Frank Comments by Dennis Ng on various Topics

This forum is created to discuss everything about Investing, from investment principles, to theories, concepts, strategies to investment jargons to provide a easy reference for everyone

Moderators: alvin, learner, Dennis Ng

Post Reply
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

smarthsf wrote:Hi all friends,

Hope everyone realize his dream. I am now still blur...blur....
Can we support each other in the jouney morally.
if you don't know, ask. Ask and people will offer answers.

It is up to us to learn, to ask.

Everyone starts out blur, including myself. As I said, "all masters were once disasters." I'm not a master yet, but I was definitely a disaster.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

Your current situation is a Result (Effects) of your past thoughts, beliefs and actions (ie. Causes).

If you do not like your current situation, change the Cause from now onwards, your thoughts, beliefs and actions. Repeating the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result is called Insanity, it's NOT persistence, it is being stubborn.

The past does not represent the future.

You can change the future.
Last edited by Dennis Ng on Sun Sep 18, 2011 3:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

Today I posted this on my facebook page:

Do you want to know the secret to getting anything that you want? If more than 20 people want to know, I will share.

In 2 hours, more than 20 people replied and said yes, many more just clicked "like the comment".

Before I shared the answer, I highlighted that:
I want to reiterate that I'll NOT be sharing my method or perspective, I'll be sharing the Truth, the whole Truth, and NOTHING but the Truth itself.

It's NOT my Secrets of Success. It's the Truth, I'll just be sharing the Truth.

Before I share, please promise that you will Believe 100% in what I'm going to share. As I said, it is NOT a theory, it is NOT my perspective or method, it is the Truth.

That it took me many years to realise this Truth, but I finally realise it is the Truth, after many years of personal experience.

So please promise me that you will Believe it and NOT just try to understand what I said, but please start Practising it. Becos Knowledge is only potential power, it only becomes Power when Applied.

This works for everything. Whatever thing you want, for instance, it will work for Money. ie. if you want more money, by doing so, you'll have more money.

It will even work for other things. eg. Friendship, Love, etc, etc...it's so amazing and it works...no more groping in the dark...things become so clear when you finally know the Answer...

Give whatever you seek. If you want a Smile, give a Smile. If you want Money, yes, unbelieveable, is you must Give money.

You might say I have little money, I'll give when I become Rich like you, Dennis. However, if you delay the Giving, you delay the Getting...Giving is the Sowing, Getting is the Reaping
...if you plan a peach seed, you get a peach tree. You may wish for an apple tree or orange tree, but you'll get a peach Tree.

So give money, if you want more money.

It is NOT how much you give, it can be 10 cents, S$1, it is that you must Give with Full Hearted Sincerity.

And the Tricky part is Giving means having NO thought of getting back, you cannot give becos you want to Receive. This is the Tricky part.

It will only work if it is True Giving, ie. Giving with no expectation of return, NOT even a praise, or recognition for the action of Giving.


Give and you shall Get, Give and you shall Receive.

Give what, Get what.

Then a friend and a seminar graduate commented:

Donna Daritan
Thanks Dennis for sharing. I strongly believe in it! Though in the money part I may not have experienced much but other than that I can almost guarantee this theory works! But you are right, to some it may sound "unnatural". But this law really works. It is actually bigger than the hype of "The Secret". I give friendships, I get friendships. I give time, I get more time. I give food, I get more food. Thanks for re-confirming and sharing this law of life! :)

And this is my reply to her:

Hi Donna, it works for money as well. Guaranteed. I have my millions as testimony.

Can you imagine if more people know of this Truth, will the World be a better place?

Please help spread the message. It is possible for everyone to Have more becos as we Give, so shall we Receive. What goes round, comes around. The earth is round. Play it forward, it will come back to you.
Last edited by Dennis Ng on Thu Sep 15, 2011 6:03 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
nglekhong
Senior Forum Member
Posts: 12
Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2011 9:44 am

Post by nglekhong »

Certainly! Sifu..

I am totally lost the direction... need your advice urgently.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

nglekhong wrote:Certainly! Sifu..

I am totally lost the direction... need your advice urgently.
what do you mean? What lost direction, what advice you need? If I don't know what you're asking, how to help?
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
nglekhong
Senior Forum Member
Posts: 12
Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2011 9:44 am

STI Direction and Property Market

Post by nglekhong »

Hi Sifu,

Sorry to mislead you...

