and bank savings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FxQE6d26s0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FxQE6d26s0
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 13:53) Posted:
|
ang mo christmas' s rally rigger a rise in HK and sgx blue chips today
usdsgd 1.3482
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/index/sti?countrycode=sg
 
long time after the collapse of
https://www.spglobal.com/commodityinsights/en/market-insights/blogs/oil/092420-after-hin-leong-collapse-of-a-singaporean-oil-prodigy
 
and three years of long covid 19 hypernation
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%E2%80%9321_Singapore_circuit_breaker_measures
 
and crypto' s crashed in 2022
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 11:57) Posted:
|
https://www.investopedia.com/decentralized-finance-defi-5113835
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 11:54) Posted:
|
in monopoly , i always ask is it a Ponzi scheme like the madoff 2008' s case
https://tenor.com/view/monopoly-floss-fortnite-monopoly-floss-fortnite-dance-gif-16266128
https://tenor.com/view/monopoly-floss-fortnite-monopoly-floss-fortnite-dance-gif-16266128
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 11:47) Posted:
|
oil,dollar,trade,stock market,swift,tresury,bonds rates and trade
https://tenor.com/view/monopoly-gif-4907489
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jv5q042QTWw
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 11:41) Posted:
|
petro yuan 谁 能 再 断 别 人 财 路 ?
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 11:38) Posted:
|
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KW2PI8RWBic
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 11:30) Posted:
|
living with dollar hegamony
https://www.macrotrends.net/2561/us-dollar-singapore-exchange-rate-historical-chart
https://www.macrotrends.net/2561/us-dollar-singapore-exchange-rate-historical-chart
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 11:23) Posted:
|
from Zero-covid to lving with covid19
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/covid19-dine-vaccination-home-recovery-booster-new-normal-2232901
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/covid19-dine-vaccination-home-recovery-booster-new-normal-2232901
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 11:20) Posted:
|
THOSE who believe the world economy can avoid the hardest of landings next year are watching China closely to see whether its move to loosen pandemic restrictions will help that scenario come about or end up wrecking it.
The knock-on effects of ditching &ldquo zero-Covid&rdquo remain highly uncertain given China&rsquo s patchy vaccine coverage, fragile health structures and the lack of clarity about the real extent of infections as Covid-19 cases start to surge.
The World Bank on Tuesday (Dec 20) cut its China growth outlook for this year and next, listing the impact of the abrupt loosening of strict Covid-19 containment measures alongside other factors including its shaky property sector.
Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda cited the resurgence of virus cases in China as putting downward pressure on the global economy, while Taiwan listed the spread of Covid-19 in China as one big uncertainty facing its economy.
Yet the consensus view remains that if China can get a grip on what US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen this month called the &ldquo very complex problem&rdquo of switching its Covid-19 stance, this would boost both its domestic economy and the global one.
That would in turn bolster the belief of policymakers in Group of Seven (G7) countries that their interest rate hikes will end up taming inflation and that any recessions that result will be relatively shallow and shortlive
If you look forward six months to the exit of the Covid wave ... we&rsquo ll be getting to a point where China just like everyone else gets to live with Covid,&rdquo said Mike Gallagher, director of research at Continuum Economics.
&ldquo The big strategic play is towards reopening. It is just going to be very bumpy.&rdquo
But equally, those inflationary pressures could be cancelled out if China&rsquo s woes led to softer global demand for commodities.
&ldquo It&rsquo s hard to say ... how those two will offset each other,&rdquo Fed chair Jerome Powell told reporters last week after the US central bank&rsquo s latest interest rate hike.
&ldquo It&rsquo s a risky situation,&rdquo he said while adding it &ldquo doesn&rsquo t seem like it&rsquo s likely to have a material overall effect on us&rdquo .
The New York Fed&rsquo s Global Supply Chain Pressure Index, launched about a year ago, already edged higher in October and November in a moderate reversal of a persistent loosening of global supply bottlenecks seen through most of 2022.
But some argue that the fact that the rest of the world&rsquo s economy has long since re-opened and started producing goods means that any supply snags due to China this time around would not be as pronounced as they were last year.
Much will depend on the policy response of Chinese leaders who have pledged to support the slowing economy and to cushion the impact of rising Covid-19 infections.
Fitch Ratings chief economist Brian Coulton said he expected a rise in infections to cause initial disruptions to activity early next year due to sickness absences and social distancing.
&ldquo However there should be a stronger recovery in activity from the middle of next year,&rdquo he said.
The World Bank now sees China&rsquo s economy growing 2.7 per cent this year and 4.3 per cent in 2023, somewhat slower than its September forecasts of 2.8 per cent and 4.5 per cent, respectively. But for now, that will not be a major preoccupation for policymakers elsewhere.
In the &ldquo risk assessment&rdquo part of its statement explaining its latest rate hike last week, the European Central Bank dwelt on various threats to the region&rsquo s outlook, starting with the Ukraine war. China&rsquo s Covid battle was not among those risks. REUTERS
 
