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Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Warnings that the Worst is Yet to Engulf Us

Ominous Warnings and Dire Predictions of World's Financial Experts

read here



Monday, April 26, 2010

Compare list - high margin & Div Yield- 26Apr 2010

You have chosen the following criteria :-
Industry : All
Criteria Min value Max value
Dividend Yield (%) 5 200
Operating Margin 45 500
Revenue Change % 1 500
Co. code Company NameOperating MarginRevenue Change %Dividend Yield (%)
1 FRET.SG First Real Estate Investment Trust128.04171.36177.9080
2 ARE.SG Ascendas Real Estate Investment Trust65.62722.64606.6497
3 PST.SG Pacific Shipping Trust63.487739.315311.2393
4 PLRE.SG Parkway Life REIT57.409023.60835.3864
5 MTLT.SG Mapletree Logistics Trust53.861110.25285.8757
6 CRCT.SG CapitaRetail China Trust47.83895.37106.5645
7 FCPT.SG Frasers Centrepoint Trust46.809212.45195.7609
8 CIT.SG Cambridge Industrial Trust46.28592.069010.3689

Compare list - high Operating margin%- 26Apr 2010

You have chosen the following criteria :-
Industry : All
Criteria Min value Max value
Operating Margin 45 500
Revenue Change % 5 500
Co. code Company NameOperating MarginRevenue Change %
1 CINT.SG China Infrastructure Holdings Limited108.277730.5480
2 CTR.SG China Infrastructure Holdings Limited108.277730.5480
3 CHF.SG CH Offshore Limited80.86328.2515
4 HPB.SG Haw Par Corporation Ltd.74.06336.1019
5 ORC.SG Orchard Parade Holdings Limited70.667485.9923
6 CPL.SG CapitaLand Limited66.794475.1901
7 CPLA.SG CapitaLand Limited66.794475.1901
8 PST.SG Pacific Shipping Trust63.487739.3153
9 OCT.SG Oriental Century Limited57.909326.8387
10 ARA.SG ARA Asset Management Limited57.576518.3274
11 PLRE.SG Parkway Life REIT57.409023.6083
12 SHP.SG Sihuan Pharmaceutical Holdings Group Ltd56.299038.4476
13 MTLT.SG Mapletree Logistics Trust53.861110.2528
14 CRCT.SG CapitaRetail China Trust47.83895.3710
15 HBI.SG Ho Bee Investment Limited47.2363298.1560
16 UOI.SG United Overseas Insurance Limited47.103246.1792
17 FCPT.SG Frasers Centrepoint Trust46.809212.4519
18 CKD.SG China Kunda Technology Holdings Limited45.724817.7776

SGX Stock Highest Yield Table - 26 Apr 10 3:09pm


Name


EPS

Div

PE

Yield

Last

Chg

Vol

High

Low

Prev


OmegaNav 50 US$ 0.720 1.5000 4.1 50.3 - - 0 - - 4.15

Pac Cent
0.087 0.0950 2.3 46.3 0.205 - 13 0.210 0.205 0.205

AIMSAMPIReit
-0.101 0.0893 - 40.6 0.220 - 222 0.225 0.220 0.220

MacCookPSF A$ -0.344 0.0100 - 36.6 0.095 - 140 0.095 0.095 0.095

Achieva
0.005 0.0400 20.1 36.4 0.110 - 1,804 0.110 0.105 0.110
Transpac
0.482 0.5000 3.5 29.9 1.67 +0.05 143 1.67 1.63 1.62

China YongS RMB 0.003 0.0293 49.7 19.7 0.030 - 291 0.030 0.030 0.030
FSL Trust US$ 0.014 0.0790 31.9 17.6 0.620 -0.015 656 0.625 0.620 0.635

FibreChem HK$ 0.588 0.0900 1.0 15.5 - - 0 - - 0.105

China Sun RMB 0.334 0.0350 0.8 13.1 - - 0 - - 0.055
GlobalInv
-0.086 0.0300 - 13.0 0.230 +0.005 6,278 0.235 0.225 0.225
Rickmers US$ 0.096 0.0391 3.1 13.0 0.415 +0.020 7,415 0.430 0.410 0.395

SP AusNet A$ 0.070 0.1185 16.8 12.6 1.19 - 58 1.19 1.19 1.19

Transit
0.057 0.0300 4.4 12.0 - - 0 - - 0.250

ShangTurbo RMB 0.035 0.0500 12.0 11.9 0.085 - 40 0.085 0.085 0.085

PacShipTr US$ US$ 0.046 0.0362 6.6 11.9 0.305 - 429 0.305 0.300 0.305
CitySpring
-0.102 0.0700 - 11.6 0.605 -0.005 280 0.610 0.605 0.610
BrightWor RMB 0.149 0.1500 8.9 11.2 0.270 +0.010 374 0.275 0.260 0.260
Datapulse
0.026 0.0250 8.7 11.1 0.225 +0.005 78 0.225 0.225 0.220

2ndChance
0.032 0.0350 10.3 10.8 - - 0 - - 0.325

FrasersComm
-0.058 0.0164 - 10.6 0.155 - 26,114 0.160 0.150 0.155
Cambridge
-0.071 0.0536 - 10.3 0.520 +0.005 2,791 0.520 0.510 0.515
8Telecom RMB 0.153 0.0885 5.6 10.2 0.175 -0.005 210 0.175 0.175 0.180

