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Sunday, 22 November 2009
Using high pay to ensure honest, clean govt won’t work
Is it possible to ensure an honest and clean government by paying high salaries? The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) asserted that a number of elected representatives were involved in taking bribes and commissions as well as misappropriating funds because their salaries and allowances were inadequate to meet their needs.
Sino-Env slams sacked financial controller
The crisis at Sino-Environment has intensified with the management claiming that its sacked financial controller threatened the firm’s survival by diverting funds earmarked for bondholders to pay professional fees.
New home for Buddhist group after 10-year wait
Headquarters is up after delays caused by 1997 crisis, Sars and priority for school projects
Illegal to quiz witnesses beyond office hours, KL court rules
A Malaysian court yesterday said it was illegal for the anti-corruption agency to question witnesses beyond office hours, dealing a blow to the authorities’ insistence that this was within its right.
High Court dismisses Hengxin suit
The High Court yesterday dismissed cable-making firm Hengxin Technology’s lawsuits against former executive directors Jiang Wei and Qian Lirong, who was also its executive chairman and CEO.
Give us what our homes deserve
Signs of more assertive middle class as home owners prepared to take control of their estate
Drink-driving conviction quashed
In a significant ruling, the High Court has quashed the drink driving conviction of a motorist found sleeping in his parked car on an expressway shoulder - even though his breath alcohol level was above the legal limit.
Catch the buzz, fine-tune the theme park pricing
It is just a matter of months now until the grand opening of the Universal Studios theme park in Singapore, but that excitement was tempered somewhat when the much-awaited ticket prices were finally made public on Wednesday.
Asia Tiger takes controlling interest in Think Greenergy
Asia Tiger Group is taking a controlling interest in UK-based waste-to-energy specialist Think Greenergy Ltd (TGE).
Sino-Environment exec directors hit back at IDs
In what may be the start of a war of words, executive directors (EDs) at Sino-Environment Technology Group have hit back at the company’s independent directors (IDs), hurling accusations against them and its sacked financial controller.
Upgraders fuel demand in Qingdao
Market growing as rising affluence leading residents to look for bigger flats
Obama’s China trip shows power shifting
President Barack Obama’s first visit to China underscored a shifting balance of power: two giants moving closer to being equals.
Abundant land supply key to mainland property prices
The mainland’s property markets have become popular investment targets for investors from around the world and both developers and analysts warn that they should bear in mind that a plentiful supply of land in the country could have a bearing on the future price performance of property assets.
Six ways to get inspired
Staying inspired is a tough job for most people, if not all. Even entrepreneur may sometimes find it difficult to stay inspired because he may also be caught in the circumstances that are unfavourable. As such, knowing that life is getting tough and the tough get going. Therefore, he has to continuously find something to inspire himself.
Game for Chinese class?
Teachers use games, websites, films and pop music to get students interested
Chen’s son had key role
Who says HK and Singapore can’t co-operate?
Can rivals Hong Kong and Singapore work together rather than just face off over who deserves the title of Asia’s top financial centre?
Pitted against the big boys
Arrogance and fear drives currency policy
What drives China’s currency policy? Is it arrogance, fear or a mix of the two?
It pays to be a soldier in Tibet
Soldiers from Guangzhou newly assigned to Tibet will get a “special allowance” of up to 160,000 yuan (HK$182,000) for serving there.
Saturday, 21 November 2009
Attention Shifts to China for Private Equity Industry
“Now, many entrepreneurs are starting to turn away foreign currency funds,” Mr. Wang at China Equity said. “They say they can take an RMB investment and not go through a lengthy process to list offshore. And they see the Shanghai or ChiNext exchange as viable listing places.”
Speculators, and mothers-in-law, drive property prices ever higher
Rampant stimulus-induced speculation, soaring prices, Mickey Mouse and evil mothers-in-law: Shanghai’s property market has become a brutal and unforgiving world for first-time buyers.
No place for hypocrisy on national security
As the world’s only superpower, the United States is accustomed to setting standards of conduct across a range of issues. These include human rights, free trade, currency manipulation and illicit drug control. Whether the US is in a position to moralise depends, to a large extent, on the countries being praised or criticised. One area where Washington has been most vocal has been its persistent criticism of Chinese espionage against US interests. In the world of intelligence, everyone spies on everyone else. Is the complaint from the US not a classic case of the pot calling the kettle black? Perhaps there is an acceptable espionage threshold beyond which spies from one nation should not go against another. But no one has specified what that might be.
