Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Catcha Media - Looking like a gem


Interesting company. Catcha media. Relevant sources are noted.

CEO: Catcha Media won’t be taken private - for now
The Catcha Media founder also told StarBizWeek several private equity funds had approached him about possibly buying out the company. However, the long-time entrepreneur said he preferred to keep the firm in public hands.

Though he did not name the parties, Grove said two funds, one local and the other a US-based firm regionally headquartered in Singapore, had expressed interest in taking Catcha Media, which debuted on the ACE Market in 2011 at 75 sen a share, off the market.

Grove was responding to a research report by CIMB Research issued yesterday that suggested Catcha Media could be privatised by private equity funds.

“We gather from a recent visit that management may consider this option if Catcha Media's share price remains depressed. In our view, any buyout price is likely to be above the 75 sen initial public offering (IPO) price, as this would alleviate the pain of long-suffering shareholders.

http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2013/5/18/business/13128850&sec=business

'Catcha Media severely undervalued'

http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/acha-2234/Article/
Bloomberg



About
Catcha Media Berhad (Catcha Media) is listed on the Malaysian bourse ACE market, is one of South East Asia’s largest and most dynamic media groups. Catcha Media’s businesses span online media, publishing and e-commerce with all of them contributing to a combined reach of approximately 10 million people per month.

Catcha Media’s digital division, Catcha Digital, exclusively operates, develops content and delivers advertising solutions across Microsoft’s entire Malaysian portfolio of online products. This portfolio includes the MSN Malaysia portal (msn.com.my), Windows Live Messenger (MY) and Hotmail (MY). It also exclusively operates inventory for Malaysia’s largest technology forum, Lowyat.net, and for Malaysia’s No.1 Car Site, Carlist.my.

Catcha Media’s publishing division, Catcha Publishing, has 15 titles in 17 editions published across three countries. Its portfolio extends to a comprehensive demographic spread from general interests through to high net worth readership with publication titles including JUICE, Hanger, Stuff, Clive, Fairways, Mint, Octane, Prestige, Prestige Lifestyle, IDEAS, HomePride, EVO, Supercars, EVO Performance Heroes and Kitchen+Bathroom Magazine.

Catcha Media is also involved in e-commerce via Hauteavenue.com. The e-commerce business operates exclusive members-only luxury fashion sales portals in Malaysia and Singapore.

From: Catcha Media website

Monday, May 20, 2013

Portfolio management

In learning portfolio management, one seeks to have a balance between equities, fixed income and cash to tide over any period and over the years let one's assets grow. I hence implement a 60% equity, 20% bond, 20% cash and cash equivalent portfolio as follows given a hypothetical account of S$100,000.

Equities stake
20% STI ETF to ride on the index growth
40% portfolio into 7 gems

Fixed income
20% portfolio into highest yielding retail bonds
In choosing between Olam 6.75% bond and LTA 4.17% bond, the latter offers a really goodnight sleep while the former actually is a lot more liquid and gives better returns. Given that your fixed income should be your safe haven in times of trouble, i would recommend $7,000 in olam bonds (Ask price: $1.012) and $13,000 in LTA bonds (Ask price : $1.10).

Fixed deposits
20% of cash in easily available funds to capitalize on opportunity
1 year fixed deposit with Maybank at 1.1% or 6 months deposit depending on your time horizon.

Here is the expected net result if all things goes as plan (time horizon differs)



Do note that the assumptions and valuations are highlighting the possibility that the companies/bonds will continue to grow and find opportunity to succeed. This are by no way an instruction to buy/sell, kindly contact your investment advisors and conduct your own due diligence before taking any course of action. 

Sunday, May 19, 2013

6 gems for readers - Q&M, Tiong Seng, MIIF, GlobalInv, Eratat and CCM group




Dear all,

Here are the latest targets that seem rather interesting. They are Q&M, Tiong Seng, MIIF, GlobalInv, Eratat and CCM group. Do note the risk evaluation.
Constructive comments are highly appreciated at edenadvisors@gmail.com. Thank you.