I have tried to use the TA which I learnt to relate to the current STI chart and I am unable to figure out the direction. I got lost on the current property market as well, look at the recent property prices are selling >S$1,400 psf at the mass market??

However, I am glad to know that you are arranging an intensive TA course for us.

Currently, I have sold off all my stocks and is keeping "cash" for the downturn to enter into stock market again.

Thanks & Best Regrds,
LH
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Re: STI Direction and Property Market

Post by Dennis Ng »

nglekhong wrote:Hi Sifu,

Sorry to mislead you...

I have tried to use the TA which I learnt to relate to the current STI chart and I am unable to figure out the direction. I got lost on the current property market as well, look at the recent property prices are selling >S$1,400 psf at the mass market??

However, I am glad to know that you are arranging an intensive TA course for us.

Currently, I have sold off all my stocks and is keeping "cash" for the downturn to enter into stock market again.

Thanks & Best Regrds,
LH
Hi LH,
yes, we'll be arranging a Comprehensive 2-day Technical Analysis Course by Yip Khiong, dates tentatively set as 12 and 13 Nov 2011. More details will be announced when finalised.

for the Property market, I think we are in the Euporia stage, where people chant:"Singapore property prices can only go up, not down."

The Global Financial Crisis is erupting, by end year 2012 I think people might realise that property prices do NOT only go up.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

Dennis Ng wrote:Please remember that the Best way to Learn is to Share. I'm NOT kidding, just sharing this based on my personal experience. Sharing will help you speed up and deepen your own learning and understanding. I'm sure those forumers who actively post will agree with me on this.
I learned a lot in this forum. By posting, I reinforced my learning. I am always ready to learn more from fellow graduates. You may know something I don't know yet. :)

学,做,教,再学,再做,再教
(learn, do, teach, re-learn, re-do, re-teach)

That's what I hope to achieve.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

When we think, we are using our conscious mind only.

Just be true to yourself, ask your heart, the answers lie within.

And when you do that, you are just being and you become a human being, not a human mind or body.

You are one with the universe & the universe will guide you in making decisions.

You will feel at ease with your decisions. I don't know how to describe the feeling, but you will feel the difference yourself.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

Recently, ex Minister Mentor Mr Lee Kuan Yew when interviewed expressed the view that Euro zone will collapse and cannot be saved.

On 31 May 2011, I also posted in thois forum similar views that Euro zone will disintegrate.

Cheers!

Dennis Ng

31 May 2011 The Euro Zone is artificially created by 16 countries choosing to "band together". The countries are very different, and some are financially very weak, eg. the PIGS.

The Financially weakest are ranked as follows:

1. Greece
2. Ireland
3. Portugal
4. Spain
5. Italy

So far, 3 out of the 4 PIGS are already in trouble, the good news is these 3 PIGs are "small", in terms of their economies as compared to the whole of Euro Zone.

However, Spain is ranked No. 4 and Italy is ranked No. 3 in terms of size of economy. In my opinion, it is just a matter of time Spain might get into trouble, and when that happens, I think the 2 Richest countries Germany and France might think twice about rescuing Spain and this might lead to the disintegration and break up of Euro Zone.

This is my prediction of what is likely to happen.

Below is an article on Europe Crisis.

Cheers!

Dennis Ng

Fixing Europe credit crisis made harder by the euro

By ROBERT SAMUELSON


IT has come to this. A year after rescuing Greece from default, Europe is staring into the abyss. The bailout has proved insufficient. Greece needs more money, and it can't borrow from private markets where it faces interest rates as high as 25 per cent. But Europe's governments are reluctant to advance more funds unless other lenders - banks, bondholders - absorb some losses by writing down their debts. This, however, would constitute a default, risking a broader banking crisis that might torpedo Europe's fragile recovery in France, Germany and elsewhere. There is no easy escape.


What's called a 'debt crisis' is increasingly a political and social crisis. Looming over the financial complexities is the broader question of the ability - or willingness - of weak debtor nations to endure growing hardship to service their massive government debts. Already, unemployment is at 14.1 per cent in Greece, 14.7 per cent in Ireland, 11.1 per cent in Portugal and 20.7 per cent in Spain. What are the limits of austerity? Steep spending cuts and tax increases do curb budget deficits; but they also create deep recessions, lowering tax revenues and offsetting some of the deficit improvement. Just how long this grinding process can continue is unclear. In Spain, the incumbent socialist party lost big in recent elections. Popular unrest persists in Greece amid signs of a 'resurgence of an anarchist movement' there and elsewhere.

