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FundSuperMart v16 (FSM) MY : Online UT Platform, UT DIY : Babystep to Investing :D
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puchongite
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Nov 27 2016, 07:51 PM
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QUOTE(nexona88 @ Nov 27 2016, 06:39 PM) Wonder if FSM would have one offer to counter eunittrust I think fsm's promotion will never as competitive as the eUT ones, so if there is any promotion, it will be after eUT promotion, to avoid head on collision. And there are some important funds are normally missing from eUT promotion. TA GTF and a few CIMB funds are normally missing from the list.
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puchongite
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Nov 28 2016, 11:40 AM
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QUOTE(wil-i-am @ Nov 28 2016, 11:29 AM) I tot RHB AIF n Ponzi 2 more or less share the same characteristics? For me they have little similarity. I don't know how they be 'same characteristic' when they most of the time going different directions. Ponzi 2.0 and east spring global emerging fund have more similarity.
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puchongite
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Nov 28 2016, 03:51 PM
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QUOTE(T231H @ Nov 28 2016, 02:57 PM) 2 Funds You Need To Know To Get Yourself Into The US Equity Market [25 November 2016] Manulife Investments US Equity Fund RHB US Focus Equity Fund QUOTE(xuzen @ Nov 28 2016, 03:02 PM) RHB GS US-Equity and TA Global Tech leh? What is rhb gs us equity ?
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puchongite
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Nov 28 2016, 03:59 PM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 28 2016, 03:31 PM) BTW I fiddled with my portfolio and it's various allocation for next year. I came up with this. RHB Asian Income Fund. ....(30%) CIMB-P Greater China Equity .....(20%) CIMB-P Asia Pac (ponzi 2.0) ......(20%) Manulife India.........(15%) TA Global Technology Fund... (10%) AmAsia REITs .... (5%) what do you guys think of this for the upcoming year portfolio rebalancing. currently I have Anita and Kapchai (only Malaysian expisure) and just keep them as status quo by just leaving the money i have with them or full withdraw and jump back when it recovers? all this to be done in January-Febuary Are you topping up Rhb Aif ? If you are, consider add to rhb atr instead. Rhb atr is FI (0% sc) and perform as good as aif. This is in accordance with algozen.
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puchongite
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Nov 28 2016, 04:06 PM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 28 2016, 04:04 PM) good call but if I'm not mistaken RHB ATR risk vs return compared to RHB AIF isn't that great. This was discussed with Xuzen back in the previous thread. correct me if I'm wrong. Pre Trump vs post Trump.
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puchongite
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Nov 28 2016, 04:18 PM
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QUOTE(T231H @ Nov 28 2016, 04:13 PM) yr top 3 funds from the list covers about 40% of Greater China regions in your portfolio....heavy betting in that region  So what do you suggest ? Add some patriotism in it ?
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puchongite
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Nov 28 2016, 04:42 PM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 28 2016, 04:25 PM) no thanks. Malaysia is going side ways and first thing they threw out was being honest about it on Day 1 of Trump shock by limiting US exchange then flip flop about it with local banks and recently stated their foreign reserves increased when it was known they injected their foreign reserves to save the currency. we will find out our true foreign reserves before the end of the year and I stuff like this makes me jittery about investing in Malaysia. PS I can leave Malaysian exposure to my epf to handle so it's all good The sad thing is that you are not alone feeling doom about MY. And it is not just foreigners who pulled out, Malaysians are themselves pulling out from investing in Malaysia. Today almost every other currencies rally against USD, except MYR. Now this thing is all about "confidence".
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puchongite
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Nov 28 2016, 04:50 PM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 28 2016, 04:42 PM) Yep. the moment it all goes side ways in January to March time line I'll skim the profits and keep the allocation to status quo when things settle down holding any Malaysian funds currently? and are you planning for an exit stage? I still have quite some KGF due to historical reason. It was the star of all funds previously. Look the historical data for 5 years or more, it outshines everybody else. When switching out at this moment, I feel like the knife is cutting the deepest part of me. This post has been edited by puchongite: Nov 28 2016, 04:52 PM
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puchongite
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Nov 28 2016, 08:29 PM
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Guys, what are you doing to the bleeding Malaysia bond funds ? Have they sort of stopped bleeding or climb up again ? What are you doing to it ? Switch out or top up or do nothing ?
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puchongite
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Nov 29 2016, 10:29 AM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 29 2016, 10:19 AM) puchongite howszat _azam13emailed fsm on our predicament and got this. » Click to show Spoiler - click again to hide... « Thank you for your email.
Generally a Malaysian bond performance is derived from 2 major factors : (1) the price of underlying bonds , (2) yield of underlying bonds. Recently there are outflow from Malaysia Government Bond market has caused the price drop of Malaysia bond and the corporate bonds were affected as well. In fact, the bond price will change on daily basis based on supply and demand but due to the bigger movement recently, it has caused some investors’ concerns. As a NAV of a bond fund will mark to market of the price of underlying bonds, therefore, the fund price dropped and investors may have similar panic like investing into equities.
From the perspective of investing in bond papers, the price will fluctuate but eventually come back as long as there is no default. With lower price and better yield, investing into the bond may bring better result going forward. For example, a bond that promise to give 5% coupon yearly was RM1000 and now the price of this bond is RM950 which translate to better result compare with you bought at RM1000 (provided the bond does not default).
Therefore, when you make the investment decision, you may consider whether the potential return is attractive enough or not at this level. If yes, you may consider top up instead of selling it. If you foresee the bond price will further going down significantly, then selling it will be an option but you also need to decide when will you want to come back to the market for better potential return.