LippoMapleT
0.037 0.0504 13.5 10.1 0.500 - 506 0.505 0.500 0.500

AdvaHldg
0.032 0.0340 10.9 9.9 0.345 - 723 0.345 0.345 0.345

EasternH
0.055 0.0180 3.5 9.5 - - 0 - - 0.190
CMZ RMB 0.116 0.0928 8.6 9.4 0.200 +0.030 10 0.200 0.200 0.170

PCA Tech US$ -0.023 0.0067 - 9.3 - - 0 - - 0.100
KSH Hldg
0.079 0.0350 5.6 9.1 0.275 +0.005 115 0.275 0.275 0.270
Starhill Gbl
-0.024 0.0569 - 9.0 0.635 +0.005 1,708 0.640 0.630 0.630

Dividends Last updated on: 26-Apr-2010 14:50

Last updated on: 26-Apr-2010 14:50
Company Dividend Ex-Date Date Payable
8Telecom SGD0.00622 May 11 Jun 2
ABR SGD0.01 May 11 May 27
Action Asia SGD0.01 May 6 May 19
Adampak SGD0.015 May 6 May 26
Adva Hldg SGD0.02 May 3 May 18
AEI SGD0.02 May 6 May 26
AEI SGD0.01 May 6 May 26
Allgreen SGD0.04 May 4 May 20
Amara SGD0.005 Jun 14 Jun 28
Apex-Pal SGD0.005 Jun 7 Jun 23
AP Oil SGD0.0075 May 4 May 19
ARA Asset Mg SGD0.025 Apr 29 May 18
Armstrong SGD0.016 May 13 May 31
AscendasReit SGD0.0273 Apr 23 May 25
AsiaEntH SGD0.012 May 3 May 21
Asia Medic SGD0.0006 Apr 29 May 14
Asia Power SGD0.007 Apr 30 May 20
Aspial SGD0.005 Jul 28 Aug 16
Auric Pac SGD0.02 May 6 May 26
Aztech SGD0.0125 Apr 23 May 11
Baker Tech SGD0.0225 May 3 May 18
BBR SGD0.006 May 4 May 18
Beng Kuang SGD0.005 Apr 28 May 14
Best World SGD0.005 May 6 May 24
Best World SGD0.005 May 6 May 24
Bonvests SGD0.0225 May 19 Jun 11
BreadTalk SGD0.01 May 6 May 26
Bright World CNY0.15 May 10 Jun 2
Broadway SGD0.02 Apr 30 May 14
C&G SGD0.001 May 4 May 21
C&O Pharm SGD0.035 Jul 8 Jul 30
C&O Pharm SGD0.005 Jul 8 Jul 30
Cambridge SGD0.01262 Apr 27 Jun 15
Capitaland SGD0.055 Apr 26 May 13
Capitaland SGD0.05 Apr 26 May 13
CapMallsAsia SGD 0.01 Apr 14 May 7
CDW USD0.003 May 4 May 20
CEI SGD0.00166 Apr 21 May 4
CEI SGD0.0013 Apr 21 May 4
Challenger SGD0.013 May 10 May 25
ChinaMerchan SGD0.02 May 11 Jun 3
ChinaNTown SGD0.00278 May 7 May 24
ChinaSunsine SGD0.01 Apr 29 May 18
China XLX SGD0.006 May 7 May 27
ChinaHongx CNY0.01 May 7 May 27
China Hu An SGD0.01 May 17 Jun 10
China Dairy SGD0.004 May 7 May 21
ChinaJishan SGD0.002 May 7 May 26
ChinaTaisan CNY0.0345 May 13 Jun 30
China Zaino CNY0.063 May 4 May 19
ChinaAOil SGD0.02 May 5 May 21
China Intl SGD0.0035 May 4 May 27
ChipEngSeng SGD0.03 May 7 May 25
CityDev SGD0.08 May 4 May 21
CityNeon SGD0.016 May 4 May 19
Cogent SGD0.0139 Apr 15 Apr 30
Colex SGD0.005 Apr 23 May 7
Colex SGD0.003 Apr 23 May 7
CombineWill SGD0.01 May 4 May 19
ComfortDelGr SGD0.0267 May 3 May 18
Cosco SGD0.03 Apr 23 May 11
CourageMar USD0.00472 May 3 May 17
CSE Global SGD0.035 Apr 22 May 6
CWT SGD0.02 Apr 29 May 13
Dairy F USD0.115 Mar 17 May 12
DBS SGD0.14 May 20 -
DBS STI ETF SGD0.02 Apr 29 May 12
DesignStudio SGD0.0125 Apr 26 May 10
Dynamic SGD0.0075 May 3 May 21
ECS Hldg SGD0.03 May 5 May 21
EDMI SGD0.015 May 17 Jun 1
Elec & Eltek USD0.15 Apr 7 Apr 21
Elec & Eltek SGD0.10 Apr 7 Apr 21
Eng Kong SGD0.027 May 5 May 27
Eng Kong SGD0.007 May 5 May 27
Engro SGD0.03 Jul 6 Jul 26
Engro SGD0.02 Jul 6 Jul 26
Ezion Hldg SGD0.0006 May 3 May 18
FalconEnergy SGD0.01 Apr 29 May 20
