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Replies to post #57 on BullRaid

Replies to #57 on BullRaid
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flota

02/22/07 6:52 PM

#61 RE: shmolton #57

China Mobile will be global big player
Wednesday, February 7th, 2007
In spite of a small presence in Hong Kong, China Mobile's footprint remains pretty much confined to its home but it is the company's ambition to extend its reach well beyond China.

China Mobile is already — this has not been challenged in the financial press — the world's biggest wireless company in terms of both subscribers and market capitalisation. Although, so far, China Mobile has only struck a deal with a Hong Kong-based wireless operator, China Resources Peoples, and confirmed its interests in Pakistan Telecom and Millicom, it has said publicly — many times — that overseas expansion is a long-term goal. Two sections of this item are in bold because the figures involved are, literally, staggering.

The company, which had cash of RMB 71.4bn ($9.5 bn) as of June 2006, is especially interested in the emerging markets.

Wang Jianzhou, chairman, said, 'One of our advantages is scale. We do central procurement so our cost is low. Since we bought Peoples, it only has to pay half what it used to pay for the same equipment.'

Wang Jianzhou has also said that China Mobile was not in a hurry. There are still plenty of growth opportunities at home.

In November, China Mobile added a record number of subscribers, bringing its total number of users to 294m — almost as large as the population of the United States.

Perhaps more importantly, while the mobile penetration rate in China's east coast cities has reached 48 per cent, only one in five people in the poorer central and western regions has mobile phones.

Zhang Dongming, research director at telecoms consultancy BDA in Beijing, said, 'No matter what China Mobile plans to do in other markets, China is likely to remain its growth engine for some time. It has a dominant position and the market is still relatively young. I don't worry about its growth potential here.'
Source: Financial Times Deutschland

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flota

02/22/07 6:57 PM

#62 RE: shmolton #57

Flyer Tomorrow

UPDATE 1-Verigy swings to profit, sets strong outlook; shares up
Thu Feb 22, 2007 5:24 PM ET



(Recasts, adds outlook, share movement)

Feb 22 (Reuters) - Verigy Ltd. <VRGY.O> swung to quarterly profit and forecast second-quarter earnings and revenue above analysts' estimates, sending shares up 21 percent in late electronic trade.

The maker of advanced test systems for the semiconductor industry reported first-quarter net income of $13 million, or 22 cents a share, compared with net loss of $16 million, or 32 cents a share in the year-ago period.

Excluding certain items, it posted earnings of 28 cents a share for the quarter.

Analysts on average were expecting first-quarter earnings of 25 cents a share, before special items, on revenue of $154.9 million, according to Reuters Estimates.

Despite a cyclically soft period in the semiconductor test industry, Verigy reported a strong quarter helped by its balanced product portfolio, which focused on both system-on-a-chip and memory device test, Chief Executive Keith Barnes said in a statement.

Looking ahead, the company expects second-quarter earnings to be 28 cents to 33 cents a share, on revenue of $170 million to $180 million.

Excluding certain items, earnings are expected to be 32 cents to 37 cents a share for the second quarter.

Analysts on average expect earnings of 24 cents a share, excluding items, on revenue of $146.5 million.

Shares of the company were trading at $22.98 in late electronic trade, after closing at $18.88 on the Nasdaq. (Reporting by Sweta Singh in Bangalore)
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flota

02/22/07 9:20 PM

#63 RE: shmolton #57

Tal Fishman and Harrison Hong, Princeton University, and Jeffrey D. Kubik, Syracuse University
"Do Arbitrageurs Amplify Economic Shocks?"
Discussant: Michael Rashes, Bracebridge Capital


http://www.econ.yale.edu/~shiller/behfin/2006-11/fishman-hong.pdf
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flota

02/22/07 9:22 PM

#64 RE: shmolton #57

Robin Greenwood, Harvard University and Stefan Nagel, Stanford University and NBER
"Inexperienced Investors and Speculative Bubbles"
Discussant: Jeremy Stein, Harvard University and NBER

http://www.econ.yale.edu/~shiller/behfin/2006-11/greenwood-nagel.pdf