Friday, 20 November 2009
Peru arrests ‘human fat killers’
Four people have been arrested in Peru on suspicion of killing dozens of people in order to sell their fat and tissue for cosmetic uses in Europe.
Thursday, 19 November 2009
Wednesday, 18 November 2009
US ‘fears’ anti-ship ballistic missile
Why Japan is rethinking its alliance with America
US President Barack Obama’s visit to Japan brought forth renewed utterances of support of their bilateral security treaty, but the new Democratic Party of Japan government of Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama appears determined to make it a more equal alliance.
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
A cautionary tale for S-chip investors
One big question that emerges from the whole sorry Sino-Environment saga is why trading of its shares continued for six months after it became likely that the company would be brought down by the problems that beset it.
Taiwan issue, spying hold back ties with US military
Military co-operation between China and the US has been sporadic and limited because of deep mistrust between the two sides, a retired PLA general has said, attributing much of the tension to Washington’s arms sales to Taipei and its surveillance activities in the South China Sea.
Singapore brothers drive US chain’s success in China
Trio grew Days Inn franchise from one hotel in 2003 to 27 now - with more on the way
Short-selling: what exactly should be disclosed?
Some 13 months ago, just after Lehman Brothers went bust and stocks all over the world were crashing, many fingers of blame were pointed in the direction of short-sellers - particularly those of a naked persuasion.
2nd senior ICA officer jailed this week
A senior immigration officer was jailed for 1-1/2 years yesterday for accepting bribes to extend the social visit passes (SVPs) of foreign nationals.
Handling the China trend

The rebound from the recent market dip in the US has been much more rapid than expected. The tests of support near 9,600 on the Dow Jones Industrial Average were successful and have provided a springboard for a rapid rally above the significant technical resistance level at 10,200. This appears to have broken the behavioural nexus between the Dow and the Shanghai Index.
Shareholders need to act in Sino-Env Tech debacle
They should seek EGM to replace executive directors if firm is to be saved
Wind Power Dilemma: Money Blows Away
Rapid, government-subsidized expansion of China’s wind power industry has led to excess capacity and investment waste.
Abuses rampant in secret black jails
State agents regularly abduct citizens and detain them for days or months in secret, illegal “black jails”, subjecting them to physical and psychological abuses, Human Rights Watch said on Thursday.
80 percent of Caijing staff quit to follow editor
Nearly 150 of the approximately 180 editorial staff members at Caijing have resigned following the departure of Hu Shuli, the founder and editor of the mainland’s most influential business magazine.
Shanghai project builds on the past
Latest redevelopment will turn old architecture into galleries, residential and retail space
Monday, 16 November 2009
Blackwater Said to Pursue Bribes to Iraq After 17 Died
Top executives at Blackwater Worldwide authorized secret payments of about $1 million to Iraqi officials that were intended to silence their criticism and buy their support after a September 2007 episode in which Blackwater security guards fatally shot 17 Iraqi civilians in Baghdad, according to former company officials.
Supermarket? It only looks like one: owner
URA investigates Mustafa Warehouse for unauthorised change of use
Soccer officials held in graft crackdown
Several high-profile soccer officials have been snared in a crackdown on underground gambling, amid growing frustrations at the highest level of the government at the ugly state of the “beautiful game” on the mainland.
Shanghai Disney park gets go-ahead
After almost 10 years negotiations and weeks of speculation and mounting anticipation, Shanghai has finally been given the green light to build a Disney theme park - but the public is still in the dark over the exact scope of the deal.
Stick to trading the large-cap ‘haves’
In local market parlance, the key manipulator behind a stock is referred to as the chng kay, a Hokkien term which loosely translates to a croupier in a casino, who is the person who holds all the cards and deals them. This then means that anyone who trades these pennies runs the risk of the chng kay pulling the plug at any time, or risk unforeseen circumstances like an overseas market crash overcoming the manipulators’ ability to deliver the goods.
Sunday, 15 November 2009
Ministry enters row over death of doctor
The Ministry of Health has stepped in and ordered the Beijing health bureau to look into the case of a Peking University professor of medicine who died in 2006 after being treated by three unlicensed medical postgraduates at the Peking University First Hospital.
3 years jail for sex with horse
A South Carolina man caught on video having sex with a horse was sentenced on Wednesday to three years in prison after pleading guilty for the second time in two years to abusing the creature.
Madame Chiang Kai-shek and the Birth of Modern China
Mainland turns to hi-tech snooping
Take a stroll along the streets of Shenzhen and look up - you will see them everywhere, on building walls, light posts, under bridges, at street corners. Digital surveillance cameras - an estimated 800,000 of them - are peering into every nook and cranny of the border city, analysing the flow of people, alerting police to suspicious gatherings and ensuring no crime is likely to go unseen.