First Res SGD0.0118 May 4 May 18
FoodEmpire SGD0.0022 May 4 May 26
FoodEmpire SGD0.0078 May 4 May 26
Fragrance SGD0.0025 May 5 May 18
Frencken SGD0.0074 Apr 29 May 14
FSL Trust USD0.015 Apr 26 May 26
Fuji Offset SGD0.003 May 3 May 18
Fujian ZY CNY0.0564 Jun 11 Jun 30
Fuxing China CNY0.02 May 6 May 20
First REIT SGD0.0019 Apr 29 May 27
First REIT SGD0.0013 Apr 29 May 27
First REIT SGD0.0158 Apr 29 May 27
Frasers CT SGD0.001639 Apr 29 May 27
Frasers CT SGD0.00398 Apr 29 May 27
FrasersCPPU SGD0.006989 Apr 29 May 27
FrasersCPPU SGD0.002455 Apr 29 May 27
FrasersCPPU SGD0.01697 Apr 29 May 27
FrasersCPPU SGD0.001011 Apr 29 May 27
G K Goh SGD0.015 May 3 May 18
Golden Agri SGD0.00495 May 3 May 17
GreatEastern SGD0.27 Apr 21 May 7
GreatEastern SGD0.08 Apr 21 May 7
Great Group CNY0.0566 Apr 27 May 11
Guthrie SGD0.0125 May 7 May 27
Haw Par SGD0.14 May 17 Jun 1
Heng Long SGD0.005 May 3 May 19
Heatec SGD0.01 May 3 May 18
Hersing SGD0.01 Apr 26 May 7
HI-P Intl SGD0.03 May 11 May 25
HKLand USD0.1 Mar 17 May 12
Hiap Hoe SGD0.0025 May 13 May 27
HL Asia SGD0.07 May 6 May 24
HL Fin SGD0.06 May 3 May 21
HLN Tech SGD0.0018 May 4 May 18
Ho Bee SGD0.02 May 10 May 31
Ho GCen SGD0.04 May 3 Jun 23
Hosen SGD0.00138 May 5 May 20
Ho Prop SGD0.02 May 10 May 25
Hotung USD0.0076 Apr 29 May 14
HockLiangS SGD0.015 May 11 Jun 3
Hoe Leong SGD0.0025 May 4 May 18
Hor Kew SGD0.0025 Apr 30 May 14
HTL Int SGD0.02 May 11 May 21
HTL Int SGD0.02 May 11 May 21
Hupsteel SGD0.005 Apr 8 Apr 22
Hwa Hong SGD0.0125 May 6 May 21
Hyflux SGD0.05 May 5 May 25
IFS Capital SGD0.015 May 3 May 18
Innotek SGD0.05 May 4 May 26
Intraco SGD0.01 Apr 27 May 11
Isetan SGD0.075 Apr 30 May 14
Jadason SGD0.003 May 7 May 24
Jardine C&C USD0.47 May 12 Jun 24
Jar Mat USD0.65 Mar 17 May 12
Jar Str USD0.14 Mar 17 May 12
JK Yaming SGD0.009 May 4 May 18
JLJ SGD0.0006 May 4 May 21
Juken Tech SGD0.0013 May 3 May 17
KencanaAgri SGD0.002 May 6 May 20
KeppelCorp SGD0.23 Apr 27 May 11
Keppel Land SGD0.08 Apr 27 Jun 18
Keppel T&T SGD0.03 Apr 23 May 7
Kian Ann SGD0.003 Apr 8 Apr 30
Kian Ho SGD0.002 May 11 Jun 1
Kian Ho SGD0.004 May 11 Jun 1
Kim Eng SGD0.08 May 10 May 27
Kingsmen SGD0.02 May 5 May 19
Koh Bros SGD0.003 Apr 30 May 18
Koon Hldgs SGD0.005 Apr 1 Apr 23
Koon Hldgs SGD0.01 Apr 1 Apr 23
Lee Kim Tah SGD0.01 May 7 May 20
Lee Metal SGD0.01 May 3 May 27
Lee Metal SGD0.01 May 3 May 27
LHT SGD0.0025 May 7 May 26
Li Heng SGD0.01 May 4 May 20
Liang Huat SGD0.0003 May 5 May 27
Lion APac SGD0.15 Apr 12 Apr 26
LowKengHuat SGD0.03 Jun 7 Jun 23
Lung Kee HKD0.11 Apr 30 May 20
ManOri USD0.05 Mar 17 May 12
MCL Land SGD0.125 May 10 May 26
MediaRing SGD0.001 Jun 7 Jun 30
Meiban SGD0.01 Apr 20 May 5
Meiban SGD0.01 Apr 20 May 5
Memtech SGD0.0075 May 5 May 21
Mencast SGD0.01 May 3 May 21
MobileOne SGD0.072 Apr 14 Apr 27
Murata 100 Y JPY35 Mar 29 Jun 30
NeraTelecom SGD 0.03 May 4 May 18
New Toyo SGD0.0127 May 4 May 21
NSL SGD0.1 May 4 May 25
Oakwell SGD0.00075 May 7 May 25
OCBC SGD0.14 Apr 23 Jun 16
Osim SGD0.01 May 10 May 26
Ocean Sky SGD0.008 May 13 May 27
OKP SGD0.01 May 4 May 27
