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Wolf Money(portfolio update end Jan 2022) long post !

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  Lone Wolf Fund(LWF) Portfolio as at end of January  1.)  Keppel Corporation   2.) Cash Test case   3.) GRAB Holdings (excluded from LWF)- Test case for new/big tech investing  *Stocks are not rank in accordance to capital invested .  *Just for sharing. Not an inducement to buy or sell . Commentary   Happy Lunar New Year to everyone celebrating this joyous occasion. I wish everyone a prosperous and healthy year of the Tiger.  STI managed to find it’s mojo in the month of Jan. The 4 percent gain made in Jan is probably one of the best I could remember taking into context the substantial fall in US market. STI index masterclass performance would had made any school disciplinary master proud. STI deservingly enjoying their day in the sun for once. Give that man A Tiger! (Space X lifting off to the moon)  Lone Wolf Fund did well due to Keppel Corp exceptional performance. Finally the laggard of STI had woken. The stock is up close to 10 per...

Wolf Money(Keppel Corporation FY 2021 result)

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  Keppel reported net profit of more than 1B. The net profit represents the highest profit since 2015. Final dividend of 21c was declared. Full year dividend came in at 33c. A 500m share buy back had also been purposed which to me act as a backstop 😃. Keppel O&M and Keppel Logistics will be sold by 1Q 2022.  I had a brief look at the result, in general I do think it met and exceeded the market expectations. I had estimated the earning to be around 750m. The communication by the management had shown a mark improvement since the last update. I am generally happy with the result. I will share in depth analysis at my end of month portfolio review. Please stay tune.  Please follow us on telegram for the latest update on Lone Wolf investor by clicking on the link below  https://t.me/joinchat/oCgkD3sQFRMzMWM1 Disclaimers   All investments is highly speculative in nature and involves substantial risk of loss. We encourage our reader to invest very carefully. We als...

Wolf Money(book recommendation)

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  (The Authors) “Invest For Good” a healthier world and a wealthier you by Greg Konieczny, Carlos von Hardenberg and Mark Möbius, the ex legendary Templeton fund manager discussed extensively the definition of ESG investing. The trio have more than a quarter century of investment experience combine discussed the subject of ESG investing and the positive impact on society and environment. What is ESG? The buzz on ESG had been on going for a couple of years. Statement on ESG are mostly found within listed company corporate social responsibilities or CSR report. ESG stands for Environmental, Social and Governance. The book started off pretty dry. Fund management company and investors can make a difference by investing in companies that meet good ESG standard. I personally think ESG focus investing is gaining traction and it will be the way of investing demanded by the current Gen Z. More people want to know if their coffee came from a sustainable source and whether that diamond ring t...

Wolf Money(world market review 17-23 Jan 2022)

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  Chua Tiag Ming Singapore 1931-2003 Chase Circa 1960s-1970s Collection of National Gallery Singapore Market Summary 17-23 Jan 2022 - + US leading economic index Conference Board rose 0.8% in Dec after advancing 0.7% in Nov  + Biden administration raises minimum wage for US federal employees to US$15 an hr  + Fed should recalibrate the support it provides to US economy  + Fed floated the notion of a “digital dollar” to keep up with cryptocurrencies  + Wall St banks expects ‘new normal’ for trading revenue after stellar 2 years  - US reviewing Alibaba cloud business to determine whether it poses risk to US national security  - US 5G internet rollout downscaled as major airlines suspend multiple flights amid safety concerns  + US in talks with Qatar over supplying LNG to EU - US suspends 44 China-bound flights from US by 4 Chinese carriers in response to Chia decision to suspend some US carrier flights over Covid-19 concerns  - US-China flights...

Wolf Bargain(Kei Hachi)

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Last week I have the privilege of having a Japanese Omakase(Chef’s selection) arranged by my wife in celebration of my birthday. Now I have the privilege of introducing my readers to one of the most value for money Omakase in Singapore. The Japanese restaurant is located at the start of Keong Saik Street which is famous for a host of other western cafes, bakeries and restaurants. The Japanese restaurant seem like an odd one out. They are the new kid on the block, they are barely 5 months into their opening. (Menu 6898128) It is uncommon to have an omakase meal for less than 130 bucks given the cost of running a Japanese restaurant. Cost of air freighting ingredients from Japan are going through the roof. Cancellation, no show and wastage add to the cost of running an Omakase theme restaurant. The restaurant took it further in term of pricing. The basic menu starts at $68++ for lunch. There are 3 pricing $68, $98 and $128 all before gst and service charge. I call it light, medium and fu...

Wolf Money(world market review 10-16 Jan 2022)

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  Light to Night festival now-3 Feb 2022@Civil District               Market Summary 10-16 Jan 2022 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸  - US inflation soared to 7% in Dec, sharpest 12-mth spike in 40 years  - Powell says rate hikes, tighter policy needed to control inflation  - US retail sales dropped by the most in 10 mths of 1.9% in Dec due to shortages of goods and explosion of Covid-19 infections  - Fed’s most important task is to control inflation: Brainard  + US trade with China surges 28.7% to US$755.6bn in 2021  - US aims to end China’s ‘chokehold’ on rare-earth supplies, require dept of Interior n Defence to create “strategic reserve” of rare earth minerals by 2025 - US proved oil reserves slipped 19% over the course of 2020, from 44.2bn barrels to 35.8bn barrels: EIA  + US public political concerns shift from virus to economy: poll  - FAA requires precautions for some Boeing 787 landings after new 5G la...

Wolf Money(book recommendation)

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  (Contents) “Monopolies Suck”, 7 ways big corporations rule your life and how to take back control by Sally Hubbard is another anti big tech anti big business anti monopoly book. It seem that I am getting into a habit of reviewing corporate demonising, corporate bashing focus genre. Maybe I am always drawn to the same old shelf in the NLB. I promise this will be the last on this topic. To be honest, it is quite depressing reading on this particular subject three times over. The book made Lewis Capaldi’s song seem rather cheerful. What I knew from my past reading as described by the author, big businesses, big tech and monopolies are bad for workers and consumers. It affect us by limiting our choices, our employment and most importantly our free way of life. Here she mention, big tech use algorithms to limit choice for consumers when shopping online. For e.g the biggest online retailer in US gives priority in term of “eyeball sphere” to their own house brand as compare to another c...