Singapore’s Trading Growth is Excellent
Monday, December 18th, 2006
By George Leong, B.Comm. for Profit Confidential
A key investment tenet of mine is the importance of diversifying your stock assets outside of the U.S. It allows you to benefit from growing markets in emerging countries. The safest and easiest way to do this is via professionally managed mutual funds. The gains from emerging markets have been spectacular in some cases compared to those in North America.
I have written about booming markets in India, China, and South Korea, as well as the rebound in Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index. Allocating a small amount of your assets to growing markets that are in an uptrend can bring about a huge return.
In the Asia region, the dominant economies are China and Japan. But there is also what is often referred to as the ‘Four Little Tigers.’ This group comprises of Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, and South Korea and has been given this moniker because of the strength in the export market.
A region that is performing well as far as the stock market is Singapore, where the Straits Times Index is at a six-year high, up 24.71% from its 52-week low. The index has easily outperformed the comparative performance of the DOW, NASDAQ, and S&P 500 over the past five years.
And for such a small country, Singapore’s trading growth has been excellent. With a land area that is a little more than 3.5 times the size of Washington, DC and with only about 4.43 million people (estimate as of July 2005), Singapore is impressive. Its port is one of the world’s busiest as far as the tonnage. Its people also have prosperity unlike that of China, with the average per capita GDP in line with the top countries of Western Europe.
The Straits Times Index comprises of 43 companies, which are probably not known to American investors. Some of the listed companies include fringe Chinese stocks. Key companies include Great Eastern Holdings Ltd. and China-based Star Pharmaceutical Ltd.
If you are interested, I advise against investing in Singapore companies individually unless you are an expert in that region or deal with an advisor that has specific and expertise knowledge of Singapore-listed companies. The risk is significantly higher and it is difficult to invest in Singapore companies. I highly advise professionally-managed mutual funds that invest some of its assets in Singapore stocks as a way to enter market.
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Tags: chinese stocks, GDP
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George is a Senior Editor at Lombardi Financial, and has been involved in analyzing the stock markets for two decades where he employs both fundamental and technical analysis. His overall market timing and trading knowledge is extensive in the areas of small-cap research and option trading. George is the editor of several of Lombardi’s popular financial newsletters, including The China Letter, Special Situations, and Obscene Profits, among others. His trading advice on stocks and options is also found on his daily trading site, Daily Profits. He has written technical and fundamental columns for numerous stock market news web sites, and he is the author of Quick Wealth Options Strategy and Mastering 7 Proven Options Strategies. Prior to starting with Lombardi Financial, George was employed as a financial analyst with Globe Information Services.