The knock-on effects of ditching &ldquo zero-Covid&rdquo remain highly uncertain given China&rsquo s patchy vaccine coverage, fragile health structures and the lack of clarity about the real extent of infections as Covid-19 cases start to surge.
The World Bank on Tuesday (Dec 20) cut its China growth outlook for this year and next, listing the impact of the abrupt loosening of strict Covid-19 containment measures alongside other factors including its shaky property sector.
Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda cited the resurgence of virus cases in China as putting downward pressure on the global economy, while Taiwan listed the spread of Covid-19 in China as one big uncertainty facing its economy.
Yet the consensus view remains that if China can get a grip on what US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen this month called the &ldquo very complex problem&rdquo of switching its Covid-19 stance, this would boost both its domestic economy and the global one.
That would in turn bolster the belief of policymakers in Group of Seven (G7) countries that their interest rate hikes will end up taming inflation and that any recessions that result will be relatively shallow and shortlive
If you look forward six months to the exit of the Covid wave ... we&rsquo ll be getting to a point where China just like everyone else gets to live with Covid,&rdquo said Mike Gallagher, director of research at Continuum Economics.
&ldquo The big strategic play is towards reopening. It is just going to be very bumpy.&rdquo
&lsquo Risky situation&rsquo
One such bump could be if global supply chains are disrupted again as Chinese workers start to fall sick in large numbers, reigniting inflation elsewhere just as central bankers see signs it has finally started to peak.But equally, those inflationary pressures could be cancelled out if China&rsquo s woes led to softer global demand for commodities.
&ldquo It&rsquo s hard to say ... how those two will offset each other,&rdquo Fed chair Jerome Powell told reporters last week after the US central bank&rsquo s latest interest rate hike.
&ldquo It&rsquo s a risky situation,&rdquo he said while adding it &ldquo doesn&rsquo t seem like it&rsquo s likely to have a material overall effect on us&rdquo .
The New York Fed&rsquo s Global Supply Chain Pressure Index, launched about a year ago, already edged higher in October and November in a moderate reversal of a persistent loosening of global supply bottlenecks seen through most of 2022.
But some argue that the fact that the rest of the world&rsquo s economy has long since re-opened and started producing goods means that any supply snags due to China this time around would not be as pronounced as they were last year.
Much will depend on the policy response of Chinese leaders who have pledged to support the slowing economy and to cushion the impact of rising Covid-19 infections.
Fitch Ratings chief economist Brian Coulton said he expected a rise in infections to cause initial disruptions to activity early next year due to sickness absences and social distancing.
&ldquo However there should be a stronger recovery in activity from the middle of next year,&rdquo he said.
The World Bank now sees China&rsquo s economy growing 2.7 per cent this year and 4.3 per cent in 2023, somewhat slower than its September forecasts of 2.8 per cent and 4.5 per cent, respectively. But for now, that will not be a major preoccupation for policymakers elsewhere.
In the &ldquo risk assessment&rdquo part of its statement explaining its latest rate hike last week, the European Central Bank dwelt on various threats to the region&rsquo s outlook, starting with the Ukraine war. China&rsquo s Covid battle was not among those risks. REUTERS
 