Some causes of Europe's plight are well-known: the harsh recession following the 2008-2009 financial crisis; ageing populations coupled with costly welfare states. But there's also another less recognised culprit: the euro, the single currency now used by 17 countries. Launched in 1999, it aimed to foster economic and political unity. Economic growth would improve. Costly currency conversions would cease; money would flow smoothly across borders to the best profit opportunities. Using euros - and not marks or lira - Germans, Italians and others would increasingly consider themselves 'Europeans'. For a while, it seemed to succeed. In the euro's first decade, jobs in countries using the common currency increased by 16 million.

It was a mirage. The euro helped create the crisis and has made its resolution harder, as a new report from the International Monetary Fund shows. For starters, the euro fostered a credit bubble that led to booms in housing, borrowing and consumer spending. When each country had its own currency, the country's central bank regulated local interest rates and credit conditions. With the euro, the European Central Bank (ECB) assumed that job. But one policy didn't fit all: Interest rates suited to Germany and France were too low for 'periphery' countries (Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain).

'Financial markets' - private investors - compounded the problem by assuming that the euro's creation reduced risk. Weak countries would be protected by the strong. Money poured into the periphery countries. There was a huge compression of interest rates. In 1997, rates on 10-year Greek government bonds averaged 9.8 per cent compared to 5.7 per cent for similar German bonds. By 2003, Greek bonds fetched 4.3 per cent, just above the 4.1 per cent of German bonds.

'The markets failed. All this would not have occurred if banks in Germany and France had not lent so much,' says economist Desmond Lachman of the American Enterprise Institute. 'It was like the US housing market.'

Both American and European banks went overboard in relaxing credit standards. Now that the credit bubble has burst, the euro impedes recovery. One way countries revive from financial crises is by depreciating their currencies. This makes exports and local tourism cheaper, creating some job gains that cushion the ill effects of austerity elsewhere. But latched to the euro, Greece and other vulnerable debtors forfeit this safety valve.

Greece's debt is now approaching an unsustainable 160 per cent of its annual economy (gross domestic product). If it defaulted, investors might dump bonds of other weak debtors for fear that they too would default. That could send interest rates soaring and saddle European banks with huge losses. At the end of 2010, Europe's banks had about US$1.3 trillion of loans and investments - both governmental and private - in Greece, Ireland, Spain and Portugal, reports the Institute of International Finance, an industry research group. A banking crisis would imperil economic recovery.

So Europe is playing for time. It's struggling to delay any Greek default long enough for other vulnerable countries to demonstrate they can handle their debts. The very process makes the euro - contrary to original intent - a source of contention, as nations shift blame and costs to others. Given Europe's huge debts, even the holding action may fail. It may merely postpone a broader crisis. 'They may dodge this bullet,' says Mr Lachman, 'but not the next.' - The Washington Post Writers Group


Euro zone cannot be saved, says Mr Lee
Collapse will be painful, but one-tier Europe too hard to achieve, he says


By Rachel Chang & Teo Wan Gek

FORMER Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew believes the euro zone cannot be saved, although the collapse of the currency union will be 'a very painful business'.

Speaking at a dialogue yesterday to mark the seventh anniversary of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, he said European leaders will try very hard to keep the euro zone from collapsing as this would be 'an admission that their aspiration of one Europe is not achievable'.

'But I do not see it being saved. But they'll try and keep it going.'

He was speaking in response to a participant asking if Singapore would buy the bonds of debt-ridden European countries. The participant was referring to reports that Italy had asked China to buy its bonds.

Mr Lee said Singapore's gross domestic product is a fraction of the European Union's, and thus it is 'in no position to rescue the Europeans, nor do I think that buying their bonds will necessarily rescue them'.

He pointed to the currency union among the 17 EU countries as the problem. 'A fundamental problem of the euro is that it makes everybody, every European country, march to the same drummer whereas each country has its own tempo and you cannot expect the Greeks to march like the Germans, so the problem will not go away.

'Eventually, I'm not sure when because it would be an admission of the aspiration being out of reach, a two-tier Europe or even a three-tier Europe is possible but a one-tier Europe with different spending habits, thrift habits and discipline is too difficult to achieve.'

The euro came into existence in 1999 in the hope of increasing economic cooperation and growth in Europe, while shoring up the EU's presence on the world stage.

