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The greedy immoral despots role in the crash of Singapore

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  • AndrewPKYap's Avatar
    13,921 posts since Oct '06
  • seotiblizzard's Avatar
    24,245 posts since Apr '06
  • AndrewPKYap's Avatar
    13,921 posts since Oct '06
    • In the propaganda press, you will not read about the greedy immoral despots role.

      I have warned that their policies will bring down Singapore (at least make it worse) when property prices started to rise.

      May 2006
      Property Prices Rise at our expense - By Andrew PK Yap
      Columns By Andrew PK Yap
      Author of Insights Into Casino and Stock Market
      When property prices go up, it benefits the few at the expense of the majority.
      http://newsintercom.org/index.php?itemid=442

      July 2007
      A Sinister Development
      Columns The development charge increase is obnoxious in that again, the government is taking more money from the people.

      While ostensibly the developers pay, is there any doubt that the ultimate paymaster is the home buyer? Is there any doubt that the majority ultimately suffers?
      http://newsintercom.org/index.php?itemid=540

      Oct 2007
      Be prepared for the downfall of Singapore
      Columns By Andrew PK Yap
      Founder of www.casinogamblingprevention.com

      That person that was in hell and visited heaven knows how to live life on earth best. It is good if you physically lived in hell for a spell and you were an expat in heaven for a few years. If hell is too frightening a place for you to step into, for you, heaven will be out of reach.
      http://newsintercom.org/index.php?itemid=554

  • seotiblizzard's Avatar
    24,245 posts since Apr '06
  • AndrewPKYap's Avatar
    13,921 posts since Oct '06
    • So you see, without democratic checks and balances, the people's voices will be drowned in the propaganda.

      You will read in the papers everyday how the US caused the problems in Singapore.

      The greedy immoral despots role will be minimized if mentioned at all!

  • AndrewPKYap's Avatar
    13,921 posts since Oct '06
    • Originally posted by seotiblizzard:
      Shocked Its either u very free or u got very good time management.

      You must be very young.

      You do not know how much money is lost and how many people suffer (but up till now it is the gamblers and the rich that suffer; oh yes and Singaporeans suffer because the despots love to gamble Singapore's reserves overseas) when the markets crash like this.

      More importantly, you have no idea how much money some people make ( Laughing ) when they can see reality for what it is and not simply buy into propaganda.

      That is what I want to tell you. you must be very young, you have no idea how much money some people make when the markets crash like this. ( Laughing )

      So you see, dare to think for yourself and do not live life simply by believing others (religious, cultural) or propaganda. Only then can you make tons of money in the markets.

      In daily living, living with beliefs and propaganda does not much harm but when it comes to the markets... blur = losses and crystal clear thinking = profits beyond your wildest dreams. Laughing

  • AndrewPKYap's Avatar
    13,921 posts since Oct '06
    • Andrew PK Yap (author of Casino Gambling, Trading Stocks... and Concepts for Skillful Decision-Making)

  • AndrewPKYap's Avatar
    13,921 posts since Oct '06
    • Back to: "The greedy immoral despots role in the crash of Singapore"

      Bought MORE of this bank's shares in July 2007

      image

      This is just a good example... imagine for yourself the losses they squandered away in the other gambles they took.

  • seotiblizzard's Avatar
    24,245 posts since Apr '06
    • Originally posted by AndrewPKYap:
      You must be very young.

      You do not know how much money is lost and how many people suffer (but up till now it is the gamblers and the rich that suffer; oh yes and Singaporeans suffer because the despots love to gamble Singapore's reserves overseas) when the markets crash like this.

      More importantly, you have no idea how much money some people make ( Laughing ) when they can see reality for what it is and not simply buy into propaganda.

      That is what I want to tell you. [b]you must be very young, you have no idea how much money some people make when the markets crash like this.
      ( Laughing )

      So you see, dare to think for yourself and do not live life simply by believing others (religious, cultural) or propaganda. Only then can you make tons of money in the markets.

      In daily living, living with beliefs and propaganda does not much harm but when it comes to the markets... blur = losses and crystal clear thinking = profits beyond your wildest dreams. Laughing [/b]

      Er.. ok. Neutral

  • deathbait's Avatar
    897 posts since Jul '07
    • I like how you created a thread to reply to yourself in quick succession.

      First of all, let's not treat the proposal as a fact. Singapore has not crashed...how can you blame anybody for something that has not yet happened?

