October 09, 2011

Having the balls to..........

Yes, well put.

October 07, 2011

Woe is Me As Ipaid

Yes, always the case. Agree?

Ringgits from Santa Najib



Abridged from Lee Wei Lian( Malaysian Insider)

As an election budget, Budget 2012 announced on 8 October contained no great surprises though there were benefits galore for the people. No, no great departure in terms of policy shifts. It was a very safe budget to rein in election votes.

There was no deep structural reforms but a slew of selective liberalisations, incentives and cash grants to target groups.

Direct cash assistance, continued subsidies and expansion of government backed budget shops were the favoured tool to help with the cost of living hoping to ease the pain of the people in the midst of inflation woes.There was also no reduced taxes or widespread liberalisation of business and import licenses to boost competition.

As expected, 17 services subsectors were liberalised in terms of foreign equity, the major ones including the oil and gas sectors, retail sectors and financial sectors were not. Foreign banks were still fettered with restrictions in the scope of services they can provide and in terms of the number of branches they can open.

In terms of the long term transformation agenda, the main issue could be that Malaysia traditionally prefers quantitative rather than qualitative measures. While there were tax incentives and cash allowances for primary and secondary schools, none of them appeared strategic enough to boost the quality of the country’s education institutions into the top tier in the world.

Strategically the PM pulled off a nice touch by announcing tax incentives for contributions to all places of religious worship and all types of schools which should help him score significant points with Malaysia’s religious and ethnic minorities.

There were also little to no widespread fiscal reforms and incentives for Malaysian businesses to become more efficient and price competitive apart from the 17 services subsectors.


The most significant measure in the budget was the introduction of an exit system for underperformance in the civil service which could eventually shrink the government’s wage bill and boost government productivity and effectiveness although the budget expenditure for salaries rose from RM49.9 billion in 2011 to RM52 billion in 2012.

“A flexible remuneration system will be introduced to retain or terminate civil servants based on performance,” said Najib.

The prime minister also managed to keep on the path of deficit reduction by committing to cut the budget deficit to 4.7 per cent from 5.4 per cent.

All in all, a good band-aid budget.

For smokers and drinkers, it's another year of tax reprieve. Let's have a Guinness,then!

October 03, 2011

Dynamic Confusion

The last month was just utter bedlam.


It didn't matter whether you were a buyer or a seller or even a hedger.

Thing are just incomprehensible.

With the European zone in a virtual debt crisis day after day no thanks to the Greek situation; the American debt implosion and also the American carry-on trade brought about by a rising US dollar,one just cannot fathom the consequences of any decision.

What you bought cheap yesterday takes a new low today. It even dives.

If you had sold, it may rise well before you can catch it back the next day.

For those with some cash, perhaps it is a good time to buy selectively on the Bursa KL.

Stocks like Sime Darby, PPB, Public Bank and Genting Bhd are great stocks if you can hold on to them.

Spot the Kitty within 10 seconds

If not, you need an eye check, pronto!

Day or Night, Moon or Sun?

Guess......

The Authentic 'Understand a Woman' book

What a laugh!