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Tuesday 29 December 2015

I was right about Noble

In my previous post about Noble here , I wrote that Noble is performing badly with a bad ROE and a bad D/E ratio. When these 2 ratios are faring badly, the company is heading for disaster.

But that's not the worse. The worse is- the commodities market is NOT showing any signs of improvement at all. When the industry is not improving, how can Noble's financials start to improve? Not to forget, it needs to continue paying its debt.

Today, Noble shares were cut to junk by Moody's.

"The worsening year-long rout in commodities, which has punished prices of raw materials that Noble handles from oil to copper, has overshadowed cost-cutting plans and will likely hurt access to funding and challenge its profitability, it said."

Noble's share price has now dropped to 0.41.

Please do not think it is 'Cheap'.

Stocks look cheap because the prices have dropped since its high time.

HOWEVER, there are always reasons what caused the price to drop and majority of the time, these reasons are due to valid rational decision thinking by the elite traders and banks.

Only very occasionally, very miraculously, will share price experience a sudden irrational emotionally driven drop in price. That will mean the price is 'undervalued' beyond a reasonable doubt. And yes, it certainly won't last long for such price to continue.

Remember, investment is certainly not a gamble. Much research and hard work is needed.

If you cannot resist the temptation to make money quickly, you are bound to lose a lot in the stock market.


Wednesday 23 December 2015

My Christmas Present from Interplex

Hello,

Here's wishing everyone a very Merry Christmas!


Baring fund has announced their plans to buy Interplex at around S$450m with each share price at around $0.82.

This price is definitely a premium over its average share price over the year. The premium is about 62%!

I bought Interplex at $0.68 and that means I will be making some profits for this takeover. Yay! Good news! :D

The year ended with some profits and some losses for my overall portfolio. Although I picked some good buys, I also made some costly mistakes ;(

Ah well, think long term ;)

Good luck, everyone. Hoping all of you have a blessed year ahead. :)

Sunday 20 December 2015

Recent Actions- Sell/Buy

Hello,

Just thought that I should share some of my recent stock actions.

Summary:
1. Bought Ascendas reit @ $2.22
2. Bought Frasers Centrepoint Trust @ $1.81
3. Bought STI ETF @ $2.86.
4. Bought OCBC @ $8.72

The Fed has increased its interest rates by 0.25% , citing an improvement in the US economy and business confidence.
Stock prices are the NPV (net present value) of its future free cash flow, a higher interest rate will mean a higher discount rate and that translates to lower NPV (lower stock price). This is the reason why stock market in SG went a nosedive last week.

Although business borrowing costs would increase due to a higher interest rate and that translates to possibly lower returns for Reits, I still went ahead to purchase Ascendas Reit @$2.22 and Frasers Centrepoint Trust @ $1.81.

These 2 Reits have a strong rental occupancy portfolio.

A-Reit has a well diversified portfolio, with 5 main property segments and situated at well located areas. It has a stable portfolio with 89.8% of portfolio revenue committed for FY15/16 and a portfolio average lease to expiry of about 3.6 years. They have also acquired One@Changi business park recently.

Frasers Centrepoint Trust has very well located shopping malls in the heartlands such as Causeway point and it enjoys consistent high occupancy rate.

I also bought STI ETF at $2.86
What I observed was that before a major announcement is to occur, Singapore's stock would experience a major fall on the day before. I grabbed STI ETF at $2.86 on 15.12.2015, the day before FED announced its IR decision. (Considering US time zone)

Lastly, I bought OCBC at $8.72
Well, I am not some finance economy expert but my observation is that bank stocks do generally better in a higher ir environment, possibly due to a myriad of many many factors. (Business confidence, better IR spreads to profit from)

In 2007, when the US ir was a crazy 5%+, OCBC stocks were at its highest (then) of $8+. When the financial crisis came about and ir suddenly took a nose dive to 0.2%, OCBC stock went tumbling down to $4+. Of course, there are many other reasons accounting for this so my addition of OCBC is more of a hedge to my portfolio.

Although the US has cited sustainable business growth, better economic performance and more jobs in the US, Singapore's economy does not look promising at the moment.
Economists have trimmed Singapore's growth forecast to 1.9% with the manufacturing sector faring the worst.

With that, I say, hold up your war chest and acquire some good business or ETF along the way :)