      Oh but you say you CAN SEE that it will crash. In other words, everything you say is based on your own prediction. In other words...it's all personal opinion.

      Here's mine:

      I must admit I've seen a deterioration in Singapore in the last decade. No, not the finances...that part is ridiculously healthy(despite what you say). No, not because of the influx of FT. But because I'm starting to see the ugly side of singapore emerge. In other words, People like you are starting to crawl out of their holes.

      Spoiled by years of government protection, enjoying high standards of living unique to few countries have made some of us(and by us i mean you) soft. You happily take the benefits when times are good, but is quick to look for people to blame when times are not so good(notice I don't say bad, because it's not).

      Sure, blame it on the FT when you can't compete in the global market(what are you, a baby that needs protection from the big bad world?) Blame the government for increasing taxes (remember all the times you like to compare sg gov with foreign ones? How about comparing the taxes?) Blame the old leaders for hanging on to power(with maniacs like CSJ on the loose, can you blame them, really?)

      Decades of soft living have made people such as yourself dependent on the very system you claim to despise. You're like the little boy who complains to his friends about how domineering his dad is, but at the first loud noise, runs back to daddy for protection.

      People have faced the challenges we faced for years. Instead of blaming everyone we can see for changing the way of life, perhaps we should take a moment to reflect on the boon that had been given to us years before, sheltering us from the cruel reality of the world economy. We're not going downhill. We're reverting to mean.

  • AndrewPKYap's Avatar
    13,921 posts since Oct '06
    • image

      Like I said previously, I no longer need to defend my position that the markets are crashing...

      ...and with this post, now let the ass-sniffing dogs of The greedy immoral despots start to defend them and try to sell more of their propaganda in sgforums...



      They can tell their lies, I will refrain from replying to their lies...

      Laughing

      Edited to add: I see the lying had already started while I was composing this post.

      Edited by AndrewPKYap 22 Jan `08, 6:36AM
  • deathbait's Avatar
    897 posts since Jul '07
    • lol

      give it a week.
      You'll probably dissappear again, like you always do when markets stop "crashing" (dipping)

  • HyperFocal's Avatar
    1,900 posts since Jul '07
    • STI plunges 6% in worst one-day fall since Oct 1987

      SINGAPORE'S market yesterday suffered its worst one-day fall since the Black Monday crash in October 1987 while other Asian bourses had to go back to the Sept11, 2001, terror attacks for a day as bad as this.

      The Straits Times Index was the region's second-worst performer, diving a jaw-dropping 187.1 points, or 6.03 per cent, in the frenzied, fear-driven bail-out. The STI has now fallen 15.8 per cent since Jan 1, wiping $62 billion off the value of local shares.

      India was the worst performer yesterday, with the Sensex Index initially plunging 12 per cent before a late recovery brought the final dip to 7.41 per cent.

      Other casualties stacked up across the region - Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell 5.5 per cent, Tokyo's Nikkei-225 was down 3.9 per cent, and China's resilient Shanghai Composite dived 5.14 per cent.

      The causes were the same factors that have been hammering markets for months - a possible recession in the United States and concerns that regional banks will be hit by the massive writedowns that have belted Western banks.

      'Irrational fear is stalking regional markets. Fundamentally, things haven't changed, and the economy is humming along nicely,' said CIMB-GK research head Song Seng Wun.

      One dealer said hedge funds - powerful investment vehicles with billions at their command - were trimming their positions across the region ahead of possibly more bad news from the US.

      'With the US markets closed for Martin Luther King Day, the funds are left rudderless as they struggle to find directions in the gloom and this is exacerbating the panic selling region-wide,' he said.

      Financial shares took the biggest hit. Bank of China and HSBC Holdings came under heavy attack, with investors spooked by fears of their balance sheets being hurt by big sub-prime writedowns, following Citigroup and Merrill Lynch's massive losses.

      DBS Group Holdings was one victim here, falling an eye-popping $1.18 to a 17-month low of $17.50. But SingTel's 7.7 per cent slide to $3.58 and Keppel Corp's 5.6 per cent fall to $10.80 stunned investors as well.

      European markets were also well down when they opened yesterday afternoon. Financial stocks there sank on concerns of their possible exposure to the bond insurance market, which has been tainted by the US mortgage crisis.

      At close, London's FTSE-100 Index was down 5.48 per cent, Paris' CAC Index fell 5.88 per cent, while Frankfurt's Dax Index tumbled 7.16 per cent.

