The email address in "Contact AK: Ads and more" above will vanish from November 2018.

PRIVACY POLICY

FAKE ASSI AK71 IN HWZ.

Featured blog.

1M50 CPF millionaire in 2021!

Ever since the CPFB introduced a colorful pie chart of our CPF savings a few years ago, I would look forward to mine every year like a teena...

Past blog posts now load week by week. The old style created a problem for some as the system would load 50 blog posts each time. Hope the new style is better. Search archives in box below.

Archives

"E-book" by AK

Second "e-book".

Another free "e-book".

4th free "e-book".

Pageviews since Dec'09

Financially free and Facebook free!

Recent Comments

ASSI's Guest bloggers

Japan's 2010 economic outlook.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

I rarely cut and paste entire articles but I am sure that there are many who are concerned about the Japanese economy despite what Marc Faber might say about being a contrarian.  So, I am sharing this latest report from Bloomberg here:

Double-dip worries abating

Tokyo upgrades economic view for first time since July


05:55 AM, Mar 16, 2010, TOKYO - The Japanese government yesterday raised its assessment of the economy for the first time in eight months, saying the recovery had begun to spur profits, home building and consumer spending.

"The economy has been picking up steadily," though it remains in a "difficult situation" because of high unemployment, the Cabinet Office said in its report for March. It added that the rebound was still weak.

Reports in the past month have shown that the nation's export-led recovery is starting to benefit consumers, with wages rising for the first time in 20 months in January and households increasing spending for a sixth month. Yesterday's upgrade comes on the eve of the Bank of Japan's board meeting, where the central bank may expand credit measures amid deflation.

"There are budding signs for a self-sustaining recovery in domestic private demand," Finance Minister Naoto Kan said yesterday.

"Concerns over a double- dip recession are abating," he added.

The Cabinet Office raised its evaluation of corporate profits, business investment, consumer spending, housing construction and employment.

The upgrade of five components is the most since July 2009. The government had said last month that the recovery was "short of autonomous factors".

Earnings are "improving" and capital spending "is starting to level off", the report said. Housing construction and private consumption are "picking up", it said.

Profits surged 102.2 per cent in the three months ended Dec 31 from a year earlier, the first increase in 10 quarters, a Finance Ministry report showed this month. Capital spending fell 18.5 per cent, the smallest decline in a year.

The unemployment rate dropped to a 10-month low of 4.9 per cent in January. Though the labour market remains severe, evidence of an "incipient recovery can be seen recently", the government said.

The improvements in the job market helped consumer confidence climb to a four-month high in February, a separate Cabinet Office report showed yesterday. Bloomberg

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

AK,

Presume you have seen Saizen's SGX announcement today - YK Shinzan was refinanced for JPY 2.0 Bln, or approx 40% of its NBV. Applying the same ratio to Saizen's 2 other unencumbered portfolios - YK Kokkei and YK Shingen, Saizen stands to obtain approx JPY 4.5Bln. Add them up anmd you get $6.5 Bln, or approximately the outstanding amount of YK Shintoku.

Time to buy more warrants!

AT

AK71 said...

Hi AT,

Thanks for the heads up. I just looked at the announcement at your prompting. :)

In summary: YK Shinzan has entered into
an agreement dated 16 March 2010 for a JPY 2.0 billion (S$30.8 million) loan from a Japanese bank, Tokyo Star Bank Ltd, for a term of 5 years up to 16 March 2015 and carries a fixed annual interest rate of 3.75625%. The
Loan has an amortising feature with JPY 100 million of principal repayment per annum. The proceeds from the Loan will be deployed towards Saizen REIT’s working capital until
such time when they are required for other purposes, including the refinancing of the loan of YK Shintoku (if such refinancing is possible).

This is exactly what I am hoping for, to have the CMBS for YK Shintoku replaced by a conventional bank loan at a much lower interest rate than the punitive 7% now due to the default. Let's hope the refinancing takes place successfully... and soon. :)


Monthly Popular Blog Posts

All time ASSI most popular!

 
 
Bloggy Award