But as several euro zone countries face debt crises, the currency union has come under fire because it forces other European countries to bail out the troubled member nations, as well as denies policymakers the flexibility of monetary policy as a tool to fight recession.

Mr Lee also said he did not think the Chinese are interested in 'rescuing Europe for the sake of Europe. They're interested in buying euro bonds cheap and hope that it will give a good return'.

Recent reports estimate that up to one-quarter of China's reserves may be euro-denominated.

When moderator Kishore Mahbubani, dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, said that a strong EU would be in China's geopolitical interests, Mr Lee disagreed. He said: 'No, no, no. It's easier to deal with 27 weak European countries than to deal with 27 united European countries.'

rchang@sph.com.sg

wangekt@sph.com.sg
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

Signs of the coming Global Financial Crisis are all around us if we bother to look.

For many years, many European countries, including Greece, have spent more than they earned...it is actually no surprise that the country is now technically bankrupt and the people will now become one of the Poorest in the whole world, it is the Universal Law of Cause and Effect.

In Greece, now unemployment rate is 16%. In Spain, it is 21%!!! Spain and Italy would be the next European countries to go into financial trouble and when that happens, Euro Zone is likely to disintegrate.

Most middle class in Singapore and all over the world have enough money to only last them 6 months if they are out of a job and are living on the "edge", without them realising. The coming Financial Crisis will see many middle class people throughout the whole world tipping over the edge to become Poor.

I am financially free. ie. I can continue supporting myself and my family even if I stop working tomorrow. This is why I want to conduct seminars and educate the public, so that more people can reach Financial Freedom like I've done and no longer need to worry about survival.

Being Financially Free and without worrying about survival, now I can focus on making a difference to the society, focus on seeing how I can contribute to the society. This is the best reason why we should aim for Financial Freedom.

Cheers!

Dennis Ng
New generations in Europe tipping into homelessness

By Ingrid Melander and Renee Maltezou

ATHENS | Mon Sep 12, 2011 5:32pm EDT

(Reuters) - After 18 years cooking moussaka and roast lamb in restaurants around Greece, Petros Papadopoulos prepares lunch for 50 in a place he never expected to end up -- as a resident of a homeless shelter in Athens.

The soft-spoken chef, who admits he is not giving his real name for fear his friends and relatives will find out about his situation, had just bought a flat and was hoping to start a family when his dream was crushed by Greece's economic crisis.

In 2010, he lost his job to Greece's worst recession in decades and joined the ranks of tens of thousands of unemployed. When he could no longer afford his mortgage, he lost his home and was forced to roam the streets.

"I felt like I was living in a movie. My life changed 180 degrees. I was lost," Papadopoulos said, wringing his hands as he recalls how he struggled to find a sleeping place in an abandoned building. "The street is unbearable."

Officials say the number of homeless in Greece has increased about 20-25% in two years, a staggering rise in a country where adult children often live with their parents and pensions traditionally go to supporting young families.

It's a statistic that resonates across many European countries laid low by the one-two punch of recession and austerity, as rising unemployment, shortages of affordable housing and social benefit cuts push more people over the edge and affect people who thought they were immune.

The clean-cut Papadopoulos, 40, shakes his head in disbelief at the year he spent sleeping rough before finding a bed in the shelter. His two brothers -- his only close family -- were too hard hit by the crisis themselves to be able to help him for long.

"I never thought this could happen to me. I later realized how thin the line is," Papadopoulos said. "It can happen to anyone. We are all potentially homeless."

"CHEATED"

In contrast to the old cliche of the disheveled homeless man with mental health or drug problems, Papadopoulos is part of a new generation of Greeks who have fallen victim to the benefit cuts meant to stave off the country's deep debt crisis.

"The population of the homeless has changed," said Aris Violantzis, a psychologist at the Klimaka NGO. "It's usually middle-aged people, in their productive years, who thought everything was going fine and they did the right things.

"They feel cheated," he added.

At the Klimaka shelter, about 50 people, most of them men, chatted, played backgammon or watched TV while waiting for the meal of pasta and meat that Papadopoulos cooked to be served on plastic plates.

The first to knock on the shelter's door were those who used to work in the sectors hardest hit by the recession, such as construction. Lambros, a former plasterer, has not told relatives that he slept in his car for three months after he was fired last Christmas, before finding a bed at the shelter.

"I don't want them to know," the 55-year-old said with tears in his eyes. "I would feel bad, and so would they."