      Even booming commodities markets suffered. Oil fell US$1.68 (S$2.42) to US$88.98 a barrel on fears of falling demand if the US slips into recession, and gold fell US$13.17 to US$870 an ounce.

      However, anxiety over the US economy may be soothed over coming weeks if the financial results of multinationals such as Microsoft and AT&T are robust.

      'But more disappointing earnings could send stock prices down further, as they fuel the risk of a recession,' warned Deutsche Bank Private Wealth Management's chief Asian strategist Marshall Gittler.

      But some traders here saw yesterday's nosedive as a golden opportunity to pick up blue chips like DBS and UOB. 'I view this sell-off as the last shoe dropping and I am sinking all my remaining funds into blue chips,' said local remisier Bernie Tan.

      Edited by HyperFocal 22 Jan `08, 7:55AM
  • shade343's Avatar
    13,712 posts since Jun '04
    • Originally posted by deathbait:
      lol

      give it a week.
      You'll probably dissappear again, like you always do when markets stop "crashing" (dipping)

      I actually agree with you on this. Laughing

      TS doesnt seem to understand that the selldown is caused by panic selling and its the speculators who are greedy immoral despots that are forced to close their position after they made bets that turned awry... Laughing

      The market shld be up today on cherry picking Very Happy

  • shade343's Avatar
    13,712 posts since Jun '04
  • genie99's Avatar
    114 posts since Dec '07
    • Originally posted by deathbait:
      lol

      give it a week.
      You'll probably dissappear again, like you always do when markets stop "crashing" (dipping)

      Don't know what issues you have against AndrewPwateveryap..... but i'll say that the situation looks bad.....

      Dunnoe much abt stocks.... but reading Hyper's post Shocked Shocked Shocked looks bad

  • HyperFocal's Avatar
    1,900 posts since Jul '07
    • Originally posted by genie99:
      Don't know what issues you have against AndrewPwateveryap..... but i'll say that the situation looks bad.....

      Dunnoe much abt stocks.... but reading Hyper's post Shocked Shocked Shocked looks bad

      ... if they would just take off the Rose Tinted Sungllases that they were issued, they will see that things aren't looking as rosy as they want them to see it...

  • shade343's Avatar
    13,712 posts since Jun '04
    • Originally posted by genie99:
      Don't know what issues you have against AndrewPwateveryap..... but i'll say that the situation looks bad.....

      Dunnoe much abt stocks.... but reading Hyper's post Shocked Shocked Shocked looks bad

      DO you really believe what he says? He is just living in his own dreamworld that everything is doom and gloom and at the same time spreading fear to investors when he himself is shorting the market.

      Laughing Laughing Laughing

  • Dino888's Avatar
    235 posts since Dec '02
  • AndrewPKYap's Avatar
    13,921 posts since Oct '06
    • image

      Some people just love for the market to slap their idiotic faces...

      People call fools like these, 'biggest fools'. Laughing

      Edited by AndrewPKYap 22 Jan `08, 9:31AM
  • 4getmenot's Avatar
    3,012 posts since Sep '06
    • i'm just keeping a watch on the stock markets across asia and see how much its gonna fall this week.. Mr. Green Mr. Green

  • Lin Yu's Avatar
    2,893 posts since Jul '07
  • phil30k's Avatar
    437 posts since Jan '08
    • I can't help but wonder if this is related to the American elections.

      There are a lot of rumors about election rigging in the US. You can do a seach on "election fraud" on Google.

      There may be grounds to believe that the US is going to undergo a fundamental change and that the change will impact on US conglomerates.

      This uncertainty may be contributing to the impact on the markets.

  • hloc's Avatar
    2,089 posts since Oct '06
    • For Invester..... It would now be a good time to get some stock that is 'under discount now. Remember that Investment is a long term thing..... and buy and sell within the week just to earn a few cents.

      hloc - Author of - ''Stop Blaming Others For Your Pathetic Life" & "Get A Life Instead Of Posting Thread 5 AM In The Morning". Like Mr Yap..... both Book can't be found anywhere within S'pore or around the World......

  • Timmay's Avatar
    130 posts since Dec '07

    • TS doesnt seem to understand that the selldown is caused by panic selling and its the speculators who are greedy immoral despots that are forced to close their position after they made bets that turned awry... Laughing

      The market shld be up today on cherry picking Very Happy

      *nods*

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