OKP SGD0.02 May 4 May 27
Otto Marine SGD0.005 May 3 May 26
Pac Century SGD0.012 May 19 Jun 2
Pan Asian SGD0.01 May 3 May 14
Pan Pacific SGD0.035 Apr 28 May 13
Pan Utd SGD0.015 May 6 May 25
Parkway SGD0.0115 Apr 22 May 5
People'sFood CNY0.0055 May 11 Jun 4
Petra SGD0.0143 May 4 May 20
Poh Tiong C SGD0.02 May 10 May 26
PSC SGD0.015 May 3 May 19
PSL SGD0.0088 May 4 May 17
QAF SGD0.02 May 11
QAF SGD0.01 May 11
Qualitas SGD0.011 Apr 30 May 14
Raffles Med SGD0.02 May 3 May 19
Ramba SGD0.001 Apr 29 May 13
Riverstone MYR0.01 May 6 May 27
Riverstone MYR0.018 May 6 May 27
Rokko SGD 0.005 Apr 23 May 7
Rotary SGD0.038 Apr 23 May 12
Roxy-Pacific SGD0.01 Apr 7 Apr 23
Ryobi Kiso SGD0.005 Apr 13 Apr 30
San Teh SGD0.008 May 7 May 25
Sarin Tech SGD0.008 May 5 May 27
SBS SGD0.043 May 3 May 17
SBI Offsh SGD0.002 May 6 May 20
SC Global SGD0.015 May 3 May 26
SeeHupSeng SGD0.003 May 6 May 21
SembCorpInd SGD0.15 Apr 26 May 12
SembMarine SGD0.06 Apr 22 May 10
SembMarine SGD0.04 Apr 22 May 10
SG MEDICAL SGD0.0027 Apr 22 May 7
SGX SGD0.0375 May 3 May 17
ShanghaiAsia SGD0.005 May 13 May 31
ShangAsiaHK HKD0.06 May 18 Jun 7
SHC Capital SGD0.0014 May 7 May 26
Sing Hldg SGD0.007 May 13 May 25
Sing Inv SGD0.08 May 12 May 25
Sinwa SGD0.008 May 3 May 17
Sky Petrol SGD0.004 May 4 May 18
SMB SGD0.015 May 5 May 21
SM Summit SGD0.005 May 5 May 26
Soilbuild SGD0.025 May 7 May 26
Soilbuild SGD0.035 May 7 May 26
Soup Restrn SGD0.0035 May 3 May 18
SouthernPkg SGD0.008 May 4 May 27
SouthernPkg SGD0.006 May 4 May 27
SPH SGD0.07 May 4 May 21
Spore Land SGD0.20 Apr 29 May 19
Spore Rein SGD0.007 Apr 28 May 12
ST Eng SGD0.0628 Apr 27 May 18
ST Eng SGD0.04 Apr 27 May 18
St Trading SGD0.02 Apr 16 May 4
Starhub SGD0.05 Apr 20 May 7
StarPharm SGD0.01 May 13 Jun 8
Straco SGD0.005 May 4 May 19
Str Asia USD0.0203 May 6 May 21
SunningTech SGD0.004 May 4 May 18
Superbowl SGD0.0025 May 11 May 27
Supercoffee SGD0.02 May 7 May 25
SupMPack SGD0.003 Apr 30 May 13
Swissco SGD0.01 Apr 22 May 6
TanChongIntl HKD0.04 May 3 May 27
Teck Wah SGD0.02 May 4 May 19
Techcomp SGD0.012 May 4 May 17
Tele choice SGD0.0175 May 3 May 20
ThaiBeverage THB0.18 May 4 May 26
ThomsonMed SGD0.012 Apr 21 May 7
Total Access THB1.39 May 5 May 26
Transpac SGD0.1 May 3 May 18
Trek SGD0.005 Apr 28 May 19
TSH SGD0.003 May 6 May 24
Tsit Wing HKD0.065 May 12 Jun 3
TPV USD0.0126 May 21 Jun 8
Tuan Sing SGD0.003 Apr 28 Jun 18
TyeSoon SGD0.00225 May 4 May 18
UE SGD0.04 May 5 May 21
UE SGD0.05 May 5 May 21
UE P SGD0.075 May 5 May 21
UIC SGD0.03 May 6 May 24
UIS SGD0.06 Apr 19 May 4
UMS SGD0.01 May 11 May 27
UOB SGD0.4 May 7 Jun 25
UOB-Kay Hian SGD0.075 May 10 May 27
UOI SGD 0.12 May 7 May 25
UOL SGD0.10 Apr 28 May 13
UtdOAus AUD0.015 May 5 May 31
Unidux SGD0.005 May 18 Jun 8
Venture SGD0.5 May 6 May 20
Vicom SGD0.06 May 3 May 17
Viking SGD0.003 Apr 19 Apr 30
Wee Hur SGD0.015 May 4 May 18
Wheelock SGD0.06 Apr 29 May 17
Wilmar SGD0.05 May 5 May 20
Yanlord SGD0.0168 May 11 Jun 1
YHI SGD0.0115 May 4 May 21
Yongnam SGD0.005 May 6 May 26
Zagro SGD0.01 May 13 Jun 1
ZhguoPengjie CNY0.056 May 6 May 24

