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do not bet against the sg bank shares

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chartistkao1
    01-Dec-2022 16:34  
Contact    Quote!
selling
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/bac
 
buying
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/u11?countrycode=sg
 
buying sgd


chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 16:29) Posted:

https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/u11?countrycode=sg
 
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/c
 
usdsgd 1.367


chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 16:19) Posted:

(Nov 30):  Beleaguered crypto lenders are being dealt another blow from Bitcoin miners, as they weather the aftermath of the FTX collapse.
Miners, who raised as much as US$4 billion from mining-equipment financing when profit margins were as high as 90%, are defaulting on loans and sending hundreds of thousands of machines that served as collateral back to lenders. New York Digital Investment Group, Celsius Network, BlockFi Inc, Galaxy Digital, and the Foundry unit of Digital Currency Group were among the biggest providers of funding to finance computer equipment and build data centres.
The liquidity crunch hitting digital-asset markets after FTX failed  comes as low Bitcoin prices, soaring energy costs and more competition weigh on miners. Loans backed by the computer equipment, known as rigs, had become one of the industry&rsquo s most popular financing tools. Many lenders are now likely facing substantial losses since they can&rsquo t seize any other assets besides the machines, whose value has dropped by as much as 85% since last November.
&ldquo People were pouring dollars into the mining space,&rdquo said Ethan Vera, chief operations officer at crypto-mining services firm Luxor Technologies. &ldquo Miners ended up dictating a lot of the loan terms, so the financiers moved ahead with a lot of the deals where only the machines were collateral.&rdquo  
Iris Energy Ltd  said this month that it expected to default on US$108 million of limited recourse loans, which is mostly backed by mining rigs. The publicly-traded miner is a long-time borrower of NYDIG, winning a US$71 million loan secured by 19,800 rigs as recently as March. That was the miner&rsquo s third facility secured by NYDIG, a unit of Stone Ridge Holdings Group. Core Scientific Inc, which has warned of bankruptcy, had US$39 million of rig-backed loans with NYDIG, and US$54 million with now bankrupt BlockFi, as of September. Stronghold Digital Mining already returned around 26,200 mining rigs in August to eliminate US$67 million debt owed to NYDIG.
NYDIG, BlockFi and Celsius did not respond to requests for comment. Foundry and Galaxy declined to comment.
There is likely to be more defaults. Compared to the publicly-listed miners, private companies currently contribute about 75% of the computing power for the entire Bitcoin network and most of their rig-backed loans with the lenders remain undisclosed, according to data from Luxor. Additional loans will likely come under stress if more private large-scale miners such as Compute North file for bankruptcy.
 


 
 
chartistkao1
    01-Dec-2022 16:29  
Contact    Quote!
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/u11?countrycode=sg
 
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/c
 
usdsgd 1.367


chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 16:19) Posted:

(Nov 30):  Beleaguered crypto lenders are being dealt another blow from Bitcoin miners, as they weather the aftermath of the FTX collapse.
Miners, who raised as much as US$4 billion from mining-equipment financing when profit margins were as high as 90%, are defaulting on loans and sending hundreds of thousands of machines that served as collateral back to lenders. New York Digital Investment Group, Celsius Network, BlockFi Inc, Galaxy Digital, and the Foundry unit of Digital Currency Group were among the biggest providers of funding to finance computer equipment and build data centres.
The liquidity crunch hitting digital-asset markets after FTX failed  comes as low Bitcoin prices, soaring energy costs and more competition weigh on miners. Loans backed by the computer equipment, known as rigs, had become one of the industry&rsquo s most popular financing tools. Many lenders are now likely facing substantial losses since they can&rsquo t seize any other assets besides the machines, whose value has dropped by as much as 85% since last November.
&ldquo People were pouring dollars into the mining space,&rdquo said Ethan Vera, chief operations officer at crypto-mining services firm Luxor Technologies. &ldquo Miners ended up dictating a lot of the loan terms, so the financiers moved ahead with a lot of the deals where only the machines were collateral.&rdquo  
Iris Energy Ltd  said this month that it expected to default on US$108 million of limited recourse loans, which is mostly backed by mining rigs. The publicly-traded miner is a long-time borrower of NYDIG, winning a US$71 million loan secured by 19,800 rigs as recently as March. That was the miner&rsquo s third facility secured by NYDIG, a unit of Stone Ridge Holdings Group. Core Scientific Inc, which has warned of bankruptcy, had US$39 million of rig-backed loans with NYDIG, and US$54 million with now bankrupt BlockFi, as of September. Stronghold Digital Mining already returned around 26,200 mining rigs in August to eliminate US$67 million debt owed to NYDIG.
NYDIG, BlockFi and Celsius did not respond to requests for comment. Foundry and Galaxy declined to comment.
There is likely to be more defaults. Compared to the publicly-listed miners, private companies currently contribute about 75% of the computing power for the entire Bitcoin network and most of their rig-backed loans with the lenders remain undisclosed, according to data from Luxor. Additional loans will likely come under stress if more private large-scale miners such as Compute North file for bankruptcy.
 

chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 16:14) Posted:

SINGAPORE (Nov 30):  Mark Nash, who had been bearish on bonds including Treasuries and credit, says there&rsquo s value in emerging-market sovereign debt.
&ldquo We shorted everything,&rdquo said Nash, who oversees the Jupiter Strategic Absolute Return Bond Fund, which beat 96% of its peers this year. But &ldquo we do like local emerging-market bonds unhedged&rdquo .
Nash favours securities sold by Brazil, Indonesia and Mexico &mdash some of the best-performing sovereign debt this year, as they benefited from a commodities boom, early rate hikes and receding fears of a hawkish Federal Reserve. He thinks they&rsquo ve only got more to gain with inflation relatively under control, while positive real yields add to their appeal.
The bet is paying off for the fund, which gained 5.7% this year, amid a record annual rout in US government bonds. Brazil&rsquo s debt has risen 11% in 2022, while Mexican notes have climbed 5.4%. In contrast, Treasury investors suffered a 12.4% loss. 
Nash&rsquo s wagers may show that there remains pockets of opportunity in the fixed-income space, after a year in which rising interest rates and surging inflation inflicted painful losses on investors. Signs that the Federal Reserve could slow its pace of tightening are helping to revive appetite for bonds.
&ldquo We are moving into a different world in which commodity prices and resources are expensive &mdash   the scarce asset now is energy, it is commodities,&rdquo said Nash, who helps oversee US$1.5 billion at Jupiter Asset Management. Some emerging markets &ldquo have high real yields, they have better trade balances and they generally have better fiscal coffers&rdquo .
The fund recorded a 650% turnover in securities traded this year and also &ldquo cleared out&rdquo a large chunk of shorts across developed-market sovereign debt amid the recent global bond rally, said the London-based money manager. It still maintains some bearish exposure to Treasuries, gilts and Japanese government bonds.
Here are edited comments from a Q& A with Nash:

Short Dollar

We are short dollars now, making the switch four weeks ago. I do think over time the dollar does fall. Fund has long positions in the Australian dollar, Brazilian real, Indonesian rupiah and Canadian dollar. 

Inflation Bet

Eventually, what will happen is inflation will fall globally, and it&rsquo ll fall for emerging markets a lot. Those central banks can actually start to ease policy to support growth, whereas in the West, policy will be kept tight to keep growth down. That difference will support emerging-market fundamentals. 
 


 
 
chartistkao1
    01-Dec-2022 16:19  
Contact    Quote!
(Nov 30):  Beleaguered crypto lenders are being dealt another blow from Bitcoin miners, as they weather the aftermath of the FTX collapse.
Miners, who raised as much as US$4 billion from mining-equipment financing when profit margins were as high as 90%, are defaulting on loans and sending hundreds of thousands of machines that served as collateral back to lenders. New York Digital Investment Group, Celsius Network, BlockFi Inc, Galaxy Digital, and the Foundry unit of Digital Currency Group were among the biggest providers of funding to finance computer equipment and build data centres.
The liquidity crunch hitting digital-asset markets after FTX failed  comes as low Bitcoin prices, soaring energy costs and more competition weigh on miners. Loans backed by the computer equipment, known as rigs, had become one of the industry&rsquo s most popular financing tools. Many lenders are now likely facing substantial losses since they can&rsquo t seize any other assets besides the machines, whose value has dropped by as much as 85% since last November.
&ldquo People were pouring dollars into the mining space,&rdquo said Ethan Vera, chief operations officer at crypto-mining services firm Luxor Technologies. &ldquo Miners ended up dictating a lot of the loan terms, so the financiers moved ahead with a lot of the deals where only the machines were collateral.&rdquo  
Iris Energy Ltd  said this month that it expected to default on US$108 million of limited recourse loans, which is mostly backed by mining rigs. The publicly-traded miner is a long-time borrower of NYDIG, winning a US$71 million loan secured by 19,800 rigs as recently as March. That was the miner&rsquo s third facility secured by NYDIG, a unit of Stone Ridge Holdings Group. Core Scientific Inc, which has warned of bankruptcy, had US$39 million of rig-backed loans with NYDIG, and US$54 million with now bankrupt BlockFi, as of September. Stronghold Digital Mining already returned around 26,200 mining rigs in August to eliminate US$67 million debt owed to NYDIG.
NYDIG, BlockFi and Celsius did not respond to requests for comment. Foundry and Galaxy declined to comment.
There is likely to be more defaults. Compared to the publicly-listed miners, private companies currently contribute about 75% of the computing power for the entire Bitcoin network and most of their rig-backed loans with the lenders remain undisclosed, according to data from Luxor. Additional loans will likely come under stress if more private large-scale miners such as Compute North file for bankruptcy.
 

chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 16:14) Posted:

SINGAPORE (Nov 30):  Mark Nash, who had been bearish on bonds including Treasuries and credit, says there&rsquo s value in emerging-market sovereign debt.
&ldquo We shorted everything,&rdquo said Nash, who oversees the Jupiter Strategic Absolute Return Bond Fund, which beat 96% of its peers this year. But &ldquo we do like local emerging-market bonds unhedged&rdquo .
Nash favours securities sold by Brazil, Indonesia and Mexico &mdash some of the best-performing sovereign debt this year, as they benefited from a commodities boom, early rate hikes and receding fears of a hawkish Federal Reserve. He thinks they&rsquo ve only got more to gain with inflation relatively under control, while positive real yields add to their appeal.
The bet is paying off for the fund, which gained 5.7% this year, amid a record annual rout in US government bonds. Brazil&rsquo s debt has risen 11% in 2022, while Mexican notes have climbed 5.4%. In contrast, Treasury investors suffered a 12.4% loss. 
Nash&rsquo s wagers may show that there remains pockets of opportunity in the fixed-income space, after a year in which rising interest rates and surging inflation inflicted painful losses on investors. Signs that the Federal Reserve could slow its pace of tightening are helping to revive appetite for bonds.
&ldquo We are moving into a different world in which commodity prices and resources are expensive &mdash   the scarce asset now is energy, it is commodities,&rdquo said Nash, who helps oversee US$1.5 billion at Jupiter Asset Management. Some emerging markets &ldquo have high real yields, they have better trade balances and they generally have better fiscal coffers&rdquo .
The fund recorded a 650% turnover in securities traded this year and also &ldquo cleared out&rdquo a large chunk of shorts across developed-market sovereign debt amid the recent global bond rally, said the London-based money manager. It still maintains some bearish exposure to Treasuries, gilts and Japanese government bonds.
Here are edited comments from a Q& A with Nash:

Short Dollar

We are short dollars now, making the switch four weeks ago. I do think over time the dollar does fall. Fund has long positions in the Australian dollar, Brazilian real, Indonesian rupiah and Canadian dollar. 

Inflation Bet

Eventually, what will happen is inflation will fall globally, and it&rsquo ll fall for emerging markets a lot. Those central banks can actually start to ease policy to support growth, whereas in the West, policy will be kept tight to keep growth down. That difference will support emerging-market fundamentals. 
 

chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 15:53) Posted:

from august 2022 to dec 2022
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/wee-ee-cheong-boosts-uob-stak


 

 
chartistkao1
    01-Dec-2022 16:14  
Contact    Quote!
SINGAPORE (Nov 30):  Mark Nash, who had been bearish on bonds including Treasuries and credit, says there&rsquo s value in emerging-market sovereign debt.
&ldquo We shorted everything,&rdquo said Nash, who oversees the Jupiter Strategic Absolute Return Bond Fund, which beat 96% of its peers this year. But &ldquo we do like local emerging-market bonds unhedged&rdquo .
Nash favours securities sold by Brazil, Indonesia and Mexico &mdash some of the best-performing sovereign debt this year, as they benefited from a commodities boom, early rate hikes and receding fears of a hawkish Federal Reserve. He thinks they&rsquo ve only got more to gain with inflation relatively under control, while positive real yields add to their appeal.
The bet is paying off for the fund, which gained 5.7% this year, amid a record annual rout in US government bonds. Brazil&rsquo s debt has risen 11% in 2022, while Mexican notes have climbed 5.4%. In contrast, Treasury investors suffered a 12.4% loss. 
Nash&rsquo s wagers may show that there remains pockets of opportunity in the fixed-income space, after a year in which rising interest rates and surging inflation inflicted painful losses on investors. Signs that the Federal Reserve could slow its pace of tightening are helping to revive appetite for bonds.
&ldquo We are moving into a different world in which commodity prices and resources are expensive &mdash   the scarce asset now is energy, it is commodities,&rdquo said Nash, who helps oversee US$1.5 billion at Jupiter Asset Management. Some emerging markets &ldquo have high real yields, they have better trade balances and they generally have better fiscal coffers&rdquo .
The fund recorded a 650% turnover in securities traded this year and also &ldquo cleared out&rdquo a large chunk of shorts across developed-market sovereign debt amid the recent global bond rally, said the London-based money manager. It still maintains some bearish exposure to Treasuries, gilts and Japanese government bonds.
Here are edited comments from a Q& A with Nash:

Short Dollar

We are short dollars now, making the switch four weeks ago. I do think over time the dollar does fall. Fund has long positions in the Australian dollar, Brazilian real, Indonesian rupiah and Canadian dollar. 

