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Asian Stocks Post Best Quarter Since 2010 on Bernanke


By Kana Nishizawa and Yoshiaki Nohara - Mar 31, 2012 7:20 AM GMT+0800
Article from Bloomberg

Asian stocks rose this week, with the regional benchmark index capping its biggest quarterly gain since 2010, after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said accommodative monetary policy is still needed. Gains were limited amid concern China’s economic slowdown is weighing on company earnings.

Sharp Corp., which fell to a 30-year low earlier this month, surged 27 percent this week in Tokyo after Foxconn Technology Group agreed to buy a stake in the display maker. Toyota Motor Corp., Asia’s biggest carmaker by market value, rose 3 percent. Korea Gas Corp. (036460), the world’s largest buyer of liquefied natural gas, gained 12 percent in Seoul after its Italian partner found reserves in Mozambique. Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. (16), the world No. 2 real estate company, plunged 9.8 percent in Hong Kong after the firm’s co-chairmen were arrested in a corruption probe.

“You just don’t have sustainability for the markets to reweight higher like they did three or four months ago,” Andrew Pease, Sydney-based chief investment strategist for the Asia- Pacific region at Russell Investment Group, which manages about $150 billion. “You are not going to see any acceleration from here and you may actually feel a bit of moderation” in the U.S.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index (MXAP) rose 0.2 percent to 126.60 this week. The measure jumped 11 percent for the first three months this year, as U.S. economic optimism and monetary easing in Europe, Japan and China fueled the fastest quarterly rally since September 2010.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average (NKY) gained 0.7 percent this week, taking its advance through the quarter to 19 percent, the biggest rise among developed market benchmark indexes. It this week recouped losses of as much as 20 percent from last year’s quake and nuclear disaster.

Shanghai Slumps

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index rose 1.5 percent while Singapore’s Straits Times Index (FSSTI) rose 0.7 percent. South Korea’s Kospi Index slid 0.6 percent.

The Shanghai Composite Index slumped 3.7 percent this week. The gauge tumbled the most in four months on March 28 after Societe Generale SA said Chinese corporate profits won’t grow at all this year.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index slid 0.6 percent on concern that earnings will slow and as Sun Hung Kai dropped 9.8 percent to HK$96.50 following the arrest of Co-chairmen Thomas and Raymond Kwok by the city’s anti-corruption agency.

Measures of volatility dropped across the region this week. The Kospi 200 Volatility Index (VKOSPI) touched its lowest level since July and the Hang Seng Index Volatility Index fell to a level not seen since August on March 27.

Accommodative Policy

The Federal Reserve’s Bernanke said on March 26 that while he’s encouraged by the unemployment rate’s decline to 8.3 percent, continued accommodative monetary policy will be needed to make further progress. Stocks gained the following day as some investors bet Bernanke’s comments indicate further policy easing is still under consideration.

Toyota rose 3 percent to 3,570 yen in Tokyo, while Billabong International Ltd. (BBH), a surfwear company that counts the Americas as its biggest market, increased 1.8 percent to A$2.78 in Sydney.

Fed policy makers “still have an option of doing more, but I think it was just reinforcing the view that they are not going to reverse policy quickly,” said Stephen Halmarick, Sydney- based head of investment markets research at Colonial First State Global Asset Management, which oversees about $150 billion. “There’s going to be a lot of liquidity provided for the market and economy. Obviously equity investors are taking it in a positive way.”

Foxconn, Sharp

Sharp surged 27 percent to 604 yen this week in Tokyo, the biggest five-day gain in the MSCI Asia Index, after Foxconn Technology and founder Terry Gou agreed to invest 133 billion yen ($1.62 billion) in the TV maker and its display unit.

Gou’s flagship Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. rose 8 percent to NT$114.50 through the week as it announced fourth- quarter net income which climbed 64 percent to NT$35 billion ($1.19 billion) surpassing each of the nine analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg, and the average of NT$26.6 billion.

Korea Gas jumped 12 percent to 43,150 won this week in Seoul after its partner Eni SpA, an Italian oil company, found reserves in Mozambique that may exceed those of the U.K.

Renhe Commercial Holdings Co. (1387), a developer of underground shopping centers in China, slumped 39 percent to 54 Hong Kong cents in Hong Kong this week, the steepest five-day drop in the MSCI Asia Pacific Index. Underlying profit fell more than 90 percent and Moody’s Investors Service cut its credit rating two levels to B3, six ranks below investment grade.

‘Cautious on China’

“We are concerned about China’s macro economy and you’ve seen some of the slowdown in growth rates in some of the companies.” said Tim Cunningham, who helps oversee $83 billion of assets, including Chinese stocks, at Thornburg Investment Management Inc. in Santa Fe, New Mexico. “We’re a little cautious on China overall and we’ve cut back our weight.”

Of the 179 companies in the Shanghai Composite that reported quarterly net income this week as of the market close, almost twice as many companies missed analyst estimates as those that exceeded them.
Jiangxi Copper Co. (600362), China’s biggest producer of the metal, dropped 6.4 percent to 23.91 yuan in Shanghai after recording an 18 percent decline in second-half profit.