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 10:22) Posted:
|
raising rates to decouple economy and deglobalisation
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/d/decoupling.asp
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHhWGI_d7b0
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 10:17) Posted:
|
the only one debt country that can print money to cancel the debts
https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/05/ltbondrisk.asp
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxGsU8oIWjY& t=77s
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 10:08) Posted:
|
how long can the combative J.Powell goes with its rate weapons
The Federal Reserve raised the fed funds rate by 50bps to 4.25%-4.5% during its last monetary policy meeting of 2022, pushing borrowing costs to the highest level since 2007, and in line with market expectations. It was a seventh consecutive rate hike, following four straight three-quarter point increases.
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADh6QTp8798
https://www.perunconsultants.com/en/blog/2022/3/29/how-to-restructure-your-offshore-chinese-debt
 
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 10:00) Posted:
|
https://globalrestructuringreview.com/article/hong-kong-court-warns-against-using-offshore-schemes-deal-us-debt
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_xjyERQI7Gk
 
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 09:56) Posted:
|
how long will the hsortists carry up the shorting when
Electric-vehicle maker Tesla has long been among the most shorted U.S. stocks.PHOTO:  NARONG SANGNAK/SHUTTERSTOCK
The  Tesla  Inc.  TSLA  -0.17%decrease red down pointing triangle  bears are finally feeling somewhat vindicated. 
After years of wrong-way bets, investors shorting the shares of  Elon Musk&lsquo s electric-vehicle maker are sitting on collective gains of $15 billion in 2022, according to data from S3 Partners. 
Appeared in the December 22, 2022, print edition as ' Tesla Bears Reap $15 Billion in Gains From Short Selling EV Maker&rsquo s Shares' .
Tesla Bears Are Sitting on $15 Billion in Gains This Year
Reversal of fortunes for Elon Musk&rsquo s company has been music to the ears of the stock&rsquo s many detractors
 
Electric-vehicle maker Tesla has long been among the most shorted U.S. stocks.PHOTO:  NARONG SANGNAK/SHUTTERSTOCK
By  Jack Pitcher
Updated Dec. 21, 2022 4:59 pm ET 
 