Poverty has visibly increased on the streets of the capital of four million, where people huddle in sleeping bags in empty alleys and can be seen rummaging through garbage containers, looking for food or scraps of metal or glass to sell.

Klimaka estimated the population living on the streets in Greece has increased by 25% to 17,000-20,000 over the past two years. The Athens municipality service for the homeless, where dozens queue every day for a meal, also reported about a rise of about 15-20%.

With Greek unemployment now over 16%, the new homeless come from all walks of life.

"The family and social solidarity overall are suffering ... I have never seen anything like this before, it is as if each man is on his own," Violantzis said.

IN THE GREY ZONE

Across the Ionian sea in Italy, which is also introducing more austerity to stave off a fiscal crisis, charity workers tell a similar tale for the homeless and say traditional family solidarity there is strained.

"There are more people in the 'grey zone' that are not living in extreme poverty but can't get to the end of the month with the income they have, such as one-parent families and the elderly," said Francesca Zuccari, of Sant Egidio charity.

The country's most active poverty relief group, the Catholic body Caritas, reports a 25% increase in those seeking its help between 2009 and 2010 and a 40% rise in new cases, the strongest increase in many years. Many are divorced and separated men.

"More people are splitting up and the economic crisis has lowered real incomes, increased unemployment and worsened the housing situation," said Caritas spokesman Renato Molinaro.

Weaker groups such as migrants and youths are especially at risk across Europe, said the European federation of NGOs working with the homeless, FEANTSA.

"There are more and more people who were definitely not in danger of becoming homeless that are actually there now," said Karolina Krzystek, policy officer at FEANTSA. Many of them are unaccounted for, sleeping temporarily on a friend's couch or in over-crowded flats.

In Spain, which has the highest unemployment rate in the European Union at more than 21% and imposed stringent belt-tightening measures to avoid having to ask for a euro zone bailout, the number of people in homeless shelters increased 15.7% from 2008 to 2010, according to official data.

WAITING FOR BETTER TIMES

The issue is not just restricted to countries at the center of the euro zone's debt crisis.

The number of homeless families in Britain, which is not in the euro zone, rose by 10% to 44,160 households in the past year, the first increase since 2004.

The biggest issue in Britain, which embarked on austerity cuts last year, is the lack of affordable housing, a spokeswoman for homelessness charity Shelter said.

"More and more people are being priced out of home ownership and private rents are rising. The cuts to housing benefits are going to put a massive strain on people," she said.

A chronic housing shortage and high unemployment are also contributing to the problem in France -- listed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development as the most generous welfare state in the world.

The managers of the Abbe Pierre Foundation and social section of the French Red Cross, two of the country's largest associations dealing with homelessness, said the number of homeless people had risen to 130,000-150,000 in early 2011 from just over 100,000 in 2008.

The Red Cross's Didier Piard said there had been a "drastic rise" since 2007 in three categories -- youths falling on hard times soon after leaving home, pensioners with dwindling buying power and asylum-seekers.

"Many of these are people who would never have been on our radar before, who worked continuously throughout their lives," he said. "For the pensioners, all of sudden they find themselves living on tiny amounts, unable to keep up with rising rents, bills and food payments."

Abbe Pierre's General Director, Patrick Doutreligne, said that cuts to social programs and funding for aid associations were pushing many lower- and middle-income people over the edge into poverty and intermittent homelessness.

"The most striking category of new homeless are pensioners. Just as all their expenses begin to rise, they are struck by a dramatic reduction in their buying power. The result is that a shocking number have to appeal to social services and associations for help with food and housing."

Emergency funding is usually still available to help people get food and a place to sleep but longer-term plans to help reintegrate the homeless back into society have often been scrapped in the name of spending cuts, says FEANTSA's Krzystek.

"People might not be freezing on the street but they don't find permanent lodging either," she said.

"There is the thinking that the homeless are so far away from the mainstream labor market that ... (they) can wait for now in shelters and we'll see when better times come."

In Athens, Papadopoulos knows getting back on track will be tough but he knocks on doors and looks through the job advertisements in the newspaper every day, hoping for the best.

"My plans for a home and a family may have collapsed," he said. "But this is still my dream."
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

The cause of last Global Financial Crisis was too much debt. Last 2 years, governments all over the world "solve" the problem by taking on more debt, merely postponing and aggravating the problem, it'll all blow up in the next Financial Crisis, which will hit us soon...

