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tccroy
    28-Sep-2023 10:43  
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Someone said with confident ISDN will suffer losses and asked me where I got the sources from. Better go and hide.

Joelton      ( Date: 28-Sep-2023 10:15) Posted:

ISDN posts 11.3% lower revenue, 43.8% lower net profit for 1HFY2023
 
ISDN Holdings has reported revenue of $169.2 million for 1HFY2023 ended June, 11.3% lower y-o-y. Similarly, gross profit fell 18.0% y-o-y to $44.3 million during the six-month period. 
 
In results released on Sept 27, the group posted net profit of $9.1 million in 1HFY2023, up 30.4% h-o-h but down 43.8% y-o-y.
 
Revenue from ISDN&rsquo s industrial automation solutions segment decreased by $16.6 million, or 9.0% y-o-y, in 1HFY2023. The decline was significantly impacted by cyclical impact from three semiconductor industry customers and weaker RMB currency against the group&rsquo s reporting currency.
 
The renminbi had depreciated by about 8.7% in June as compared to a year prior. On a constant currency basis, the group&rsquo s revenue would be $180.0 million in 1HFY2023, a slight decrease of 2.7% y-o-y.
 
The group&rsquo s other segment is renewable energy, with revenue recognised in 1HFY2022 related to construction revenue before it was commercialised. Hence, revenue fell 82.0% y-o-y to $1.0 million in 1HFY2023. 
 
The group&rsquo s hydropower plant, Lau Biang 1, commenced commercial operations on Dec 31, 2022. The group recognised $1.1 million and $1.2 million in revenue and finance lease income under other operating income respectively for Lau Biang 1 in 1HFY2023.
 
The group&rsquo s gross profit margin declined 2.2 percentage points y-o-y to 26.2% in 1HFY2023. 
 
Cost of sales for the period was $124.8 million, 8.6% lower y-o-y. Operating expenses declined 6.1% h-o-h to $31.4 million in 1HFY2023.
 
Earnings per share for the period fell to 1.04 cents from 2.52 cents this time last year.
 
The board has decided not to declare any interim dividend for the 1HFY2023, unchanged from this time last year. 
 
As at June 30, cash and cash equivalents stands at $49.6 million, down from $54.1 million at the start of the six-month period.
 
As at June 30, the group has long and short-term bank borrowings of approximately $33.8 million and its gearing ratio stands at 16.9%, down from 17.2% as at Dec 31, 2022. 

 
 
7ocean
    28-Sep-2023 10:25  
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Its Time Collecting.....
 
 
Joelton
    28-Sep-2023 10:15  
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ISDN posts 11.3% lower revenue, 43.8% lower net profit for 1HFY2023
 
ISDN Holdings has reported revenue of $169.2 million for 1HFY2023 ended June, 11.3% lower y-o-y. Similarly, gross profit fell 18.0% y-o-y to $44.3 million during the six-month period. 
 
In results released on Sept 27, the group posted net profit of $9.1 million in 1HFY2023, up 30.4% h-o-h but down 43.8% y-o-y.
 
Revenue from ISDN&rsquo s industrial automation solutions segment decreased by $16.6 million, or 9.0% y-o-y, in 1HFY2023. The decline was significantly impacted by cyclical impact from three semiconductor industry customers and weaker RMB currency against the group&rsquo s reporting currency.
 
The renminbi had depreciated by about 8.7% in June as compared to a year prior. On a constant currency basis, the group&rsquo s revenue would be $180.0 million in 1HFY2023, a slight decrease of 2.7% y-o-y.
 
The group&rsquo s other segment is renewable energy, with revenue recognised in 1HFY2022 related to construction revenue before it was commercialised. Hence, revenue fell 82.0% y-o-y to $1.0 million in 1HFY2023. 
 
The group&rsquo s hydropower plant, Lau Biang 1, commenced commercial operations on Dec 31, 2022. The group recognised $1.1 million and $1.2 million in revenue and finance lease income under other operating income respectively for Lau Biang 1 in 1HFY2023.
 
The group&rsquo s gross profit margin declined 2.2 percentage points y-o-y to 26.2% in 1HFY2023. 
 
