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

Feeling the stress in Singapore?

Saturday, August 28, 2010

"Singapore, one of the world's richest cities, has a land area of just 710 square kilometres (274 square miles) but until recent years, it had avoided the congested feeling of places like Hong Kong and Tokyo.


"Widely acclaimed as one of the world's most "liveable" cities, Singapore is now experiencing urban growth woes as it moves to expand its population to 6.5 million in 20 years, up 30 percent from the current level of five million."

Some facts:

1.  Tourist arrivals surpassed the one million mark in a single month for the first time in July 2010.

2.  Despite increased train frequency during peak demand periods, trains were more cramped than before.

3.  As of July, there were 936,311 vehicles plying the roads of Singapore, with cars accounting for 61.5 percent of the total, compared to 755,000 vehicles just five years ago.

4.  Demand for homes in Singapore's public housing blocks, where 80 percent of the population reside, is also straining supply. Foreigners who enjoy permanent residency and are eligible to purchase public housing totalled 533,000 in 2009, a 37.8 percent increase from 2005.

Read the full article here.
Singapore shows signs of urban stress.
AFP, Wednesday, 25 August 2010.

Raffles Education: Downtrend in force.

Raffles Education's downtrend continues. Distressed shareholders must be wondering if there is any end in sight. 29.5c is where we find the merged 20d and 50d MAs. This level was previously a support and is now resistance. Volume expanded as price drew to a close at 27.5c in the last session.


The MACD is declining in negative territory.  Momentum is clearly negative. After enjoying a brief period of accumulation from 26 July, distribution activity which started on 11 August has wiped out all gains in the OBV by the end of the last session.  Traders who were nimble enough to offload at 31c before the distribution activity took hold would have made a gain assuming they bought in at 29.5c.

Raffles Education's downtrend is in force and it would take a brave punter to try and make money trading this counter. Selling on rebounds is the strategy to adopt here, at least until there are clearer longer term reversal signals.

Related post:
Charts in brief: 16 Jul 10 (Part 3).


Monthly Popular Blog Posts

All time ASSI most popular!

 
 
Bloggy Award