Inflation Bet

Eventually, what will happen is inflation will fall globally, and it&rsquo ll fall for emerging markets a lot. Those central banks can actually start to ease policy to support growth, whereas in the West, policy will be kept tight to keep growth down. That difference will support emerging-market fundamentals. 
 

chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 15:53) Posted:

from august 2022 to dec 2022
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/wee-ee-cheong-boosts-uob-stake

chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 09:58) Posted:

UOB Aims to Buy Out HK$10B Loan for Shimao Kowloon Project 

2022/09/22 by Leave a Comment



https://www.mingtiandi.com/real-estate/finance/uob-to-buy-out-loan-for-shimao-kowloon-project/

 


 
 
chartistkao1
    01-Dec-2022 15:53  
Contact    Quote!
from august 2022 to dec 2022
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/wee-ee-cheong-boosts-uob-stake

chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 09:58) Posted:

UOB Aims to Buy Out HK$10B Loan for Shimao Kowloon Project 

2022/09/22 by Leave a Comment



https://www.mingtiandi.com/real-estate/finance/uob-to-buy-out-loan-for-shimao-kowloon-project/

 

chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 05:44) Posted:

WASHINGTON&mdash Federal Reserve Chair  Jerome Powell  indicated the central bank is on track to raise interest rates by a half percentage point at its next meeting, stepping down from  an unprecedented series of four 0.75-point rate rises  aimed at  combating high inflation.
Mr. Powell, in a speech Wednesday, said  an overheated labor market  needed to cool more for the Fed to be confident that inflation would make durable downward progress toward its 2% goal.

Because the Fed has raised rates rapidly and it takes time for those moves  to influence the economy, it would make sense for officials to slow rate increases, he said at an event at the Brookings Institution. &ldquo The time for moderating the pace of rate increases may come as soon as the December meeting,&rdquo he said.
Mr. Powell reviewed signs of progress on the inflation fight, including a slowdown in interest-rate sensitive sectors of the economy such as housing and  improving supply-chain conditions.  But he said that  declines in goods prices and rents, which have contributed notably to inflation over the last 18 months, might be insufficient if firms don&rsquo t slow their hiring.
&ldquo The labor market &hellip shows only tentative signs of rebalancing, and wage growth remains well above levels that would be consistent with 2% inflation,&rdquo Mr. Powell said. &ldquo Despite some promising developments, we have a long way to go in restoring price stability.&rdquo
Inflation is running near a 40-year high and has triggered the most rapid series of interest-rate increases by the Fed since the early 1980s. The Fed seeks to reduce inflation by slowing the economy  through tighter financial conditions&mdash such as higher borrowing costs, lower stock prices and a stronger dollar&mdash which typically curb demand.
Fed officials  lifted their benchmark rate by 0.75 percentage point  on Nov. 2 to a range between 3.75% and 4%. Many officials have signaled they are leaning toward  approving a 0.5-point increase  at their Dec. 13-14 meeting. They had held the rate near zero until March.
A big question now for the Fed is how much further to keep raising rates. Some officials are concerned about causing unnecessary damage to the economy and labor market because it takes time  for the full effects of those increases to ripple through the economy.
Other policy makers are concerned that price pressures could stay high because, despite improvements in supply chains and commodity markets, prices have picked up for more labor-intensive services.
Mr. Powell repeated his earlier view that officials were likely to raise rates to a somewhat higher level early next year than they had anticipated in projections released after their September meeting, when most officials saw their benchmark rate rising to between 4.5% and 5%.
&ldquo There is no doubt that we have made substantial progress,&rdquo he said. &ldquo We have more ground to cover.&rdquo
Mr. Powell&rsquo s comments signaled less confidence in forecasts that have repeatedly suggested an imminent and rapid deceleration in price pressures because inflation has mostly &ldquo moved stubbornly sideways&rdquo over the course of this year.
 


 
 
chartistkao1
    01-Dec-2022 09:58  
Contact    Quote!

UOB Aims to Buy Out HK$10B Loan for Shimao Kowloon Project 

2022/09/22 by Leave a Comment



https://www.mingtiandi.com/real-estate/finance/uob-to-buy-out-loan-for-shimao-kowloon-project/

 

chartistkao1      ( Date: 01-Dec-2022 05:44) Posted:

WASHINGTON&mdash Federal Reserve Chair  Jerome Powell  indicated the central bank is on track to raise interest rates by a half percentage point at its next meeting, stepping down from  an unprecedented series of four 0.75-point rate rises  aimed at  combating high inflation.
Mr. Powell, in a speech Wednesday, said  an overheated labor market  needed to cool more for the Fed to be confident that inflation would make durable downward progress toward its 2% goal.