Cost of sales for the period was $124.8 million, 8.6% lower y-o-y. Operating expenses declined 6.1% h-o-h to $31.4 million in 1HFY2023.
 
Earnings per share for the period fell to 1.04 cents from 2.52 cents this time last year.
 
The board has decided not to declare any interim dividend for the 1HFY2023, unchanged from this time last year. 
 
As at June 30, cash and cash equivalents stands at $49.6 million, down from $54.1 million at the start of the six-month period.
 
As at June 30, the group has long and short-term bank borrowings of approximately $33.8 million and its gearing ratio stands at 16.9%, down from 17.2% as at Dec 31, 2022. 
 

 
dontbetray
    26-Sep-2023 14:11  
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why you work up?

tccroy      ( Date: 20-Sep-2023 09:00) Posted:

Are you sleeping? 3 weeks ago, so many neo sayers negative comment to scare the retailers to panick sell to as low as 136. Then staged a rebound causing so many Rex retailers suffering huge losses. These are the evil commenters using scaring and unscrupulous method to make money.

dontbetray      ( Date: 20-Sep-2023 08:56) Posted:

As matter of fact , Rex doesn' t have china exposure and fake data. It' s 2 different argument. Rex is also safe as it doesn' t subject to some evil immorality hyping. I wish you   huat huat and send my regards to hi


 
 
leroy55
    24-Sep-2023 11:41  
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Investors in China scramble to sell overseas properties amid shaky economic conditions



Soon after China decided to  lift border controls in January, ending three years of zero-COVID measures, Stephen Yao embarked on a new mission.

Representing more than 200 middle-class Chinese families with many in second-tier cities, the Guangdong-based property agent has been searching for buyers for the investment properties his clients bought in Southeast Asian countries before the pandemic.

Property used to be the most favoured investment for Chinese people engaged in wealth accumulation, when it promised rapid and steady economic growth.

Small apartments and condominiums in Southeast Asia, especially Thailand, were a popular choice for the Chinese middle classes in the late 2010s due to affordability and geographic proximity.

But amid a bumpy reopening recovery, a  protracted property crisis at home  and dwindling growth of household wealth, some have struggled with worsening financial conditions and had to scale back overseas investment.

&ldquo If we take into account rental returns and changes in exchange rates, most of their property investments overseas are actually profitable in terms of yuan,&rdquo Yao said.

&ldquo But a number of them can no longer afford the final payment for their property investment and desperately need cash to solve their domestic financial problems, such as business failures, layoffs and mortgage loan defaults,&rdquo he said.

&ldquo Some no longer have the extra funds to continue holding these overseas properties.&rdquo

Back in 2017 and 2018, Yao made 32 trips from his home in southern China to Thailand to help his Chinese clients buy condos in the downtown area of Bangkok and Pattaya with a unit priced between 500,000 yuan (US$68,400) and 2,000,000 yuan.

&ldquo Many of the buyers were ordinary middle-class families from second-tier cities in China engaged in the tourism, export and services industries,&rdquo Yao said.

&ldquo Since the pandemic, their income has dropped significantly and the market value of domestic properties has also declined.

&ldquo For their overseas investment, it is entirely different now in terms of both their liquidity and geopolitical situation.&rdquo


The increasingly uncertain economic environment has seen China&rsquo s middle class becoming more conservative and cutting back on high-end purchases, according to a survey published on Tuesday by Shanghai Jiao Tong University&rsquo s Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance (SAIF) and financial services provider Charles Schwab.

Despite some upbeat data in August after a spate of support measures, China&rsquo s  economy is still facing speed bumps on the road to recovery, including low confidence in production and consumption.

The overseas buying spree in high-end properties in the middle of the 2010s by Chinese business magnates such as Wang Jianlin, chairman of Dalian Wanda Group, also served as a catalyst for the rising middle class to tap into the overseas real estate market.

Condominiums in Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia and Japan all became popular investments. Demand prompted Chinese developers to build properties in Southeast Asia, tailor-made for affluent Chinese people eager to invest overseas or to embrace a different life abroad.

But those projects are now under threat, faced with making losses.

&ldquo It has less than 1 per cent of the 700,000 people that were planned for the Forest City community,&rdquo said Patricia Li, one of a group of middle-class Chinese investors flocking to Malaysia to buy property.