Chinese Trial Reveals Vast Web of Corruption
Wen Qiang had a fondness for Louis Vuitton belts, fossilized dinosaur eggs and B-list pop stars. For a public employee in charge of the local judiciary, he also had a lot of money: nearly $3 million that investigators found buried beneath a fish pond.
China’s researchers poised to dominate
China’s military making strides in space: US general
China’s military has made dramatic progress in space over the past decade and the goals of its program remain unclear, a top American general said.
Waking up to the world of casinos
In 2010, Singaporeans will wake up to a world that will include casinos, an industry that is sometimes known to have a sleazy underbelly.
Risks and Rewards on China’s New Stock Board
The opening of a Nasdaq-style stock board in China is already being seen as a watershed moment for the country’s capital markets, providing new but volatile opportunities for mainland Chinese investors and an alternative source of financing for start-up companies.
Pheim lawyers warn of investors’ quandary
They claim that a guilty verdict could have implications for average investor
Officials blamed for chaos at Beijing airport
Snowfall causes flight delays, but poor service adds to disruption
Firms wake up to spending power of the elderly
“The gold is among the silver,” say some businessmen involved with an increasingly ageing society in the world’s most populous nation.
Chongqing, SGX mull over listing pact
Singapore Exchange (SGX) and the Chongqing government are mulling over ways to promote listing of Chongqing companies on SGX and boost transparency of listing candidates.
China’s Henry Ford the driving force behind Geely
Li Shufu, the founder of China’s Zhejiang Geely Holdings, has much in common with Henry Ford, from a childhood on the farm to a scrappy determination to build a car-making behemoth from nothing.
China to put weapons in space
The head of China’s air force has said the country has plans to build weapons in space, describing it as a “historical inevitability”.
Car insurance: Two strikes and you’re out?
Car insurers have insisted that it is within their rights to reject policy applications from motorists if they have one too many accident claims within a year.
Dual-listing firms alienate local investors
They feel short-changed when same shares are priced lower in Taipei
Corruption in education a key concern
The mainland leadership’s decision to remove unpopular education minister Dr Zhou Ji over the weekend may seem abrupt, but it was not unexpected. It’s actually a welcome development. As the central government maps out educational reforms for the medium and long term, Zhou’s removal may signal a new start.
China’s enforcement officers turned thugs
A highly publicised case of injustice has led to calls for the reform, or even abolition, of a law enforcement agency found in every Chinese city, and which is notorious for its thuggish behaviour.
Investors shun mainland developers’ share sales
Excellence postpones IPO; Mingfa retail issue 50pc subscribed
515m yuan fraud in river clean-up campaign
Eleven of the 13 provinces in a river clean-up programme across the mainland either misused or faked spending totalling 515 million yuan (HK$584 million) over seven years, a state audit has found.
Top official endorses Chongqing crackdown
The clampdown on organised crime in Chongqing has earned praise from the country’s top law-enforcement official, according to state media.
New mystery in Chen shooting
Taiwanese investigators looking into the 2004 shooting of the island’s former president Chen Shui-bian said yesterday they had found no blood or bullet hole in his trousers, adding mystery to an incident that may have won him a second term.
No blood found in Chen’s 2004 shooting
No bullet holes or blood were found on Taiwan ex-president Chen Shui-bian in a 2004 election eve shooting, raising new suspicion about the incident that preceded a razor-thin victory, investigators said on Thursday.
10 Years Later, a Much Less Expensive Dow 10,000
But the return to 10,000 also serves as a bitter reminder that stocks have gone virtually nowhere, on balance, for more than a decade. It was in March 1999 that the Dow first climbed above 10,000, before soaring as high as 14,164 two years ago and plummeting as low as 6,547 this past March.
China’s Role as Lender Alters Dynamics for United States
When President Obama visits China for the first time on Sunday, he will, in many ways, be assuming the role of profligate spender coming to pay his respects to his banker.
No bars, no mistresses, Chinese officials warned
Chinese officials are being told to dump their mistresses, avoid hostess bars, and shun extravagances as part of the Communist party’s efforts to clamp down on the corruption that is threatening its rule and sullying its reputation.
Saturday, 14 November 2009
Believing in the bears, running with the bulls
Given the strength of the stock market rally over the past eight months, and considering just how supportive conditions are for share prices right now, it might seem surprising that anyone at all is still bearish on equities.