Because the Fed has raised rates rapidly and it takes time for those moves  to influence the economy, it would make sense for officials to slow rate increases, he said at an event at the Brookings Institution. &ldquo The time for moderating the pace of rate increases may come as soon as the December meeting,&rdquo he said.
Mr. Powell reviewed signs of progress on the inflation fight, including a slowdown in interest-rate sensitive sectors of the economy such as housing and  improving supply-chain conditions.  But he said that  declines in goods prices and rents, which have contributed notably to inflation over the last 18 months, might be insufficient if firms don&rsquo t slow their hiring.
&ldquo The labor market &hellip shows only tentative signs of rebalancing, and wage growth remains well above levels that would be consistent with 2% inflation,&rdquo Mr. Powell said. &ldquo Despite some promising developments, we have a long way to go in restoring price stability.&rdquo
Inflation is running near a 40-year high and has triggered the most rapid series of interest-rate increases by the Fed since the early 1980s. The Fed seeks to reduce inflation by slowing the economy  through tighter financial conditions&mdash such as higher borrowing costs, lower stock prices and a stronger dollar&mdash which typically curb demand.
Fed officials  lifted their benchmark rate by 0.75 percentage point  on Nov. 2 to a range between 3.75% and 4%. Many officials have signaled they are leaning toward  approving a 0.5-point increase  at their Dec. 13-14 meeting. They had held the rate near zero until March.
A big question now for the Fed is how much further to keep raising rates. Some officials are concerned about causing unnecessary damage to the economy and labor market because it takes time  for the full effects of those increases to ripple through the economy.
Other policy makers are concerned that price pressures could stay high because, despite improvements in supply chains and commodity markets, prices have picked up for more labor-intensive services.
Mr. Powell repeated his earlier view that officials were likely to raise rates to a somewhat higher level early next year than they had anticipated in projections released after their September meeting, when most officials saw their benchmark rate rising to between 4.5% and 5%.
&ldquo There is no doubt that we have made substantial progress,&rdquo he said. &ldquo We have more ground to cover.&rdquo
Mr. Powell&rsquo s comments signaled less confidence in forecasts that have repeatedly suggested an imminent and rapid deceleration in price pressures because inflation has mostly &ldquo moved stubbornly sideways&rdquo over the course of this year.
 


chartistkao1      ( Date: 29-Nov-2022 16:58) Posted:

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/malaysia-anwar-ibrahim-procurement-tender-civil-service-ge15-310808


 

 
chartistkao1
    01-Dec-2022 05:44  
Contact    Quote!
WASHINGTON&mdash Federal Reserve Chair  Jerome Powell  indicated the central bank is on track to raise interest rates by a half percentage point at its next meeting, stepping down from  an unprecedented series of four 0.75-point rate rises  aimed at  combating high inflation.
Mr. Powell, in a speech Wednesday, said  an overheated labor market  needed to cool more for the Fed to be confident that inflation would make durable downward progress toward its 2% goal.

Because the Fed has raised rates rapidly and it takes time for those moves  to influence the economy, it would make sense for officials to slow rate increases, he said at an event at the Brookings Institution. &ldquo The time for moderating the pace of rate increases may come as soon as the December meeting,&rdquo he said.
Mr. Powell reviewed signs of progress on the inflation fight, including a slowdown in interest-rate sensitive sectors of the economy such as housing and  improving supply-chain conditions.  But he said that  declines in goods prices and rents, which have contributed notably to inflation over the last 18 months, might be insufficient if firms don&rsquo t slow their hiring.
&ldquo The labor market &hellip shows only tentative signs of rebalancing, and wage growth remains well above levels that would be consistent with 2% inflation,&rdquo Mr. Powell said. &ldquo Despite some promising developments, we have a long way to go in restoring price stability.&rdquo
Inflation is running near a 40-year high and has triggered the most rapid series of interest-rate increases by the Fed since the early 1980s. The Fed seeks to reduce inflation by slowing the economy  through tighter financial conditions&mdash such as higher borrowing costs, lower stock prices and a stronger dollar&mdash which typically curb demand.
Fed officials  lifted their benchmark rate by 0.75 percentage point  on Nov. 2 to a range between 3.75% and 4%. Many officials have signaled they are leaning toward  approving a 0.5-point increase  at their Dec. 13-14 meeting. They had held the rate near zero until March.
A big question now for the Fed is how much further to keep raising rates. Some officials are concerned about causing unnecessary damage to the economy and labor market because it takes time  for the full effects of those increases to ripple through the economy.
Other policy makers are concerned that price pressures could stay high because, despite improvements in supply chains and commodity markets, prices have picked up for more labor-intensive services.
Mr. Powell repeated his earlier view that officials were likely to raise rates to a somewhat higher level early next year than they had anticipated in projections released after their September meeting, when most officials saw their benchmark rate rising to between 4.5% and 5%.
&ldquo There is no doubt that we have made substantial progress,&rdquo he said. &ldquo We have more ground to cover.&rdquo
Mr. Powell&rsquo s comments signaled less confidence in forecasts that have repeatedly suggested an imminent and rapid deceleration in price pressures because inflation has mostly &ldquo moved stubbornly sideways&rdquo over the course of this year.
 


chartistkao1      ( Date: 29-Nov-2022 16:58) Posted:

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/malaysia-anwar-ibrahim-procurement-tender-civil-service-ge15-3108081

chartistkao1      ( Date: 29-Nov-2022 16:54) Posted:

The S$5 billion deal will be fully funded by the bank&rsquo s excess capital, which will have a &ldquo manageable&rdquo impact on UOB&rsquo s capital position. UOB is also &ldquo comfortable and confident&rdquo in its ability to maintain its 50 per cent dividend payout ratio.(at current price of $30.8)
https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/uob-kill-4-birds-1-stone-acquiring-citibanks-operations-region-s5b-1790841


 
 
chartistkao1
    29-Nov-2022 16:58  
Contact    Quote!
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/malaysia-anwar-ibrahim-procurement-tender-civil-service-ge15-3108081

chartistkao1      ( Date: 29-Nov-2022 16:54) Posted:

The S$5 billion deal will be fully funded by the bank&rsquo s excess capital, which will have a &ldquo manageable&rdquo impact on UOB&rsquo s capital position. UOB is also &ldquo comfortable and confident&rdquo in its ability to maintain its 50 per cent dividend payout ratio.(at current price of $30.8)
https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/uob-kill-4-birds-1-stone-acquiring-citibanks-operations-region-s5b-1790841


chartistkao1      ( Date: 29-Nov-2022 10:29) Posted:

A married deal of 70,600 shares at S$29.555 was made at 9.19 am on Friday, according to ShareInvestor data.
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/capital-markets-currencies/hot-stock-uob-14-after-citi-consumer-business
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/brokers-take-analysts-largely-positive-uobs-purchase-citi-assets


 
 
chartistkao1
    29-Nov-2022 16:54  
Contact    Quote!
The S$5 billion deal will be fully funded by the bank&rsquo s excess capital, which will have a &ldquo manageable&rdquo impact on UOB&rsquo s capital position. UOB is also &ldquo comfortable and confident&rdquo in its ability to maintain its 50 per cent dividend payout ratio.(at current price of $30.8)
https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/uob-kill-4-birds-1-stone-acquiring-citibanks-operations-region-s5b-1790841


chartistkao1      ( Date: 29-Nov-2022 10:29) Posted:

A married deal of 70,600 shares at S$29.555 was made at 9.19 am on Friday, according to ShareInvestor data.
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/capital-markets-currencies/hot-stock-uob-14-after-citi-consumer-business
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/brokers-take-analysts-largely-positive-uobs-purchase-citi-assets


chartistkao1      ( Date: 29-Nov-2022 09:36) Posted:

usdsgd 1.377
https://www.straitstimes.com/business/banking/singapore-banks-hiring-thousands-in-fast-growing-areas-like-tech-wealth-management
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/banks-singapore-expand-wealth-tech-jobs-even-wall-street-layoffs-gather-steam
 


 
 
chartistkao1
    29-Nov-2022 10:29  
Contact    Quote!
A married deal of 70,600 shares at S$29.555 was made at 9.19 am on Friday, according to ShareInvestor data.
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/capital-markets-currencies/hot-stock-uob-14-after-citi-consumer-business
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/brokers-take-analysts-largely-positive-uobs-purchase-citi-assets


chartistkao1      ( Date: 29-Nov-2022 09:36) Posted:

usdsgd 1.377
https://www.straitstimes.com/business/banking/singapore-banks-hiring-thousands-in-fast-growing-areas-like-tech-wealth-management
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/banks-singapore-expand-wealth-tech-jobs-even-wall-street-layoffs-gather-steam
 


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 16:43) Posted:

the funds go into football betting for the time being after crypto crashed and tonight half day trading
https://www.google.com/search?q=soccer+match& client=firefox-b-d& sxsrf=ALiCzsYUA8PIgwS2BaqV-lh7QYjhqXPsog%3A1669365680742& ei=sH-AY9juLL2y3LUPoYqjiAs& ved=0ahUKEwjYhprj98j7AhU9GbcAHSHFCLEQ4dUDCA4& uact=5& oq=soccer+match& gs_lcp=Cgxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAQAzILCAAQgAQQsQMQgwEyCwgAEIAEELEDEIMBMgsIABCABBCxAxCDATILCAAQgAQQsQMQgwEyCwgAEIAEELEDEIMBMgoIABCABBCHAhAUMgoIABCABBCHAhAUMgUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQyBQgAEIAEOgoIABBHENYEELADOgcIABCwAxBDOg0IABDkAhDWBBCwAxgBOgwILhDIAxCwAxBDGAI6DwguENQCEMgDELADEEMYAjoKCC4QsQMQgwEQQzoKCAAQsQMQgwEQQzoECAAQQzoECC4QQzoFCC4QgARKBAhBGABKBAhGGAFQ9AhY5RRggRloAXABeACAAYgBiAGzA5IBAzUuMZgBAKABAcgBEsABAdoBBggBEAEYCdoBBggCEAEYCA& sclient=gws-wiz-serp#sie=m /g/11pz0xc5lj 2 /m/030q7 dt fp 1


 

 
chartistkao1
    29-Nov-2022 09:36  
Contact    Quote!
usdsgd 1.377
https://www.straitstimes.com/business/banking/singapore-banks-hiring-thousands-in-fast-growing-areas-like-tech-wealth-management
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/banks-singapore-expand-wealth-tech-jobs-even-wall-street-layoffs-gather-steam
 