We do not over pessimistic on the outlook of Malaysia bond market. Nevertheless, to mitigate interest rate risk, we will encourage investors to consider adding shorter duration bond fund into portfolio.
On the other hand, to answer your question about RHB Asian Total Return Fund, we do not overweight foreign bonds at this juncture eventhough we think that it is good to have some higher yield foreign bond fund in the portfolio to enhance the returns for long term. Therefore, I do not encourage you to shift your entire Malaysian assets into RHB Asian Total Return Fund. The depreciation of MYR may cause the foreign bond fund past performance looks attractive, however, the currency movement is hardly predictable in short term. If MYR bounce back, it will impact the performance of foreign bond fund.
I hope the provided information and opinion can help you make informed decision. Lastly, we wish to highlight to you again that investing should be forward looking. When the investment turned out of your expectation, the decision to hold or not to hold the investment should be based on the expectation of how the investment will perform in the future instead of past. To mitigate the risk, we will encourage investors to build diversified portfolio and aim long term to achieve the initial investment objectives.  A politically neutral answer. By the way, what has been said ?
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puchongite
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Nov 29 2016, 10:41 AM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 29 2016, 10:39 AM) what i get from fsm is that they are still holding on to Malaysia and its capability to shine and not jump the gun and buy into foreign Bond funds now Ok, that's what you managed to read out of it. It's a like a wordless book, different people read different things from the book.
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puchongite
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Nov 29 2016, 10:55 AM
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QUOTE(nexona88 @ Nov 29 2016, 10:50 AM) Hmm seems like using the safe route to answer.. Very neutral, have hope on Malaysia.. Now only small issue, needs to look bigger picture.. Look forward bla bla bla.. Can't expect too much, as they are not God, they won't know things for sure. In the first place, their views on US presidential elections has been very very calm before the election. But the post Trump effect turns out to have far more reaching implication than they initially expected.
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puchongite
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Nov 29 2016, 05:15 PM
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QUOTE(river.sand @ Nov 29 2016, 05:09 PM) Shorter duration bond funds? Do we have such bond funds in FSM? Maybe what is meant is bonds which do not have redemption fees for minimum period. This post has been edited by puchongite: Nov 29 2016, 05:16 PM
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puchongite
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Nov 29 2016, 05:37 PM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 29 2016, 05:22 PM) yuck the returns from am plus is worst than FD promos. my as well place in cash management https://www.fundsupermart.com.my/main/fundi...Fund-2-MYOSKCMFShows that you are still awake.
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puchongite
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Nov 29 2016, 07:29 PM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 29 2016, 06:49 PM) kinda reluctant as the switching fees and I'll be selling at a lost. what if it rebounds by end January, wouldn't I have shot my leg? Nobody knows it for sure. But my prediction will be different between equity vs bond. For equity, the chances of big swing in different direction within 2 months is high. For bond to have big swing within 2 months in different directions, my humble prediction is, not very high.
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puchongite
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Nov 30 2016, 08:59 AM
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QUOTE(prince_mk @ Nov 30 2016, 08:10 AM) Sifu, If buy spy then will cover all these. Dont you think better ? Any advise Pokemon catch them all for what ? From the graph it shows an obvious divergence but only once. After that, the graphs remain fairly stable, if there is an increase/decrease, it is fairly gradual. If one is late, one has missed the boat.
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puchongite
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Nov 30 2016, 09:32 AM
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I have a different version of divergence graph :-
The graph shows in fact, TA global tech dipped after the election and recovered, but Manulife US equity surged right away. There is a gradual increase for all the funds subsequently.
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puchongite
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Nov 30 2016, 10:37 AM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 30 2016, 10:29 AM) The rebound in emerging markets is expected to be “sustained” as a strengthening U.S. economy under President-elect Donald Trump may help boost these economies, according to Mark Mobius, executive chairman at Templeton Emerging Markets Group. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index has risen 2.6 percent from its four-month low on Nov. 14, while some currencies in developing countries -- including the South African rand and South Korean won -- have rebounded in the past week. All 24 emerging-market currencies dropped against the greenback in the two weeks following the Nov. 8 U.S. elections. Investors should be in China, India, Brazil and Russia, and allocate at least 30 percent of their portfolios in emerging markets, Mobius said. In Southeast Asia, he sees bright spots in Indonesia, Thailand, as well as Vietnam, as they move toward a more market-based economy in the way they allocate their resources. Indonesia, for instance, has been bringing in private investment to develop its infrastructure, he said.Bloomberg - Mobius Sees 'Sustained' Emerging-Market Rebound http://bloom.bg/2fHgn0rlooks like I was right to place 30% of my portfolio in EM The definition of rebound EM seem to exclude Malaysia and Philippines. The Ponzi 1.0 continues to slide.
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puchongite
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Nov 30 2016, 10:46 AM
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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Nov 30 2016, 10:42 AM) Yeap. I am not betting on malaysia anytime soon. the Fund manager in Ponzi 1.0 better start studying her investment in Malaysia. I am monitoring Ponzi 2 and AIf Ponzi 2 and RHB AIF are both doing fine now.
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puchongite
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Nov 30 2016, 02:32 PM
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QUOTE(David83 @ Nov 30 2016, 02:07 PM) Ponzi 1 has been dropping from its all time high. Recommendation :- Switch over to Affin Hwang Select Asia (Ex Japan) Opportunity Fund. Save the switching fees.
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