Latest Forum Topics /
Yoma Strategic
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YOMA
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MarcLim
Veteran |
25-Feb-2021 17:14
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0.16 I buy some. 😅
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heyhellohey
Member |
25-Feb-2021 15:21
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Waiting for it to hit $0.16 | ||||
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FlyingCat
Master |
24-Feb-2021 13:37
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yoma ma didnt die.... after breaking .18 n one time throw die. survival of the fittest.. come lai cheong please | ||||
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vicloo
Supreme |
24-Feb-2021 12:37
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https://www.ft.com/content/0deb1860-cd46-45aa-8992-e7849c025f37
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/sembcorp-to-stay-invested-in-myanmar-despite-rising-political-tensions Japan just like Spore, business in Myanmar still mostly intact. "But for most other Japanese companies in Myanmar, it is business as usual ? to the extent that is possible while tens of thousands of civil servants, transport workers, medical staff and others protest against the military. ?While keeping a close eye on the situation and hoping for a rapid resolution, many Japanese companies are staying calm and carrying on with their operations,? said Kazufumi Tanaka, managing director of the Japan External Trade Organization?s office in Yangon. About 70 per cent of Japanese companies in the Thilawa Special Economic Zone are back in operation, said Tanaka, including all of the garment manufacturers that had flocked there in search of low labour costs. Foreign investors, including those from Japan, are mindful of not being seen to abandon local workers at a time of national crisis. Foreign direct investment is a vital source of growth for Myanmar, one of Asia?s poorest countries, and Japan is a big partner, with official loans from Tokyo to Yangon reaching ¥1tn ($9.5bn) over the past decade. Having maintained links with Myanmar through the previous period of military rule despite pressure from Washington to distance itself, Japan has also been more reserved than western countries in condemning the February 1 coup. Tokyo seldom criticises other Asian countries on matters of governance or human rights and has long seen its economic presence in Myanmar as a counterweight to China, the country?s neighbour and its biggest trading partner. Unlike the many Japanese companies that have set up local factories, Kirin acquired a 55 per cent stake in Myanmar Brewery, the country?s top beer producer, for $560m in 2015 and later spent $4.3m for a majority stake in Mandalay Brewery. The partner in both joint ventures is the military-controlled Myanma Economic Holdings Public Company (MEHL). Even before the coup, the Japanese group was under intense pressure from activists to review its operations in Myanmar after an investigation failed to uncover where proceeds from the beer ventures ended up. The Myanmar military has been accused of crimes against humanity for committing atrocities against Rohingya Muslims and other minorities."
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Entropy72
Master |
24-Feb-2021 11:57
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None who has bought since 1 Feb have made monies. Will they accumulate more to average down or cut loss? | ||||
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ozone2002
Supreme |
23-Feb-2021 21:53
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Last:0.182        -0.001but when there' s blood on the street continue accumulation on dip good luck dyodd   |
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Entropy72
Master |
23-Feb-2021 19:21
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Nicholas Coppel is a retired Australian diplomat who served as ambassador to Myanmar from 2015 to 2018. In the Western world' s rush to condemn Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi for the forced exodus of more than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar' s Rakhine State into Bangladesh, little was said about the role and responsibilities of Myanmar' s commander in chief, Senior Gen.  Min Aung Hlaing. Now that he has mounted a coup and toppled the world' s fallen democracy icon, there have been numerous international calls for Suu Kyi' s release from arbitrary detention, including a United Nations Security Council resolution on Feb. 5. Only now is the world asking questions about the senior general: Who is he, what is he like  and what is he up to? It is worth going back to the Rohingya crisis to get the measure of the man. Under the military-drafted 2008 constitution, the senior general chooses the ministers for defense, border affairs  and home affairs. The commander is not answerable to any civilian or other authority and holds a monopoly on the coercive power of the state. The 2017 attacks on the Rohingya and their villages forced them to flee to Bangladesh where they continue to languish in squalid refugee camps in Cox' s Bazar. Be in no doubt   this was the work of the senior general and Rakhine ethno-nationalists. And yet the world turned against Suu Kyi and made her responsible. Little attention was given to Min Aung Hlaing whose only punishment was to be sanctioned by a small group of countries. Even the better informed argued that Suu Kyi could have at least said something and not defended her country against claims of genocide before the International Court of Justice at The Hague. That may be correct, but the Rohingya would still be in refugee camps unable and unwilling to return, and it perpetuates our problem of seeing everything that happens in Myanmar in terms of Suu Kyi. The world' s focus should always have been on Min Aung Hlaing. The Feb. 1 coup has rightly put a spotlight on Min Aung Hlaing. He is the man responsible for the forced exodus of the Rohingya and the end of Myanmar' s nascent quasi-democracy. When I met with him to convey formally the Australian government' s views, he