In 2017, Li invested in two apartments in  Forest City, a development by Chinese property giant Country Garden in Johor, the southernmost state in Malaysia.

Forest City, a US$100 billion property project, is planned to house up to 700,000 people once completed in 2035.

The tightening regulation on property developers&rsquo liability in China since 2021 has put many developers, especially private ones, in dire financial straits, such as Evergrande and Country Garden.

And the protracted property distress has been the major drag on the economic recovery this year.

Country Garden, once a gold standard in the Chinese real estate industry, is now at the centre of the crisis with an estimated US$2.5 billion in coupon payments and bond maturities due by the end of the year.

A possible default would ripple through the fragile recovery and dampen market confidence.

 



Related:


Forest City now looks more like a ghost town than the thriving residential and commercial district that was promised, with condominiums, roads and shops laying empty, according to Li.

She said she felt quite depressed as the price of the apartments has fallen to 6,000 yuan per square metre now &ndash down from 18,000 yuan.

&ldquo There may be just a few thousand Chinese people living over there now. Many want to sell their houses. Unless he or she can find Chinese buyers, no one else would be interested, neither locals nor buyers of other countries, as the design and features are only suitable for the Chinese community,&rdquo she said.

A change in the style of overseas consumption has also affected the market.

Li said this year some Chinese families flew to Johor and Kuala Lumpur on tourist visas, then switched to student and companion visas to attend international schools, some of which have Chinese students accounting for more than half their enrolments.

&ldquo But they are more inclined to rent instead of buying houses at will as before,&rdquo she said.

The overall investment situation of Chinese households has deteriorated, according to a quarterly household wealth survey by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu.

It said the cumulative return on household investment and wealth management dropped to -0.1 per cent, down from 0.07 per cent in the first quarter, after the return fell to 1.8 per cent in 2022 from 2.8 per cent in 2021.

&ldquo In the US, despite the income decrease, the middle class still has strong purchasing power. In contrast, the decline in the income of the Chinese middle class means a diminishing overseas purchase power,&rdquo said Gavin Chiu Sin-hin, an independent UK-based commentator, who is a former associate professor at Shenzhen University.

&ldquo They are only able to spend money domestically, and their ability to buy imported goods is compromised,&rdquo he said.

Chiu said the scale and influence of the country&rsquo s middle class have increased along with China&rsquo s miracle economic growth.

 



Related:


But in recent years, some of China&rsquo s policy tightening measures against private enterprises have raised concerns and undermined the expansion of the middle class, as their careers and economic prospects mainly depend on the private economy.

This demographic dividend is disappearing due to China&rsquo s rapidly ageing population. Both labour shortages and social security pressure amid the ageing population may be a hindrance to the growth of the middle class in China, Chiu added.

The depreciation of the yuan is also affecting the purchasing power of the Chinese middle class.

China&rsquo s yuan has been weak against the US dollar since last year. It hit a 16-year record low against the US currency earlier this month before paring some losses. The average exchange rate of the yuan to the dollar was about 6.5 in 2017, compared to the current rate of around 7.3.

Chinese property investors who entered the Japanese market have also been confronted with challenges, as their costs cannot be offset by returns in the long run.

&ldquo Those who invested in Japanese properties to run B& Bs for Chinese tourists are also facing losses, because Chinese tourists have not returned yet,&rdquo said Tina Chen, who works for a consulting agency investigating the Japanese market.

International institutions have slashed forecasts on China&rsquo s economic growth this year and are divided over whether Beijing will be able to achieve its target of around 5 per cent growth.

The government has rolled out a package of measures since July to loosen curbs on the property market, reinvigorate investor confidence and boost consumption, although policy effects have yet to be put fully into play.

For Yao, the mission to find new buyers is difficult, making it hard to help his clients cash in their overseas assets.

Yao has set up accounts on social media platforms such as ByteDance and Facebook in a bid to draw attention from potential buyers.

&ldquo Thailand&rsquo s second-hand property market is quite saturated, and both locals and foreign investors are reluctant to buy second-hand properties. So our goal is still to focus on the Chinese middle class who still want to transfer their domestic wealth abroad,&rdquo he said.