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 16:43) Posted:

the funds go into football betting for the time being after crypto crashed and tonight half day trading
https://www.google.com/search?q=soccer+match& client=firefox-b-d& sxsrf=ALiCzsYUA8PIgwS2BaqV-lh7QYjhqXPsog%3A1669365680742& ei=sH-AY9juLL2y3LUPoYqjiAs& ved=0ahUKEwjYhprj98j7AhU9GbcAHSHFCLEQ4dUDCA4& uact=5& oq=soccer+match& gs_lcp=Cgxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAQAzILCAAQgAQQsQMQgwEyCwgAEIAEELEDEIMBMgsIABCABBCxAxCDATILCAAQgAQQsQMQgwEyCwgAEIAEELEDEIMBMgoIABCABBCHAhAUMgoIABCABBCHAhAUMgUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQyBQgAEIAEOgoIABBHENYEELADOgcIABCwAxBDOg0IABDkAhDWBBCwAxgBOgwILhDIAxCwAxBDGAI6DwguENQCEMgDELADEEMYAjoKCC4QsQMQgwEQQzoKCAAQsQMQgwEQQzoECAAQQzoECC4QQzoFCC4QgARKBAhBGABKBAhGGAFQ9AhY5RRggRloAXABeACAAYgBiAGzA5IBAzUuMZgBAKABAcgBEsABAdoBBggBEAEYCdoBBggCEAEYCA& sclient=gws-wiz-serp#sie=m /g/11pz0xc5lj 2 /m/030q7 dt fp 1

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 14:42) Posted:

the big  4 china banks
https://m.thefx168.com/active/article/6198772.html
 
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-11-21/China-s-securities-regulator-to-support-property-firms-bond-financing-1f8YgFkoUQE/index.html
 
https://www.zaobao.com.sg/realtime/china/story20221001-1318478


 
 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 16:43  
Contact    Quote!
the funds go into football betting for the time being after crypto crashed and tonight half day trading
https://www.google.com/search?q=soccer+match& client=firefox-b-d& sxsrf=ALiCzsYUA8PIgwS2BaqV-lh7QYjhqXPsog%3A1669365680742& ei=sH-AY9juLL2y3LUPoYqjiAs& ved=0ahUKEwjYhprj98j7AhU9GbcAHSHFCLEQ4dUDCA4& uact=5& oq=soccer+match& gs_lcp=Cgxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAQAzILCAAQgAQQsQMQgwEyCwgAEIAEELEDEIMBMgsIABCABBCxAxCDATILCAAQgAQQsQMQgwEyCwgAEIAEELEDEIMBMgoIABCABBCHAhAUMgoIABCABBCHAhAUMgUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQyBQgAEIAEOgoIABBHENYEELADOgcIABCwAxBDOg0IABDkAhDWBBCwAxgBOgwILhDIAxCwAxBDGAI6DwguENQCEMgDELADEEMYAjoKCC4QsQMQgwEQQzoKCAAQsQMQgwEQQzoECAAQQzoECC4QQzoFCC4QgARKBAhBGABKBAhGGAFQ9AhY5RRggRloAXABeACAAYgBiAGzA5IBAzUuMZgBAKABAcgBEsABAdoBBggBEAEYCdoBBggCEAEYCA& sclient=gws-wiz-serp#sie=m /g/11pz0xc5lj 2 /m/030q7 dt fp 1

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 14:42) Posted:

the big  4 china banks
https://m.thefx168.com/active/article/6198772.html
 
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-11-21/China-s-securities-regulator-to-support-property-firms-bond-financing-1f8YgFkoUQE/index.html
 
https://www.zaobao.com.sg/realtime/china/story20221001-1318478


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 14:29) Posted:

if taiwan' s dap lost in coming taiwan' s election,then US will step up its next move
http://eng.chinamil.com.cn/view/2022-11/22/content_10200787.htm
 
https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2022/11/34dad3ba3fae-us-military-poised-to-return-to-subic-bay-counter-chinas-presence.html


 
 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 14:42  
Contact    Quote!
the big  4 china banks
https://m.thefx168.com/active/article/6198772.html
 
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-11-21/China-s-securities-regulator-to-support-property-firms-bond-financing-1f8YgFkoUQE/index.html
 
https://www.zaobao.com.sg/realtime/china/story20221001-1318478


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 14:29) Posted:

if taiwan' s dap lost in coming taiwan' s election,then US will step up its next move
http://eng.chinamil.com.cn/view/2022-11/22/content_10200787.htm
 
https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2022/11/34dad3ba3fae-us-military-poised-to-return-to-subic-bay-counter-chinas-presence.html


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:20) Posted:

when substantial amount of FEd official appear to agree on slower rate hikes,china rescue its ailing property sector
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-11-24/IMF-China-s-support-initiatives-for-property-sector-applaudable-1fdvxvr9AOc/index.html
 