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Personal TA On STI APR to MAY 2010



Previously in Mar 2010:
(200 days trendwave now at +2 / 3 eillott wave . Not indicated in the picture).
50 days trendwave now at -2 /5 eillott wave , and midway of this -2 wave occurs sometime in 22 ~ 29 Mar .
wave for 5 days trendwave now at +2 / 3 wave .
10 days trendwave now at +1/5 wave.
20days monthly trendwave now at -3/3 wave.

For 30 Mar to 16APR:
200 days trendwave == +2 /3 eillottwave.
50 days trendwave == -2/5 eillottwave. (2mths runtime)
20days trendwave == +1/5 eillottwave.
10days trendwave == +1/5 eillottwave.
5days trendwave == +1/5 eillottwave.


For 16 APR to MAY 2010:
200 days trendwave == +2 /3 eillottwave.(-3/3 wave kicks in when gold price falls )
50 days trendwave == +3/5 eillottwave. (Est. to last Jun/Jul 2010. Watchdate 25 Jun to 9Jul) (-4/5 wave kick in when gold falls below 1080, runtime less than 2 mths)
20days trendwave == -2/5 eillottwave.
10days trendwave == +1/5 eillottwave.
5days trendwave == -2/5 eillottwave.

Teeka Tiwari: Train Wreck- 6 Scenarios to Prepare for

Orginal report to download http://publications.thetycoonreport.com/t/2170145/1282096/630862/0/

Scenario 1 – Interest Rates Stay Down
In this scenario, the U.S. experiences an extended period of Japanese-style
deflation.
What is deflation? It’s the opposite of inflation: instead of prices steadily rising
over time, they steadily decline. Impossible, you say?
PRICES IN JAPAN
HAVE BEEN
DROPPING FOR 20
YEARS!
In the chart to the right
we can see that in 8 of
the last 14 years prices
have been declining.
Even in the up years,
price appreciation has
been negligible.
And you know what
triggered Japan’s deflationary spiral? Out-of-control real estate prices, that’s
what! They had their 2008 in 1988 and they still haven’t gotten out of it.
Not only was real estate
to blame, but there was
also a second very
important piece to that
puzzle. What most
analysts failed to grasp
was that Japan’s
downturn was presaged
by the peaking of its
wealthiest citizens – the
39- to 43-year-old
demographic.
In any industrialized
economy, there is a
demographic segment
that represents the peak earners who are the engine of growth. In Japan that
happens to be the 39- to 43-year-olds. As this group went into decline, the entire
Japanese economy followed, as you can see in the chart to the right.
We are seeing the same exact series of events occur in the U.S., except that due to
societal differences, our peak earning demographic is the 45- to 54-year-old
group.
Fortunately, the rise and decline of any age group can be almost perfectly
predicted based on birth and immigration records, so we can see into the future,
right now, with near-perfect clarity, about how the 45- to 54-year-old age group
will change, and what we see isn’t good.
Take a look at the red
line and you’ll see
that shortly after
2010, this age group
drops off a cliff – a
decrease in
magnitude that’s far
greater than the blip
that happened
during the Great
Depression.
But that’s not our
only problem – along
with these big-money earners, we also have another influential demographic, the
so-called baby boomer generation, which is set to exit the workforce at roughly
the same time that the peak earners are leaving.
So that means that simultaneously we have the most productive part of our
population, the 45- to 54-year-olds, on a downward slide, and we have the largest
part of our population, the baby boomers, about to exit the workforce and tap
into Social Security and Medicare, two entitlement programs that are already
bankrupt and only
going to get worse –
see the chart on the
right.
That’s a pretty
powerful one-two
punch, and the
effects simply cannot
be ignored.
As the buying power
of these two groups diminishes and as we see general consumer demand stay
sluggish as people refuse to spend, we could see prices actually start to drop.
This is what deflation looks like; prices start going down! As prices continue to
drop, consumers spend less and less because they know if they wait they will get a
better deal. This leads to a deflationary spiral, where spending slows to a halt and
companies go out of business left and right.
Under this scenario, the buying power of
paper cash actually increases over time
rather than declining over time.
In a deflationary environment you want to
buy bonds or high-yielding debt
instruments before deflation becomes
apparent to the crowd. You see, as deflation
takes hold, the central bankers take interest
rates all the way down in a futile effort to
stimulate their respective economies.
As interest rates go lower, bond prices go up.
Let me walk you through it.
Imagine that you have a bond with a face value of $1,000 and it pays a coupon of
4%. Each year you get $40 in interest on your $1,000.
Now imagine that interest rates drop from 4% to 2%. You will still receive your
4%, or $40 per year, but your bond will increase in value. This happens because
now the prevailing interest rate is 2% instead of 4%.
So the value of your bond will increase as prevailing rates go lower.
If you decide to sell your bond before its maturity date, the person buying your
bond will still receive a 4% coupon paid by the original issuer of the bond but
their yield will only be 2%, which would once again reflect prevailing bond yields.
The yield is only 2% because your bond would have appreciated in value to reflect
current interest rates.
If you are receiving 4%, or $40 per $1,000 invested, and rates drop to 2%, your
bond would have to increase in value to $2,000 to reflect the change to a 2% rate.
2% of $2,000 equals $40.
Remember, the coupon rate never changes since the coupon is the amount of
interest paid by the original issuer of the bond. The yield on the bond however,
fluctuates every day and is based upon prevailing interest rates.
Under this scenario,
the buying power of
paper cash actually
increases over time
rather than declining
over time.
To reiterate, if you now sell your bond at
$2,000, the buyer still receives the same 4%
coupon or $40. However the buyer’s effective
yield is only 2%.
Are you beginning to see how much money
can be made going long with bonds in a
declining-interest-rate environment?
They are, but
compared to how
low Japanese rates
have been, we are
just getting started.
Even now, 10-year
Japanese
government debt is
yielding just 1.4%.
By contrast, the 10-
year Treasury is
trading close to 4%!
A 2.46% move
lower in bond rates would have bond prices sky rocketing. In a worst-case
scenario you could see 10-year bond yields trading below 1%!
Remember, 2008 taught us that nothing is impossible!
Assets to Own: Cash, Bonds, Interest Bearing Instruments
Assets to Avoid: Gold, Commodities