Cheers!

Dennis Ng
ein55 wrote: Prof Chan mentioned rise in China stocks in 2009 was due to China QE or other monetary policy at that time. After the China gov gradually control the hot$ flow (eg. rise in interest rate, control the bank's cash reserve, etc), SSEC has been declining in the past 2 years. Let's see if there is a major change from Mar 2012 after change in national leadership.
So the gist of what Prof Chan is saying is that when money supply increases, money flows to stock markets, that's why stock markets go up. When money supply is tightened, stock market goes down even when economy is growing well. So according to Prof Chan, we need to watch out Money Supply closely to know what might happen to stock markets.

For U.S. and Europe to increase money supply, they need to increase debt, problem is they are already facing problem of too much debt, this is why I personally think that the next Global Financial Crisis is inevitable and likely to come before Jun 2012 (something I said for several months already).

So in my opinion, what is likely to happen in stock market in the next few months is only Bear Market Rally, thereafter followed by a further Crash in Stock Markets. It is possible for Global Stock Markets to Crash NEAR or even below Mar 2009's lows.

I don't think that Prof Chan or Hu Li Yang share such a view, Hu is definitely very bullish, while Prof Chan does not think markets would go so low.

As I look back at what happened, my personal analysis is the problems of too much debt (Cause) of the last Financial Crisis have NOT been solved, instead, the world have aggravated the Problem with governments taking on even more Debt in the last 2 years to bail out troubled banks and companies (AIG, General Motors, CITIGROUP, Bank of America were some of those being rescued)...

The world merely kicked the can further down the road.

The problem is we are now very near the end of the Road, and they cannot kick the can too much further, it is a dead end. (Global Financial Crisis are likely to hit real soon).

The 2 things they did last round:

1. printing money and taking on more debt
2. lowering interest rates

have been almost exhausted, so when the next Crisis comes, global governments have almost run out of bullets, the only country still with some Bullets in the gun barrel is China, but China has limited bullets and cannot and UNABLE to save Europe nor U.S. The best thing they can do as China said is for them to make sure China is ok and NOT in trouble.

The next Crisis is unavoidable. This is my opinion.

I have long prepared for the next Crisis since I started warning as early as Oct 2010. I hope the Advance Warning (more than 1 year) warning that I share with the public and seminar graduates would similarly help you to prepare to survive the next Crisis, as many people around the world would lose most of their money and be tipped into poverty. There'll be social unrests throughout the whole world, many countries' governments would be toppled.

To make things worse, the world will face Rising Inflation, Rising Unemployment and INCREASING frequency and Increased Magnitude of Climate Disasters, such as Floods, Earthquakes, Typhoons etc, that will lead to even more Financial Losses and Loss of Lives in year 2012...


Mark my words. I really can see all these things happening. It is NOT FA or TA, it is unexplainable why I can see it so clearly.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
sheiwah
Silver Forum Contributor
Posts: 39
Joined: Mon Nov 01, 2010 5:34 pm
Location: Singapore
Contact:

limping along

Post by sheiwah »

soon can be a few years...it's inevitable that somehing will crack...i suspect they will prolong the limping as long as they can.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Re: limping along

Post by Dennis Ng »

sheiwah wrote:soon can be a few years...it's inevitable that somehing will crack...i suspect they will prolong the limping as long as they can.
Hi sheiwah,
I'm afraid not. Latest Crisis will hit is by Jun 2012, just my opinion.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

Western countries such as U.S. and many European countries, especially those who are lazy, don't want to work much, spend more than they earn, have lots of Social Benefits will become POOR countries in the coming years.

It might be a shock to many of the Americans and Europeans, but it is actually expected, becos of the Universal Law of Cause and Effect.

We always Reap what we Sowed.

They have sowed seeds of Poverty, now they are reaping the fruits.

Now 21% of American households earn less than US$21,000 a year, or less than US$2,000 per month. Greece unemployment rate is 16%, Spain is 21%, many middle class in these countries are tipping over the edge and fall into poverty...

Instead of solving their problems, Americans chose the easy way out, devaluing US$, so that they can owe China and other big creditors less money in US$ terms.

They want to drag the world down, so that they can remain super power.

They are making more mistakes to cover the mistakes they made (over-spend, over-borrow).

If they succeed, they would have sowed even more seeds of disaster for their future generations. We always Reap what we Sow. Sow bad seeds, Reap bad fruits.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Post Reply