Listen to article
Length(7 minutes)
Queue
After years of wrong-way bets, investors shorting the shares of  Elon Musk&lsquo s electric-vehicle maker are sitting on collective gains of $15 billion in 2022, according to data from S3 Partners. 
Short sellers borrow shares and sell them with the hope of profiting by buying the stock back at a lower price later.
Tesla shares have fallen 61% in 2022, including Tuesday&rsquo s 8.1% drop, dinged by the higher interest-rate environment that has sent speculative stocks tumbling back to earth. Investors have also  grown increasingly concerned  that Mr. Musk&rsquo s attention is divided following  his takeover of Twitter Inc.
The  reversal of Tesla&rsquo s fortunes  has been music to the ears of the stock&rsquo s many detractors who  watched in astonishment  when it kicked off a monster run in early 2020, with little regard for fundamentals.
Tesla traded around $30, on a split-adjusted basis, at the start of that year and eventually peaked above $400 in November 2021. Its valuation swelled to more than $1.2 trillion, making it one of the largest companies in the U.S. by market value. The stock closed Wednesday at $137.57, a two-year low.
&ldquo It has not been an easy road being a Tesla bear,&rdquo said Andrew Left, the founder of Citron Research who is known for betting against stocks. &ldquo It&rsquo s been a pain-in-the-ass trade.&rdquo  
Of course, many Tesla bears didn&rsquo t stick around. Some were forced to  call off their bets  and close their positions at a loss during the precipitous rise in the company&rsquo s shares. Collective mark-to-market losses on the trade were a whopping $51 billion over the course of 2020 and 2021, according to S3.
Tesla has long been among the most shorted U.S. stocks. The rapid increase in the shares during the pandemic was exacerbated in part by the many short sellers who were forced to buy back shares to close their losing positions.
Short interest in Tesla peaked at more than $51 billion in January 2021, but has fallen to average $19.3 billion in 2022, according to S3. Roughly 3% of the stock&rsquo s free float is currently sold short, down from an average of 10% in 2020. 
Mr. Left, who was previously burned by his short position, says he promised himself at one point that he would never trade Tesla again. This summer, though, he says he began to get &ldquo FOMO,&rdquo or a fear of missing out, and he jumped back in. Mr. Left said he closed his position Thursday at a profit but sees room for the shares to fall further.
&ldquo It&rsquo s still an expensive stock,&rdquo he said. &ldquo By no means is this over. As most stock traders will tell you, things don&rsquo t go from expensive to fairly priced. Things normally go from expensive to cheap.&rdquo
Tesla shares are trading at 42.5 times their earnings over the past 12 months, a far cry from their peak multiple of 1,765 from January 2021, according to FactSet. The S& P 500, in contrast, trades at 17.6 times earnings.
&ldquo People are starting to pay attention to some of the facts that they didn&rsquo t want to pay attention to before. Competition. Saturation. There&rsquo s a lot of factors involved that people were sweeping under the table,&rdquo Mr. Left added.
Also hurting the stock of late are Mr. Musk&rsquo s own share sales. The Tesla chief executive has sold more than $39 billion in stock since November 2021, in part to help finance his Twitter acquisition. His  most recent sale  was last week.
Twitter has been in turmoil since Elon Musk took over. To get a sense of what&rsquo s going on behind the scenes, The Wall Street Journal spoke with former Tesla and SpaceX employees to better understand how Musk leads companies. Illustration: Ryan Trefes
Mr. Musk tweeted late Tuesday that  he would step down  as Twitter&rsquo s chief executive as soon as he finds a replacement. 
Tesla didn&rsquo t immediately respond to a request for comment. Mr. Musk has previously tweeted that short sellers were &ldquo value destroyers&rdquo and that short sales should be illegal. 
Lately, the stock has been the target of everyone from hedge-fund managers to  Microsoft  Corp. co-founder  Bill Gates. 
In a series of tweets earlier this year, Mr. Musk  accused Mr. Gates of shorting  $500 million in Tesla shares. Mr. Gates didn&rsquo t directly answer questions about whether he was personally shorting the stock at The Wall Street Journal&rsquo s CEO Council Summit in May. A representative for the Gates Foundation didn&rsquo t immediately respond to a request for comment. 
Danny Moses, the investor famous for bets against the housing market who was portrayed in the 2015 movie &ldquo The Big Short,&rdquo said on CNBC Thursday that he is currently short Tesla and expects it to fall further. 
&ldquo It&rsquo s still a $500 billion company and I don&rsquo t think that the fundamentals justify that valuation,&rdquo Mr. Moses said on &ldquo Fast Money.&rdquo &ldquo I think a lot of the stock price has been about his brand, and we&rsquo ve seen that now get hit a little bit. His attention span is being compromised.&rdquo
One group has refused to abandon Tesla despite this year&rsquo s sharp share-price declines: the retail crowd. Tesla has been the most-purchased stock among U.S. retail, or nonprofessional, investors this year&mdash dethroning  Apple  Inc., according to data from Vanda Research. The $15.2 billion of retail purchases is a record for Tesla.
&ldquo While purchasing across the market has softened, retail investors have continued to religiously buy into Tesla,&rdquo said Lucas Mantle, a data science analyst at Vanda Research. 
If there&rsquo s one thing strategists agree on, it&rsquo s the difficulty of valuing Tesla given the retail interest and Mr. Musk&rsquo s cultlike following. 
Australian hedge-fund manager  John Hempton, founder of Bronte Capital, said his firm has a small short position in Tesla but struggles to apply its traditional criteria in evaluating the stock.
&ldquo Elon breaks our model,&rdquo Mr. Hempton said.
Write to Jack Pitcher at  [email protected]
Corrections & Amplifications
Tesla&rsquo s trailing price/earnings ratio peaked at 1,765 in January 2021. An earlier version of this article incorrectly said that it peaked at 1,196 in April 2021. (Corrected on Dec. 21)
 
Tesla shares have fallen 61% in 2022, including Tuesday&rsquo s 8.1% drop, dinged by the higher interest-rate environment that has sent speculative stocks tumbling back to earth. Investors have also  grown increasingly concerned  that Mr. Musk&rsquo s attention is divided following  his takeover of Twitter Inc.
NEWSLETTER SIGN-UP
Markets
A pre-markets primer packed with news, trends and ideas. Plus, up-to-the-minute market data.
Markets
A pre-markets primer packed with news, trends and ideas. Plus, up-to-the-minute market data.
Preview
Subscribe
 
 
 