&ldquo We hope the sales could be more active later this year or next year when China&rsquo s domestic economy recovers further.&rdquo

But for now, it remains a struggle. From March to the present day, only six of the more than 200 condominiums in Thailand have been sold to new Chinese buyers, Yao said.
 
 
dontbetray
    23-Sep-2023 11:34  
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I' m afraid you misaligned the element I' m manifesting between 2 stocks.   Rex is safer than isdn. Period 

tccroy      ( Date: 20-Sep-2023 09:00) Posted:

Are you sleeping? 3 weeks ago, so many neo sayers negative comment to scare the retailers to panick sell to as low as 136. Then staged a rebound causing so many Rex retailers suffering huge losses. These are the evil commenters using scaring and unscrupulous method to make money.

dontbetray      ( Date: 20-Sep-2023 08:56) Posted:

As matter of fact , Rex doesn' t have china exposure and fake data. It' s 2 different argument. Rex is also safe as it doesn' t subject to some evil immorality hyping. I wish you   huat huat and send my regards to hi


 

 
tccroy
    20-Sep-2023 09:00  
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Are you sleeping? 3 weeks ago, so many neo sayers negative comment to scare the retailers to panick sell to as low as 136. Then staged a rebound causing so many Rex retailers suffering huge losses. These are the evil commenters using scaring and unscrupulous method to make money.

dontbetray      ( Date: 20-Sep-2023 08:56) Posted:

As matter of fact , Rex doesn' t have china exposure and fake data. It' s 2 different argument. Rex is also safe as it doesn' t subject to some evil immorality hyping. I wish you   huat huat and send my regards to him

tccroy      ( Date: 15-Sep-2023 12:02) Posted:

Think positive.. After all the negative comment on Rex International, so many retail investors panick sold , after that rebounded. Retailers should put blame to these Neo sayers


 
 
dontbetray
    20-Sep-2023 08:56  
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As matter of fact , Rex doesn' t have china exposure and fake data. It' s 2 different argument. Rex is also safe as it doesn' t subject to some evil immorality hyping. I wish you   huat huat and send my regards to him

tccroy      ( Date: 15-Sep-2023 12:02) Posted:

Think positive.. After all the negative comment on Rex International, so many retail investors panick sold , after that rebounded. Retailers should put blame to these Neo sayers

 
 
like2learn
    15-Sep-2023 21:02  
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referring to the 1H2023 results under " Geographical information" segment, it is the SG revenue which drop a lot whereas PRC quite stable .... so i think the issue facing the company is not just PRC .... 

FrancisLim      ( Date: 15-Sep-2023 09:20) Posted:

--- Post Removed by User ---

 
 
tccroy
    15-Sep-2023 12:02  
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Think positive.. After all the negative comment on Rex International, so many retail investors panick sold , after that rebounded. Retailers should put blame to these Neo sayers
 

 
tccroy
    12-Sep-2023 18:43  
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I don't owe you an explanation. Did you pay me to do that?

dontbetray      ( Date: 09-Sep-2023 00:41) Posted:

I heard from his investment chatgroup that he ask you to write this 

tccroy      ( Date: 07-Sep-2023 10:10) Posted:

Can you wait for the next results announcement


 
 
dontbetray
    09-Sep-2023 00:41  
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I heard from his investment chatgroup that he ask you to write this 

tccroy      ( Date: 07-Sep-2023 10:10) Posted:

Can you wait for the next results announcement

dontbetray      ( Date: 07-Sep-2023 10:00) Posted:

i mean may i know who share with you that '   still making profits from other sources and they still continue paying dividends.'

 


 
 
tccroy
    07-Sep-2023 10:10  
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Can you wait for the next results announcement

dontbetray      ( Date: 07-Sep-2023 10:00) Posted:

i mean may i know who share with you that '   still making profits from other sources and they still continue paying dividends.'

 


tccroy      ( Date: 07-Sep-2023 09:14) Posted:

I already received the dividends and that prove it unless you did not invest in ISDN hence you do not receive any dividends from ISDN


 
 
dontbetray
    07-Sep-2023 10:00  
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i mean may i know who share with you that '   still making profits from other sources and they still continue paying dividends.'