Disclaimer: Please do your own due diligence, while I do my best to ensure the data is accurate as possible, there are differences with regards to estimations, valuations and risk evaluations.

Opening a brokerage account...


A first step - daring to try

To start off, this is a short introduction.

I am a 23 year old graduate from Nanyang Business School.
- My ambition is to be a successful fund manager, just like Jim Rogers.

Here is a list of the markets the brokerage firm covers...maybe more as this research is dated.

To sum up my research on the firms....
This is quite interesting though, it seems like POEMs did have the widest market coverage of 13 markets to trade in, with Lim and Tan coming in second with 11. OCBC and DBS look pretty good too. This are the line ups in no particular order, but it seems that the firms that are purely brokerage ( i.e with no backing of the Banks) seem more into venturing into markets. That being said, I do think Kim Eng and UOB-KH have some fantastic design of website - clean and sleek, it gives me this good first impression versus the clutter of stuff on Lim and Tan and Poems, too much things.. you leave your customer (not me though) confused!

AmfraserCIMB-GKDBSDMG & UOBKHKim EngLim & TanOCBCPhillip
SingaporeYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes
MalaysiaYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes
USAYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes
HongKongYesYesYesYesYesYesYes
ThailandYesYesYesYes
JapanYesYesYesYes
UKYesYesYes
CanadaYes
KoreaYesYes
AustraliaYesYesYesYes
IndonesiaYesYesYesYes
Shanghai BYesYesYesYes
Shenzhen BYesYesYesYes
PhilipinesYesYesYesYes
Sri LankaYes
TaiwanYesYes

Older,richer men more prone to biases


Dear readers,

An interesting article that focuses on investment mentality and problems that the everyday investor continues to face. Take heed, practice makes perfect!

Taken from : http://business.asiaone.com/news/older-richer-savvier-men-more-prone-biases

All rights belong to The Straits Times


The Straits Times
Men who are older, richer and savvier are more prone to biases when investing, a new survey has found.
The study, by three students from the Nanyang Business School of the Nanyang Technological University (NTU), shows that gender, age and smarts all affect investing bias - sometimes in surprising ways.
For instance, men are more overconfident about their investing ability than women, according to students Chiang Jia Bing, Joel Siew and Raymond Toh.
"After a long winning streak, (men) tend to believe they will consistently outperform the market and hence trade excessively," said the students, who polled 221 Singapore investors.
"Unfortunately, this leads to significant errors as they brush aside subsequent mistakes as aberrations."
Men also suffer more from the disposition effect, the survey has found.
They sell winning stocks too soon and hold losing ones too long, leading to lower gains and larger losses.
Lastly, men are more likely than women to have "home bias": a preference for investing in local shares over foreign counters.
Because of this, they overallocate funds to the local market and forgo some geographical diversification benefits, the NTU students said.
Older investors are also subject to the same biases, the study shows.
In addition, investors also tend to fall prey to loss aversion and confirmation bias as they age.
Confirmation bias is when investors seek only proof of their beliefs and ignore contrary data.
Loss aversion, where the pain of losing money outweighs the pleasure of profit, skews a portfolio towards safe investments with low returns.
Interestingly, investors with higher income, education and financial literacy are more prone to the overconfidence and disposition effect biases, but less to loss aversion, the study shows.
The findings are important as investors led astray by bias may have underperforming portfolios, said the NTU banking and finance students, who are all in their final year of studies.
The students, led by their supervisor, Dr Kong Yoon Kee, also noted that the study results are "worrying" because men tend to be more involved in household investment decisions and because Singapore's population is ageing.
"Investment bias is an important element that is often overlooked, and underestimated," they concluded.
"In the light of this, investor advocacy groups should extend financial education to include awareness about investment biases and their risks."