Li & Fung Ltd. (494), a supplier of clothes and toys to retailers, slumped 10 percent to HK$17.82 in Hong Kong after saying it’s selling 210 million shares at HK$18.62 each to boost general working capital, which may be used for acquisitions.

To contact the reporters on this story: Kana Nishizawa in Hong Kong at knishizawa5@bloomberg.net; Yoshiaki Nohara in Tokyo at ynohara1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Gentle at ngentle2@bloomberg.net.

Article from Bloomberg

Find These Stocks Before Wall Street Does

y Rich Duprey
March 29, 2012
Article from The Motley Fool


Seeking stocks that others ignore, shun, or simply forget gives individual investors like you an edge over the professionals. Getting in before Wall Street discovers them -- or rediscovers them -- means you can stake a claim before they start taking off. 

Here we check out companies with minimal analyst coverage at best, and then we pair our list with the opinions of the Motley Fool CAPS community. A stock that garners CAPS' top ratings but hasn't yet caught analysts' attention could be your next home-run investment.


Source: Motley Fool CAPS. NA = not available. Wall Street picks based on CAPS, Chesapeake Granite has three analysts following it according to Yahoo! Finance.

Remember, without much analyst support, you'll have to do more digging on your own to see whether these stocks deserve a spot in your portfolio, so don't just buy or sell them based solely on their appearance here. 

Hiding in plain sight

The oil and gas industry has been rolling out royalty trusts at a quick pace these days that doesn't seem to be abating anytime soon. SandRidge Energy (NYSE: SD  ) launched the SandRidge Permian Trust and SandRidge Mississippian Trust I recently, and it has a second Mississippian trust in the wings.

Chesapeake Energy (NYSE: CHK  ) is also keeping up with the Joneses with its IPO of Chesapeake Granite Wash Trust, as has Whiting Petroleum, which unveiled Whiting USA Trust II just the other day (Whiting USA Trust I has been around for a few years).

So why this resurgence in trusts? It allows the parent company to generate gobs of cash for its assets without diluting current shareholders with new stock or burdening itself with debt. Given assets with significant reserves, the trusts should produce oil and gas faithfully over their 20-year lifespans.

Last year, Chesapeake Energy said it was doubling its rig count in Oklahoma and Kansas and was planning a nearly $2 billion capital expenditure plan for this year. But with $351 million in cash on its balance sheet against almost $10.6 billion in debt, it would be constrained. The trust gives it a chance to maximize value for shareholders without incurring their wrath.

So far there's unanimous opinion on the ability of the Granite Wash trust to outperform the market, but let us know your views of its prospects on the Chesapeake Energy Granite Wash Trust CAPS page, and add the trust to the Fool's free, personalized stock-tracking service to see how long it stays off the grid of the analyst community.

A rich patina

Ultra-deepwater drilling is the future of oil exploration, with investors able to choose between Transocean (NYSE: RIG  ) , the industry's largest player by market cap, and lesser players like SeaDrill and Noble, among others.

SeaDrill is definitely an investor favorite, with all but one of 145 CAPS All-Stars rating the deepwater driller to outperform the broad indexes. Wall Street also likes its prospects, unanimously believing it will come out ahead, and while there's even a consensus of sorts among Foolish analysts, Sean Williams has problems with SeaDrill's inability to produce positive cash flows on anything approaching a regular basis.

Oil prices remain north of $100 a barrel, and SeaDrill recently secured a contract with dayrates of $595,000. Better yet, it says it expects rates to breach $600,000 soon and notes that some drillers are securing rates of $750,000 a day. It's a positive industry trend, and CAPS member troym72 thinks SeaDrill will climb.

There has been a recent pull-back in shares of SDRL. The company's earning and dividend yield support a much higher stock price than where it is now. I'm taking advantage of this pull-back to thumb up SDRL.
Let us know on the SeaDrill CAPS page whether you think it will continue sailing the high seas, and add it to your Watchlist to be alerted if it's at risk to sink to Davy Jones' locker.

Swing for the fences

If you're looking for other hidden energy opportunities, read The Motley Fool's special free report on "3 Stocks for $100 Oil." These three companies are poised to profit from the world's insatiable thirst for energy, but to find out which stocks our top analysts picked, download this report free for a limited time only.

The Steve Jobs Betrayal 

You may already know that in the final year of his life, Jobs revealed a stunning betrayal — and told his biographer, "I will spend my last dying breath... and every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank to right this wrong." What was it that made Jobs so irate — and why could it make a few in-the-know investors some major profits over the coming months and years?

Fool contributor Rich Duprey holds no position in any company mentioned. Check out his holdings and a short bio. The Motley Fool owns shares of Transocean. Motley Fool newsletter serviceshave recommended buying shares of Chesapeake Energy and SeaDrill. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. 


Article from The Motley Fool