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/interest-rate


 
 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 14:29  
Contact    Quote!
if taiwan' s dap lost in coming taiwan' s election,then US will step up its next move
http://eng.chinamil.com.cn/view/2022-11/22/content_10200787.htm
 
https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2022/11/34dad3ba3fae-us-military-poised-to-return-to-subic-bay-counter-chinas-presence.html


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:20) Posted:

when substantial amount of FEd official appear to agree on slower rate hikes,china rescue its ailing property sector
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-11-24/IMF-China-s-support-initiatives-for-property-sector-applaudable-1fdvxvr9AOc/index.html
 
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/interest-rate


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:16) Posted:

and many over leveraged big economy get hit
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-10-14/UK-s-financial-crisis-appears-unavoidable-1e7JlKynKww/index.html
 
https://www.rocketmortgage.com/learn/fed-rate-hike


 
 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 13:20  
Contact    Quote!
when substantial amount of FEd official appear to agree on slower rate hikes,china rescue its ailing property sector
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-11-24/IMF-China-s-support-initiatives-for-property-sector-applaudable-1fdvxvr9AOc/index.html
 
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/interest-rate


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:16) Posted:

and many over leveraged big economy get hit
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-10-14/UK-s-financial-crisis-appears-unavoidable-1e7JlKynKww/index.html
 
https://www.rocketmortgage.com/learn/fed-rate-hike


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:13) Posted:

so the housing and crypto ballons breaks by rapid rate hikes
https://www.bankrate.com/real-estate/housing-bubble


 

 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 13:16  
Contact    Quote!
and many over leveraged big economy get hit
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-10-14/UK-s-financial-crisis-appears-unavoidable-1e7JlKynKww/index.html
 
https://www.rocketmortgage.com/learn/fed-rate-hike


chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:13) Posted:

so the housing and crypto ballons breaks by rapid rate hikes
https://www.bankrate.com/real-estate/housing-bubble/

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:11) Posted:

how to prick the QE' s balloon caused by the mass printing of money by large economy
https://www.rocketmortgage.com/learn/fed-rate-hik


 
 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 13:13  
Contact    Quote!
so the housing and crypto ballons breaks by rapid rate hikes
https://www.bankrate.com/real-estate/housing-bubble/

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:11) Posted:

how to prick the QE' s balloon caused by the mass printing of money by large economy
https://www.rocketmortgage.com/learn/fed-rate-hike

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:08) Posted:

just likes during 1990 to 1995,hot hot money flows into asia, after 2009' s US subprime crisis, hot moeny caused by central banker' s QE and printing of money flows into asia and flowed the whole asia markets like the flood caused by climate changed
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2019-08-14/How-Hong-Kong-survived-the-1998-financial-crisis-J9lwvZrsNq/index.htm


 
 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 13:11  
Contact    Quote!
how to prick the QE' s balloon caused by the mass printing of money by large economy
https://www.rocketmortgage.com/learn/fed-rate-hike

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:08) Posted:

just likes during 1990 to 1995,hot hot money flows into asia, after 2009' s US subprime crisis, hot moeny caused by central banker' s QE and printing of money flows into asia and flowed the whole asia markets like the flood caused by climate changed
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2019-08-14/How-Hong-Kong-survived-the-1998-financial-crisis-J9lwvZrsNq/index.html

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:03) Posted:

will the angmo fund managers succeed in making the us dollar the king again after 1997?
https://fortune.com/2022/11/24/bill-ackman-break-hong-kong-dollar-currency-peg-us


 
 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 13:08  
Contact    Quote!
just likes during 1990 to 1995,hot hot money flows into asia, after 2009' s US subprime crisis, hot moeny caused by central banker' s QE and printing of money flows into asia and flowed the whole asia markets like the flood caused by climate changed
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2019-08-14/How-Hong-Kong-survived-the-1998-financial-crisis-J9lwvZrsNq/index.html

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 13:03) Posted:

will the angmo fund managers succeed in making the us dollar the king again after 1997?
https://fortune.com/2022/11/24/bill-ackman-break-hong-kong-dollar-currency-peg-us/

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 11:49) Posted:

breaking away from the dollar' s control,will asia win this war?
https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/how-dollar-hegemony-is-gradually-receding/article65663386.ec


 
 
chartistkao1
    25-Nov-2022 13:03  
Contact    Quote!
will the angmo fund managers succeed in making the us dollar the king again after 1997?
https://fortune.com/2022/11/24/bill-ackman-break-hong-kong-dollar-currency-peg-us/

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 11:49) Posted:

breaking away from the dollar' s control,will asia win this war?
https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/how-dollar-hegemony-is-gradually-receding/article65663386.ece

chartistkao1      ( Date: 25-Nov-2022 11:47) Posted:

will sgd get colonised bu usd again?
https://www.jstor.org/stable/4416354
 
usd/sgd1.372


 
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