 


tccroy      ( Date: 07-Sep-2023 09:14) Posted:

I already received the dividends and that prove it unless you did not invest in ISDN hence you do not receive any dividends from ISDN.

dontbetray      ( Date: 07-Sep-2023 09:05) Posted:

--- Post Removed by User ---


 
 
tccroy
    07-Sep-2023 09:14  
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I already received the dividends and that prove it unless you did not invest in ISDN hence you do not receive any dividends from ISDN.

dontbetray      ( Date: 07-Sep-2023 09:05) Posted:

--- Post Removed by User ---

 

 
behonest
    06-Sep-2023 14:21  
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Francis lim, please pass this to another MR LIM that we all know.

Chinese property developer Country Garden is looking to issue HK$270 million (US$34.4 million) worth of new shares amid mounting financial concerns, it says in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange. Funds rasied from the issuance will be used to pay off some of its borrowings, after it missed interest payments on some dollar bonds. The woes of China' s largest property developer has deepened contagion fears in the country' s ailing property sector.

The shares of fellow real estate developer China Evergrande Group has nosedived after it resumed trading for the first time in almost 18 months. The uncompleted projects from struggling developers could leave suppliers unpaid, homebuyers out of pocket and put China' s wider economy under increased pressure.
 
 


hypewhy      ( Date: 28-Aug-2023 11:15) Posted:

you do see Evergrande is not doing well. it reflect the china home kind of thing , Mr Lim

FrancisLim      ( Date: 28-Aug-2023 09:56) Posted:

--- Post Removed by User ---


 
 
behonest
    05-Sep-2023 19:48  
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It' s ok. Just ignore him. Now tank 

hypewhy      ( Date: 29-Aug-2023 14:11) Posted:

i agree. dont know why that okie fella kept mislding

leroy55      ( Date: 28-Aug-2023 08:15) Posted:

 

CHINA&rsquo S economy was meant to drive a third of global economic growth this year, so its dramatic slowdown in recent months is sounding alarm bells across the world.

Policymakers are bracing for a hit to their economies as China&rsquo s imports of everything from construction materials to electronics slide.

Caterpillar Inc. says Chinese demand for machines used on building sites is worse than previously thought.

 

US President Joe Biden called the economic problems a &ldquo ticking time bomb.&rdquo

Global investors have already pulled more than US$10 billion from China&rsquo s stock markets, with most of the selling in blue chips. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley have cut their targets for Chinese equities, with the former also warning of spillover risks to the rest of the region.

 

Asian economies are taking the biggest hit to their trade so far, along with countries in Africa.

Japan reported its first drop in exports in more than two years in July after China cut back on purchases of cars and chips. Central bankers from South Korea and Thailand last week cited China&rsquo s weak recovery for downgrades to their growth forecasts.  It&rsquo s not all doom-and-gloom, though. 

China&rsquo s slowdown will drag down global oil prices, and deflation in the country means the prices of goods being shipped around the world are falling.

 

That&rsquo s a benefit to countries like the US and UK still battling high inflation.  Some emerging markets like India also see opportunities, hoping to attract the foreign investment that may be leaving China&rsquo s shores.

But as the world&rsquo s second-largest economy, a prolonged slowdown in China will hurt, rather than help, the rest of the world.

An analysis from the International Monetary Fund shows how much is at stake: when China&rsquo s growth rate rises by 1 percentage point, global expansion is boosted by about 0.3 percentage points.

China&rsquo s deflation &ldquo isn&rsquo t such a bad thing&rdquo for the global economy, Peter Berezin, chief global strategist BCA Research, said in an interview on Bloomberg TV. &ldquo But, if the rest of the world, the US and Europe, falls into recession, if China remains weak, then that would be a problem &ndash not just for China but for the whole global economy.&rdquo

Here&rsquo s a look at how China&rsquo s slowdown is rippling across economies and financial markets.

Trade slump

Many countries, especially those in Asia, count China as their biggest export market for everything from electronic parts and food to metals and energy.

The value of Chinese imports has fallen for nine of the last 10 months as demand retreats from the record highs set during the pandemic. The value of shipments from Africa, Asia and North America were all lower in July than they were a year ago.

Africa and Asia have been the hardest hit, with the value of imports down more than 14 per cent in the first seven months this year.

Part of that is due to a drop in demand for electronics parts from South Korea and Taiwan, while falling prices of commodities such as fossil fuels are also hitting the value of goods shipped to China.