Scenario 2 – Interest Rates Skyrocket
In this possible future, we see nightmarishly high inflation. As our country
struggles to bridge the budget deficit gap and fund our social programs we will
invariably crank up our printing presses even more. In fact, it’s already
happening, as is dramatized by the chart below!
The only thing stopping this runaway inflation so far has been the banks’
reluctance to lend. The availability of credit has contracted while the money
supply has ballooned. As the bankers feel more secure, it won't be long before
But I can hear some
of you saying,
“Interest rates are
already super low.”
Americans are once again deluged with easy-access, inflation-inducing consumer
loans.
This in turn will devalue the dollar further and drive interest rates on our
government debt higher as buyers demand a bigger risk premium to protect
themselves.
In the worst-case scenario we see
1923 German-style hyperinflation rip
through Western European
countries.
Quick history lesson: After World
War I, to finance war reparation
payments, the Germans hit the
printing presses full force, the entire
effect of which was not felt until late
1923. By the end of 1923 prices were
rising at a rate of 500% per week!
This is, of course, an extreme
example, and I’m not suggesting we
are anywhere near that type of an
event taking place in America…at
least not for the next 40 years or so.
However, even a more moderate
version of a hyperinflation
environment could push U.S. interest
rates to above 20% as an embattled
Fed attempts to stem the complete
collapse of the U.S. dollar.
Remember that not too long ago, in the early 1980s, the federal funds rate did
climb as high as 20%.
Inflation is a vicious redistributor of wealth
income; it smashes the value of life insurance payouts and destroys savings
cash.
BUT!
If this happens and you make the right moves
to make untold millions of dollars. The money that we can make under this
scenario is truly scary.
As interest rates rise, the prices of bonds get HAMMERED and you can make a
fortune shorting bonds.
The leverage you can employ in the bond market is staggering. Depending upon
which vehicle you use, you can get anywhere from 2:1 to 50:1 leverage!
This is the exact scenario we saw in the 1980s when out
forced the then–Fed president Paul Volcker to raise
eye-popping 20%! Traders such as Gary Bielfeldt (profiled in Jack Schwager’s
wealth; it destroys anyone living on a fixed
moves, you can put yourself in a position
out-of-control inflation
the federal funds rate to an
in
u unds
excellent book, Market Wizards) went from being a one-lot corn trader to one of
the biggest bond traders in the world! And he did it over a two-and-a-half-year
period from mid 1984 to 1986, as interest came down off its peak.
This time around I aim to put you in a position to catch the bond market coming
and going. Should this nightmare scenario come to fruition, we want to short
bonds as rates climb and then buy bonds as rates collapse. Bielfeldt made
millions just catching the second half of that move in bonds…imagine if you can
catch both?
Does 50:1 leverage make sense if you’re an individual investor? Absolutely not –
but through the use of certain leveraged vehicles known as ultra ETFs, or
exchange-traded funds (about which I will be going into much more detail in my
webinar series), you can participate in this huge move in bonds without incurring
any of the unlimited risk characterized by trading bond futures.
In my upcoming webinar on Tuesday, April 27 (the final installment in the Train
Wreck series), I’m going to walk you step by step through several specific ETFs
that you need to be aware of so you know exactly what to do should this
particular scenario come about.
Assets to Own: Gold, Commodities, Short Bonds, Real Estate, Art,
Collectibles, Foreign Bank Deposits
Assets to Avoid: Cash, Bonds, Interest-Bearing Securities