Strong demand shows that Hong Kong IPOs still coveted
Top-end pricing indicates demand; no investor fatigue despite IPO surge
How recent wars shaped the PLA Air Force
The People’s Liberation Army Air Force has grown in leaps and bounds since it was set up with a handful of planes seized from the defeated Kuomintang force.
Unforgettable humiliation led to development of GPS equivalent
An “unforgettable humiliation” the People’s Liberation Army suffered during the Taiwan Strait missile crisis in 1996 prompted the mainland to build its own global navigation and positioning satellite system, a retired senior military official has disclosed.
Guoco a winner, with or without BEA buyout
Nasdaq sees doubling of its Chinese listings
Nasdaq OMX Group said the number of Greater China companies listed on its exchange could double in as little as two years, fuelled by a growing appetite for these shares from a wider range of institutional investors in the United States.
Speculative money propels B shares in catch-up play
The mainland’s foreign-currency B shares rose yesterday amid an influx of speculative capital as analysts cautioned investors of a boom-to-bust scenario.
Crackdown imminent on hoarding of land
The mainland plans to penalise developers that hoard sites to boost land prices.
Beijing rejects projects worth 200b yuan
China, the world’s third-largest economy, has rejected requests to build industrial projects worth almost 200 billion yuan (HK$227.06 billion) and plans new measures to close factories to curb overcapacity and pollution.
Hong Kong should get fair deal over entry of mainland auditors
Former premier Zhu Rongji is known for his poker face. Unlike his self-aggrandising peers, Zhu rarely painted the huge calligraphy displays that one finds hanging at the doorways of almost every major mainland institution. He only did four.
It was spring 2001. He was visiting the newly founded Shanghai National Accounting Institute, one of the country’s three schools for accountants.
He wrote four words: “Bu zuo jin zhang (No book-cooking).”
It was spring 2001. He was visiting the newly founded Shanghai National Accounting Institute, one of the country’s three schools for accountants.
He wrote four words: “Bu zuo jin zhang (No book-cooking).”
Sino-Env gets flak over sacking of finance head
The Singapore Exchange (SGX) is threatening to delist waste recycler Sino-Environment if it fails to brush up on its governance practices.
Sino-Environment given 30 days to tackle governance issues
The Singapore Exchange has given Sino-Environment Technology 30 days to address issues raised by its independent directors (IDs) or face delisting after the IDs hit out at the company’s summary dismissal of its financial controller.
Growing US$ carry trade could fuel new speculative mania: Tsang
A carry trade that is building up in the US dollar could fuel a new wave of speculative mania, Hong Kong Chief Executive Donald Tsang said yesterday.
Shenzhen wants to be clean, just like Singapore
Shenzhen is in the midst of a self-improvement binge. On the orders of provincial party secretary Wang Yang, the ragged boom town has set the target of catching up with premier Asian cities such as Hong Kong and Seoul within 10 years, and becoming a “world-class international metropolis” within 20.
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
Magazine’s new team face uphill battle to maintain standards
Caijing magazine’s new editorial team will have a tough job maintaining quality and regaining the confidence of readers and advertisers following the departure of its founder, Hu Shuli, along with most of the staff of its business and editorial operations.
US$ carry trade set to be next bubble horror
Speculators will get their fingers burned, just like their yen carry trade counterparts
China in race to secure overseas uranium supply
Whether it is in the frigid Athabasca Basin in north Canada, the arid Outback of Australia or the dunes of Namibia in southwest Africa, mainland firms have been eagerly acquiring access to uranium deposits around the world to supplement domestic supply of the raw material for nuclear power.
Vintners approach fickle Chinese market cautiously
Chinese wine imports have soared more than ten-fold in the past few years but foreign producers hoping to cash in on the boom are warning that the market is fickle and not for the faint of heart.
Waking the warrants market from its slumber
After experiencing explosive growth for the past few years, the covered warrants market in Singapore seems to have fallen off the cliff.
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Year-end rally touted for mainland stocks
Unexpectedly strong earnings at listed mainland companies have spurred analysts to raise their profit forecasts, creating room for about a 15 per cent rise in Shanghai’s benchmark stock index over the next three months.
Has landslide threat halted dam’s finale?
Yunyang government admitted on its website that the frequent occurrences of landslides had alarmed the central government. What is clear is that the dam, a source of national pride, is now a headache for many.
Fossil trade puts China’s natural history at risk
China’s opening up may have led to an economic miracle, but it has been a mixed blessing for one of the world’s major finds of prehistoric fossils, as dealers and foreign buyers have exploited the lack of effective heritage laws to spirit them overseas.
Big money fuels illegal trade in rare fossils
Her recipe for success is make the clients wait
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