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Charts in brief: 14 Jun 2010.

Monday, June 14, 2010

LMIR: Price continues to be resisted by the 50dMA at 47.5c. Volume was very low today and continues a picture of negative divergence between price and volume. As MFI rose gently higher, the OBV is flattish. This is not a bullish sign either.  Immediate support at 45.5c which approximates the position of the trendline support as well as the 20dMA.




AIMS AMP Capital Industrial REIT: A one lot buy up at closing prevented the formation of a gravestone doji. 21.5c has been established as the immediate support.  This REIT is still trading within a range and I would buy more if it trades closer to the support of the trading range at 20c.





CapitaMalls Asia:  Symmetrical triangle has yet to be resolved. Negative divergence between price and volume is glaring. MFI has been rising but OBV has been flattish. MACD is rising but is still in negative territory.  All these make the buy signal shown in MACD histogram suspicious.  $2.14 is the resistance to watch.




FSL Trust: I was wondering if this counter might form a bullish harami today.  Unfortunately, it's a gravestone doji. This counter is oversold.  In the event of a rebound, I see resistance at 39c and 44c.




Golden Agriculture: Nice up day.  We might see the price continue to rise tomorrow as there is respectable volume and price closed at the high of the day at 53c. Immediate support at 49c.  Immediate resistance at 55c.


FSL Trust: A crisis or an opportunity?

Saturday, June 12, 2010

I still have units of FSL Trust which were bought at an average price of S$1.00 per unit.  By any stretch of imagination, I cannot foresee FSL Trust trading at S$1.00 per unit in the next few years, if ever.  I have kept these units in a frozen portfolio together with a few other stocks to remind myself of the mistakes I made.

As FSL Trust enjoyed a recovery in unit price and was trading at an average of 60c for about a year till the first few days of May 2010, reaching a high of 69.5c in July 2009, I advised potential investors that it is still a risky investment. The primary reason why I consider FSL Trust to be a risky investment is its indebtedness.

As of 31 March 2010, it had bank loans of US$484.6m. This has been reduced to US$ 477.1m after another loan payment was made in April 2010. FSL Trust makes quarterly loan payments. About half of the loans will mature in April 2012 and the rest are maturing in March 2014.  Although its vessels are valued at US$826m, it only has US$56m in cash and cash equivalents as of 31 March 2010.

In 1QFY10, FSL Trust's revenue was US$24.43m.  The two ships which were leased to Groda, Verona I and Nika I, contributed 15% to FSL Trust's revenue.  Assuming a total cessation of contribution (which is not very likely), quarterly revenue would decline to US$20.77m. Then, assuming cost of operations remain the same and assuming that US$8m is used to make quarterly loan repayment as usual, what is left would be US$4.77m.  This could then be distributed to unit holders.  This would give a dpu of about 0.8 USc (or 1.08 Sc).

Based on the current unit price of 37c, the yield would be 11.68%.  If the unit price declines to test its historic low of 32c, the yield would be 13.5%.  Remember that this is based on the most abject scenario that contributions from Verona I and Nika I would cease completely.  That is why I said on 9 June: "It seems to me that a test of 32c as support would be overly pessimistic and if it should come to that, I would probably buy in again."

In all probability, FSL Trust would be able to secure the release of the two vessels by paying US$4.8m in total.  It would be able to fund this internally as it has US$56m in cash and cash equivalents. A resumption of operations of the vessels would continue to contribute to revenue although much reduced.

As of 31 March 2010, NAV is 62 USc per unit.  That is about 83.7 Sc (based on US$1 = S$ 1.35).  Buying at 37c represents a 56% discount to NAV while buying at 32c would represent a 62% discount to NAV.  Compared to buying at 60c, which represents a lesser 28.5% discount to NAV, there is a greater margin of safety now.

For sure, FSL Trust's high gearing is still an issue.  However, as its unit price continues declining, risk reward analysis suggests that it might be rewarding to enter with a long position.  I did so but was probably too early as I anticipated a bottoming of the unit price instead of waiting for clearer signs using TA.

Panic is still running high and fear is palpable, judging by the relatively high volume of trade as price declined. I am sure that there is no shortage of short sellers as well (please pardon the pun).  Once short sellers begin to cover their positions and once the last bearish investor throws up his arms in despair, we will see a reversal.  We must see a base forming and it would be ideal to see that base retested and holding.  That is a good time to add to long positions.  In crises, we find opportunities.  This crisis might just be an opportunity.

Related post:
FSL Trust: A new low.

Charts in brief: 11 Jun 10.

Friday, June 11, 2010

CapitaMalls Asia: A trading halt in the morning was called for as the sale of three malls to its REIT in Malaysia was announced. The response to this announcement was vapid. The symmetrical triangle has yet to resolve itself while the negative divergence between price and volume is still quite obvious.









AIMS AMP Capital Industrial REIT: Closed at 21.5c. MACD continues its decline and looks set to leave positive territory. Rising MFI suggests positive buying momentum while a falling OBV suggests distribution.  This divergence could limit upside in the near term.




FSL Trust: The decision to wait and see even as the price plunged two sessions ago has paid off. OCBC Research has terminated coverage of all shipping trusts and DBSV has advised avoiding FSL Trust for now. Using Fibo lines, we see that closing at 37c today is at the 123.6% Fibo line and if this should give way, price could decline to 33.5c as the 138.2% Fibo line is at 33.7c.




Healthway Medical:  Formed a doji today, unable to break the high of 19c as volume declined.  MFI peeked into overbought territory while OBV has flattened. The doji is a reversal signal but it needs confirmation although the technicals support a reversal. A correction downwards should find support at 16c, a many times tested support in the past.







LMIR: Closed above 47c resistance but is met with resistance provided by the 50dMA at 47.5c.  The candlestick formed today is that of a hangman.  The negative divergence between rising price and declining volume is still valid.  LMIR is rising on weak technicals.


LMIR: Testing resistance.

Thursday, June 10, 2010



LMIR has risen on declining volume. MACD is rising in negative territory and the MFI continues to rise towards 50%. Without a significant expansion in volume as price pushes higher, it will be hard to overcome immediate resistance at 47c.  In the event that 47c is taken out, there is a band of resistance provided by a cluster of MAs from 47.5c to 48.5c.  Upside seems limited which might explain the lack of enthusiasm from market participants in adding to their long positions here.




I would like to accumulate units in LMIR again but will wait to see how things unfold.


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