China Fishery: Trading within an Up Trend Channel

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China Fishery is currently trading within an up trend channel.  $0.665 is a critical support to ensure a continual up trend whereby $0.665 is uptrend channel support, 20D SMA, 61.8% Fibonacci Retracement Level and also precious resistance turned support.

Key Statistics for CFG

Current P/E Ratio (ttm) 8.3391
Estimated P/E(09/2012) 4.6109
Relative P/E vs. FSSTI 0.8048
Earnings Per Share (USD) (ttm) 0.0664
Est. EPS (USD) (09/2012) 0.1200
Est. PEG Ratio
Market Cap (M SGD) 700.88
Shares Outstanding (M) 1,023.18
30 Day Average Volume 2,660,733
Price/Book (mrq) 0.6833
Price/Sale (ttm) 0.9660
Dividend Indicated Gross Yield 2.77%
Cash Dividend (SGD) 0.0190
Last Dividend 02/14/2013
5 Year Dividend Growth -13.83%
Next Earnings Announcement 05/10/2013
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Pacific Andes: On Up Trend

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Pacific Andes is technically bullish and currently trading in an uptrend channel. The stock is currently trading above 20D, 50D and 200D SMA and finding the support at the uptrend channel now. The stock is trading at about 0.46 P/B Ratio, the lowest for the past 4 years. Book Value at $0.3247. Net Operating Cash Flow Healthy, Current Ratio > 2.

Fundamentally and Technically Pacific Andes looks good for a bullish trade.

Key Statistics for PAH

Current P/E Ratio (ttm) 5.2852
Estimated P/E(09/2013) 4.1395
Relative P/E vs. FSSTI 0.5100
Earnings Per Share (HKD) (ttm) 0.1803
Est. EPS (HKD) (09/2013) 0.2300
Est. PEG Ratio
Market Cap (M SGD) 728.23
Shares Outstanding (M) 4,790.99
30 Day Average Volume 11,796,400
Price/Book (mrq) 0.4615
Price/Sale (ttm) 0.4064
Dividend Indicated Gross Yield 1.97%
Cash Dividend (SGD) 0.0030
Last Dividend 02/14/2013
5 Year Dividend Growth -19.62%
Next Earnings Announcement 05/10/2013
Continue ReadingPacific Andes: On Up Trend

STI with dividends returned 12.7% p.a. over past 10 yrs

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Unlike ordinary eggs, nest eggs are used for a specific purpose. The nest egg is the egg that stays in the nest, and helps in the laying of more eggs. In the investment world the nest egg might better be referred to as a cornerstone investment. This is the type of investment that has a special purpose, formed with personal objectives, providing a base for continued investing.

If a cornerstone investment takes up your entire life-savings, it will not induce further activity. Also if the cornerstone does not generate any income, it will not likely induce any re-investment. Thirdly, if the cornerstone investment is not compatible with other markets, it will be difficult to grow the cornerstone.

A market that fulfills the above criteria with the added familiarity of tracking the performance of Singapore’s biggest companies is the Straits Times Index (STI). The STI’s 30 constituents are diversified over 14 different sectors, made up of 29 stocks plus 1 Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT). Performances of the 30 constituents in the 2013 year-to-date have varied from -9.1% for City Developments [C09] to +15.5% for CapitaMalls Asia [JS8].

Over the last 10 years, the STI has moved from 1,291.61* on 31 January 2003 to 3,291.14 on Friday 1 February 2013. Over the ten year period, this represents an average annualised price gain of +9.8%. Over the period, the STI constituents have paid shareholders regular dividends. Dividends provide the means for corporate profits or trust distributions to be given to the stock or trust holder on a regular basis. Dividends have boosted the +9.8% average annualised price return to a +12.7% average annualised total return. Current indicative yields for the 29 STI stocks that maintain a dividend yield range from 0.6% for Jardine Strategic USD [J37] to 5.1% for Starhub [CC3]. A full list of STI stock yields updated to the Friday close can be found here.

How does an investor use the STI as a cornerstone? Exchange-traded funds (ETF) are investment funds listed and traded on SGX, designed to track the performance of an Index, such as the SPDR STI ETF (ES3) and the Nikko AM STI ETF (G3B). You can buy or sell ETF units at market prices any time during trading hours, just like stocks. The size of the ETF units makes portfolio investing affordable. Furthermore, the ETF can be used with other stocks to build a bigger share portfolio.

The two ETFs that track the STI can also generate income through semi-annual dividends. The first distribution for the SPDR STI ETF in 2013 (which was S$0.04 per unit) went ex-dividend on Friday 1 February with the payment date 19 February. As the SDPR STI ETF is Singapore dollar denominated, Direct Crediting Service (DCS) allows CDP to directly credit dividend payments to the CDP account holder’s bank account on payment date (click here for more information).

In terms of cornerstone affordability, consider that on Friday, the minimum required investment in the SPDR STI ETF on Friday was S$3,320 or S$334 for the Nikko AM STI ETF, not including the single transaction cost.  These two ETFs are cash based ETFs, have total expense ratios less than 0.50% and are categorised specified investment products. The SPDR STI ETF is CPFIS-included and you can use your CPF account monies to purchase it. In growing the nest egg, investors have a number of other ETFs or Sector-specific stocks to choose from. 

 
*note based on old index calculations.

 

Source: SGX MyGateway

Continue ReadingSTI with dividends returned 12.7% p.a. over past 10 yrs