Scenario 3 – We Turn into a Welfare State
Under this scenario,
the more liberal
elements in our
country use the
confusion caused by
the financial crisis as a
way to vastly expand
government power.
Under a welfare state
the collective masses
work, produce and
contribute up to 70%
of their economic
output, which is then
redistributed by the
government.
In fact, it’s already happening. Did you know that the U.S. now has MORE
government employees than it has employees working in private, goodsproducing
industries? See the chart on the right to better understand the
dramatic rise in the public sector versus the private sector.
In this scenario, more and more of our country’s wealth will be diverted to serve
the growing public sector, to the detriment of the private sector. Does anybody
reading this think that’s a good thing?
This is the worst kind of job growth because it sucks the nation’s wealth away in
an effort to support itself. Make-work projects, sweetheart deals and gross
inefficiency are the hallmarks of this type of government.
Of all the scenarios, this is the one I fear the most! Under this type of regime,
wealth is created by those that are able to successfully navigate the system as
more and more buying power gets appropriated by the government. Pockets of
sectors end up doing very, very well while others wither on the vine.
So we may see the Construction sector do extremely well as it becomes the
recipient of massive federal spending. Alternatively we could see the Medical
Equipment sector do poorly as more and more of the nation’s health care costs
are unfairly pushed onto these companies via punitive taxes.
Welfare government policies lead to all types of protectionism, which drives up
the prices on everything from a loaf of bread to a new car. The cost of doing
business becomes prohibitive; even more jobs end up being farmed out overseas.
This scenario is the most difficult to trade in for traditional money managers and
individual investors alike. This potential outcome, more than any of the others,
will demand a deep understanding of how to select sectors for both long and
short trading.
Under this type of political regime, everything is driven through political policy.
As policy shifts occur, sectors and other financial assets will move. The good news
is that if you know what to look for, many of these policy moves will show up in
the different stock sectors before they become front-page news.
Assets to Own: Companies with strong government contracts with
emphasis on sector rotation
Assets to Avoid: Under this type of government this will be an evermoving
target



Scenario 4 – Strong Dollar
Stick a 300-pound man next to a 600-pound man and the 300-pound man will
look skinny, guaranteed.
And that’s exactly the logic behind scenario four. In this scenario, Western
countries are swamped by debt, their currencies deeply hurt by fears of imminent
default, and yet somehow due to the U.S.’s deep and complex economy we
stumble but we manage to avoid the abyss.
In this scenario,
global wealth
managers and
sovereign reserve
funds flock to the
U.S. dollar the way
they did in 2008 in
an attempt to secure
a safe port in the
storm. In 2008 we
saw the U.S. Dollar
Index rally from a
low of 72 to a high of
88 in just five
months! Under this scenario we could see the U.S. Dollar Index go above 140!
Under this potential outcome the rest of the world
falls off an economic cliff.
The UK gets downgraded, multiple EU countries go
bankrupt and Germany fails to stem the tide of
sovereign failures. If this happens and the U.S. can
still push off its immediate problems for a few more
years, then we will see the U.S. dollar march much,
much higher.
Under this scenario, commodity prices get torn
apart as the relative cost of U.S.-dollardenominated
commodities creates inflationary
pressure in Europe but ends up being deflationary for us.
Imagine that you live in Germany and that oil is at $80 a barrel. Virtually all
commodities are priced in U.S. Dollars, so as a German, if you want to buy a
barrel of oil you must first convert your Euros into Dollars.
A Common Mistake
Most people think that the
only way to profit from
moves in the dollar is to
trade futures. They are
wrong! In this series I will
show you exactly how you
can play the dollar without
having to come near a
futures contract.
Let us assume that the exchange rate is 1.5 U.S. Dollars for 1 Euro. So for every
Euro you change, you receive $1.5 American. To find out how much an $80 barrel
of oil is in Euros, we simply divide the price of the oil ($80) by the Euro exchange
rate of $1.50. This tells us that it takes 53.3 Euros to buy one barrel of oil.
With me so far?
Now let us assume that the U.S. Dollar rallies and instead of you (remember, you
are a German holding Euros in this case) receiving $1.50 per Euro, you now only
get $1 per Euro. This would mean that if oil stayed the same price at $80 a barrel,
you would now be paying 80 Euros for the same barrel of oil that used to only
cost you 53 Euros.
All that changed was the exchange rate, and your cost of oil went up 50%! So
under this scenario, oil becomes more expensive to the rest of the world while
remaining static to us.
As our dollar increases in value, the price of oil as well as all other commodities
acts as a massive tax cut for American businesses and consumers alike. To
compensate for the above scenario, commodity prices will typically drop in value
as the U.S. Dollar rallies. This happens because foreign demand for commodities
slackens because those same commodities are now more expensive in their local
currencies. Again this relative price difference is solely caused by the U.S. Dollar
rallying.
As those commodities come down in price, all of that extra money that was
getting sucked up by high commodity prices is free to be put back to work in our
economy. Think of it this way: when we spend $100 a barrel for oil, that oil
money gets literally shipped out of the country and out under the dessert
somewhere.
Wouldn’t that money be much better used by being reinvested into the U.S.
somewhere? When oil is cheap, all of those extra oil dollars stay in America to
get put to work in our economy.
The downside of this is that as our dollar appreciates, our exports become much
more expensive for foreign buyers and we would likely see a widening of the trade
deficit.
Assets to Own: U.S. Dollar , U.S.-Dollar-Denominated Assets
Assets to Avoid: Multinational Corporations, Commodity Producers,
Gold, Oil and Almost All Commodities