 
Tesla traded around $30, on a split-adjusted basis, at the start of that year and eventually peaked above $400 in November 2021. Its valuation swelled to more than $1.2 trillion, making it one of the largest companies in the U.S. by market value. The stock closed Wednesday at $137.57, a two-year low.
&ldquo It has not been an easy road being a Tesla bear,&rdquo said Andrew Left, the founder of Citron Research who is known for betting against stocks. &ldquo It&rsquo s been a pain-in-the-ass trade.&rdquo  
Of course, many Tesla bears didn&rsquo t stick around. Some were forced to  call off their bets  and close their positions at a loss during the precipitous rise in the company&rsquo s shares. Collective mark-to-market losses on the trade were a whopping $51 billion over the course of 2020 and 2021, according to S3.
 
Short interest in Tesla peaked at more than $51 billion in January 2021, but has fallen to average $19.3 billion in 2022, according to S3. Roughly 3% of the stock&rsquo s free float is currently sold short, down from an average of 10% in 2020. 
Mr. Left, who was previously burned by his short position, says he promised himself at one point that he would never trade Tesla again. This summer, though, he says he began to get &ldquo FOMO,&rdquo or a fear of missing out, and he jumped back in. Mr. Left said he closed his position Thursday at a profit but sees room for the shares to fall further.
 
Tesla shares are trading at 42.5 times their earnings over the past 12 months, a far cry from their peak multiple of 1,765 from January 2021, according to FactSet. The S& P 500, in contrast, trades at 17.6 times earnings.
&ldquo People are starting to pay attention to some of the facts that they didn&rsquo t want to pay attention to before. Competition. Saturation. There&rsquo s a lot of factors involved that people were sweeping under the table,&rdquo Mr. Left added.
Also hurting the stock of late are Mr. Musk&rsquo s own share sales. The Tesla chief executive has sold more than $39 billion in stock since November 2021, in part to help finance his Twitter acquisition. His  most recent sale  was last week.
 
Elon Musk&rsquo s Unconventional Management Style: Former Employees Share Stories
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
 
Elon Musk&rsquo s Unconventional Management Style: Former Employees Share StoriesPlay video: Elon Musk&rsquo s Unconventional Management Style: Former Employees Share Stories
 
Tesla didn&rsquo t immediately respond to a request for comment. Mr. Musk has previously tweeted that short sellers were &ldquo value destroyers&rdquo and that short sales should be illegal. 
Lately, the stock has been the target of everyone from hedge-fund managers to  Microsoft  Corp. co-founder  Bill Gates. 
Advertisement - Scroll to Continue
 
Danny Moses, the investor famous for bets against the housing market who was portrayed in the 2015 movie &ldquo The Big Short,&rdquo said on CNBC Thursday that he is currently short Tesla and expects it to fall further. 
SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS
What&rsquo s your outlook on Tesla? Join the conversation below.One group has refused to abandon Tesla despite this year&rsquo s sharp share-price declines: the retail crowd. Tesla has been the most-purchased stock among U.S. retail, or nonprofessional, investors this year&mdash dethroning  Apple  Inc., according to data from Vanda Research. The $15.2 billion of retail purchases is a record for Tesla.
&ldquo While purchasing across the market has softened, retail investors have continued to religiously buy into Tesla,&rdquo said Lucas Mantle, a data science analyst at Vanda Research. 
 
Australian hedge-fund manager  John Hempton, founder of Bronte Capital, said his firm has a small short position in Tesla but struggles to apply its traditional criteria in evaluating the stock.
&ldquo Elon breaks our model,&rdquo Mr. Hempton said.
Write to Jack Pitcher at  [email protected]
Corrections & Amplifications
Tesla&rsquo s trailing price/earnings ratio peaked at 1,765 in January 2021. An earlier version of this article incorrectly said that it peaked at 1,196 in April 2021. (Corrected on Dec. 21)
 
Appeared in the December 22, 2022, print edition as ' Tesla Bears Reap $15 Billion in Gains From Short Selling EV Maker&rsquo s Shares' .
SHOW CONVERSATION
173
 
 
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/tsla
chartistkao1 ( Date: 22-Dec-2022 09:49) Posted:
|
usd sgd 1.3489
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KAIM-bzb8PA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KAIM-bzb8PA
chartistkao1 ( Date: 21-Dec-2022 16:59) Posted:
|