So far, the actual volume of commodities such as iron or copper ore sent to China has held up. But if the slowdown continues, shipments could be impacted, which would affect miners in Australia, South America and elsewhere around the world.

Deflation pressure

Producer prices in China have contracted for the past 10 months, meaning the cost of goods being shipped from the country is falling. That&rsquo s welcome news for people around the globe still struggling with high inflation.

The price of Chinese goods at US docks has fallen every month this year and that is likely to continue until factory prices in China return to positive territory.

Economists at Wells Fargo & Co. estimate that a &lsquo hard landing&rsquo in China &ndash which they define as a 12.5 per cent divergence from its trend growth &ndash would cut the baseline forecast for US consumer inflation in 2025 by 0.7 percentage points to 1.4 per cent.

Slow tourism

Rebound Chinese consumers are spending more on services, like travel and tourism, than on goods &ndash but they&rsquo re not yet venturing overseas in large numbers.

Until recently the government had banned group tours to many countries and there is still a lack of flights, meaning it&rsquo s much more expensive to travel than it was before the pandemic.

The pandemic and weak economy have curbed incomes in China, while the years-long housing market slump means homeowners feel less wealthy than before. That suggests it may take a long time for overseas travel to rebound to the levels they were at before the pandemic, hitting tourism-dependent nations in South-east Asia such as Thailand.

Currency impact

China&rsquo s economic woes have pushed the currency down more than 5 per cent against the dollar this year, with the yuan close to breaching the 7.3 mark this month. The central bank has escalated its defense of the yuan through various measures including its daily currency fixings.

The depreciation in the offshore yuan is having a greater impact on its peers in Asia, Latin America and the Central and Eastern Europe bloc, Bloomberg data show, with the correlation of the Chinese currency to some others rising.

The weak sentiment spillover may weigh on currencies like the Singapore dollar, Thai baht, and Mexican peso as correlations rise, according to Barclays Bank Plc.  &ldquo With the weaker China economy it&rsquo s very difficult to be optimistic on the Asian economies and currencies and we&rsquo re more concerned about the metal-exposed currencies,&rdquo said Magdalena Polan, head of emerging market macro research at PGIM.

Weakness in the construction sector may see currencies of commodity-led economies, such as the Chilean peso and South African rand, suffer, she said.

The Australian dollar, which often trades as a proxy for China, has lost more than 3 per cent this quarter, the worst performer in the Group-of-10 basket.

Bonds lose appeal

China&rsquo s interest rate cuts this year have reduced the appeal of its bonds to foreign investors, who have cut their exposure to the market and are looking for alternatives in the rest of the region.

Overseas holdings of Chinese sovereign notes are at the lowest share of the total market since 2019, according to Bloomberg calculations. Global funds had turned more bullish on the local currency bonds of South Korea and Indonesia as central banks there near the end of their interest-rate hiking cycles. 

Luxury stocks

Companies from Nike to Caterpillar have reported a hit to their earnings from China&rsquo s slowdown.

An MSCI index that tracks global companies with the biggest exposure to China has retreated 9.3 per cent this month, nearly double the decline in the broader gauge of world stocks.

A gauge of European luxury goods and Thailand travel and leisure also track losses to China&rsquo s onshore equity benchmark.

The sectors are &ldquo accurate reflections of how global investors may take indirect exposure to China and the outlook as China&rsquo s economy continues to weigh,&rdquo said Redmond Wong, a market strategist at Saxo Capital Markets in Hong Kong.

Luxury goods firms such as Louis Vuitton bags-maker LVMH, Gucci-owner Kering SA and Hermes International are particularly vulnerable to any wobbles in Chinese demand. BLOOMBERG


 
 
dc16888
    04-Sep-2023 15:42  
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yes
 
 
tccroy
    04-Sep-2023 15:35  
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Too much of negative remarks from commenters. But I still keep faith with ISDN. ISDN still making profits from other sources and they still continue paying dividends. I keep faith and will be rewarded

behonest      ( Date: 04-Sep-2023 13:28) Posted:

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trader1970
    04-Sep-2023 09:11  
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Juz BO.... WATCH... time to catch up with the rest...wink
 
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