Scenario 5 – Weak Dollar Scenario
Under crushing deficits, the Treasury finally crosses the tipping point and prints
one bill too many and the world collectively turns its back on the dollar. Under
this scenario we see OPEC, Russia, South America and China abandon the dollar
as a global reserve currency and begin the systematic selling of their vast holdings
of U.S. bonds.
In fact, there is strong indication that China has already started to do that, as
evidenced by the chart to the right.
Commodities become priced to
absurd levels in U.S. dollars,
hurting all those living in the
U.S., and yet are cheap to foreign
buyers with their much stronger
currencies. Savings accounts get
destroyed by hyperinflation,
bond funds end up being ruinous
to their owners and small
investors see the buying power of
their dollars entombed under a
mountain of national debt.
This is a scenario that seems to
be the most popular among the
naysayers and doom-andgloomers.
It’s still too early to tell if this will be the ultimate scenario that will
play out. What I can tell you is that as more and more people expect this
particular scenario to play out, the less likely it will be.
However, under this series of events the number one play will be to go long on
real assets like income-producing real estate, commodities and other incomeproducing
real assets. You will also be able to make an absolute killing shorting
the dollar and buying
gold.
In a true U.S. dollar
rout, gold prices could
move far past $2,000
per ounce and oil could
move well north of
$200 a barrel.
In fact, we have already seen a fairly steady and strong move into gold over the
last 10 years, as you can see in the chart to the right.
Assets to Own: Commodities, Gold, Real Estate (both commercial and
residential), Non-U.S.-Dollar-Denominated Bank Deposits
Assets to Avoid: Cash, Cash Equivalents, U.S.-Dollar-Denominated
Bonds


Scenario 6 – Goldilocks Scenario
Under the Goldilocks scenario the U.S. doesn’t borrow too much, doesn’t borrow
too little, doesn’t fall too far, doesn’t rise too high – under the Goldilocks scenario
the United States gets it just right.
Under this scenario we see a real consumer-demand-driven recovery take hold,
we see the tax receipts bounce back in time to prevent a disastrous credit
downgrade, and we see a new growth cycle emerge from an as-yet unknown
industry.
In short, the politicians’ hopes and dreams come true and we all live happily ever
after!
Don’t laugh – this is
exactly what happened
after the 1991 recession,
and no one, and I mean
no one, saw it coming!
The chart to the right
shows the massive
strength that the U.S.
had coming out of its
worst recession in a
decade.
As investors, our job is not to protect our cherished opinions; our job is to make
money. As bleak as everything looks right now, we must absolutely plan for the
highly improbable idea of total economic salvation.
As ridiculous as our current spending and budget deficit are, should a new
industry sprout up overnight the way the Internet did, we will exit our economic
woes pretty quickly. They won’t be eliminated, but they’ll be pushed off for many
years to come.
So we need to be vigilant to the telltale signs of a true recovery. The key leading
indicator for us will be the stock and debt markets. If we see credit flowing
without government intervention, if we see equity markets embark on a sustained
period of higher highs, and corporations begin to show solid top-line and bottomline
growth that is matched with an industrial breakthrough, then we absolutely
want to be a part of that.
The big winner will be equity prices, and typically as equities outperform,
commodities underperform. Should this occur, you can catch the market going
both ways: long equities, short commodities.
Assets to Own: Stocks, Real Estate
Assets to Avoid: Commodities


How to Simplify Your Investing
What I have just shared with you is my best guess on the six scenarios that could
potentially unfold as this crisis works itself out.
Many of you reading this are probably used to trading only stocks and may be
wondering how in heck you are supposed to buy or sell commodities, currencies,
bonds and other assets classes with which you are not familiar.
Investing can be confusing enough just with stocks, so what on earth is going to
happen when you throw all of these other options into the mix?
Well, friends, fortunately the market has come to the rescue. You see, over the
past few years a financial innovation has allowed the average investor to invest in
these seeming “exotic” assets classes just as easily as he or she could in stocks.
I am talking about exchange-traded funds.
ETFs are somewhat similar to mutual funds in that they hold a variety of different
stocks and can give you broad exposure. However they are much better than
mutual funds because they are much cheaper to trade, they are liquid, they trade
options and you can short them.
They are also free from any and all manager bias. This means that they are not
personality-dependent because most ETFs (at least the ones I would buy) are
designed to give you exposure to a specific industry or index.
This allows us to trade in markets and securities that we never could before.
In fact, I am so excited about ETFs that I am going to hold a special teleseminar
soon for the next installment in the Train Wreck series, during which I’ll share
with you:
Can ETFs outperform individual stocks …
Why all ETFs are NOT created equal …
How I used ETFs to profit from the 2007-2008 meltdown …
Why you need to think “sectors” and not stocks …
How simple it is to trade commodities and interest rates using ETFs …
I’ve personally been using ETFs for years to rake in the profits and they’re by far
my favorite investment vehicle. I want to share these insights with you.
The investing world can be complex, but ETFs make it dramatically simpler,
easier and cheaper to make the moves that you want, to put your chips where you
think you have the best odds to win – and profit.
Parting Thoughts
Friends, I hope this report has opened your eyes to the wildly different ways that
this crisis may play out.
Dozens of warning signals are going off right now that prove without a shadow of
a doubt that something big is going to happen…and you need to be prepared.
What I’ve shared with you today are the broad strokes of what’s potentially going
to happen, but to be properly prepared, you will need to know EXACTLY what
specific securities to trade, EXACTLY what strategies to employ and EXACTLY
when to pull the trigger on your moves.

Train Wreck series – a webinar that will be held toward the end of this month.

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