showed no remorse for the disproportionate use of force against the Rohingya. Enthroned in an elaborately carved chair, he lectured me for over an hour before I had an opportunity to speak. His lengthy monologue was all about how the Rohingya do not belong in Myanmar and aim to take over Rakhine State. With the senior general now holding absolute power, the bleak outlook for the Rohingya has become even more so. Safe repatriation will be out of the question even if it is offered. One million long-suffering Rohingya are destined to spend many more years without hope detained in Bangladesh' s refugee camps. The outlook for democracy in Myanmar also is bleak. Min Aung Hlaing claims that the electoral roll was compromised and the election commission was not taking seriously complaints of voter fraud and other irregularities. He has sought to make out that his actions were constitutional and has said fresh elections will be held after a yearlong state of emergency. Few people in Myanmar share his assessment or support his actions. I believe he is likely to keep his word and hold elections after one year as this is his exit strategy and pathway to the presidency. The military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) will win 25% of the seats either directly or in a coalition with like-minded minor parties. That is all they need to form a government because the commander in chief personally appoints another 25% of the members of parliament in both the upper and lower houses. It was only ever a quasi-democracy. The USDP will win because the military has already appointed a new Union Election Commission who have responsibility for preparing for and conducting elections. They have a challenging task as in 2020 the USDP won just 7% of the contested seats while the NLD won a resounding 83%. Trumped-up charges have already been laid against Suu Kyi and other National League for Democracy leaders, and the compromised courts will find them all guilty which will prevent them from contesting future elections. And even in the unlikely event that the courts and election commission do their job impartially and professionally, Suu Kyi' s NLD will most likely boycott the next election. With justification, she will argue that the NLD is the legitimately elected government and should be allowed to govern without having to go back to the people. When it comes to matters of principle, Aung San Suu Kyi is resolute. I met Suu Kyi on numerous occasions both public and private. In public, she is invariably charming and eloquent. In private, she always holds her ground and rarely concedes a point. In the lead-up to the November 2015 elections, Suu Kyi frequently invited me and several other ambassadors with aid programs supporting democratic elections to her home on Yangon' s University Avenue. There, squeezed in around the dining table, she lectured and questioned us for hours on every detail of the election commission' s preparations for the upcoming voting. Suu Kyi did not trust the USDP government to conduct fair elections. And then, after her party overwhelmingly won, she feared the results would not be honored. She urged the jubilant crowds of NLD supporters to be more restrained, and in the long five months before the formal handover of power she did not meet with the media or announce her ministerial lineup. Suu Kyi feared anything she might say or do could provoke the military to step back in and void the elections, or ignore them as they did in 1990. We diplomats did not share her fear but accepted her jitteriness as the product of 15 years of house arrest and proximity to men with guns. On Feb. 1, the world realized she was right to be afraid. While Suu Kyi is resolute, Ming Aung Hlaing is stubborn. He will not back down and having set in train a series of events he will see them through. He wants Myanmar to return to the 2011-16 USDP style of government when military personnel took off their uniforms and donned civilian clothes to take up government positions. This is his idea of the " disciplined democracy"   envisaged in the 2008 Constitution. The big questions are will the civil disobedience movement be sustained and remain peaceful, and will the police and armed forces continue to avoid a showdown? Min Aung Hlaing sees his forces, the Tatmadaw, as the praetorian guards of national unity and stability and will step in if there is rioting or violence. But if there are orders to use force against unarmed civilians then we might see internal dissent among Myanmar' s military. The sort of crackdown on protesters seen in 1988 would put Ming Aung Hlaing' s position as commander in chief at risk of a challenge. Many electorates with a strong military presence voted for the NLD and unquestioning support from the rank and file soldier for the senior general cannot be taken for granted. Opposition to the coup is about supporting the people of Myanmar and their transition to democracy. To go light on the senior general because he is opposed to Suu Kyi would be a serious misreading of the situation, past and present.
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Entropy72
Master |
23-Feb-2021 18:49
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ASEAN' s proposal to bing forward a re-election with extenive international observers is a practical one to re-inject stability to the country.   The hurdles are that (1) some Myanmese will question the need for re-election when Nov20   one was " already fair" (2) Tatmadaw will likely find ways to exclude ASSK from this election by charging her with offence that disqualifies her from election (3) the senior generals in Tatmadaw will seek indeminity against treason and genocide charges. I hope Myanmese will support the re-election to bring a closure to the instability and to make it clear that the re-election is NOT and admission that the Nov 20 election was defrauded.   And Myanmese should vote overwhelmingly for NLD (or any party except UDSP). regardless ASSK is running or not. A tsunami of people support for NLD in an election that is recognised as fair by the Tatmadaw will bring much more credibility to the civilian government.   And it can even set the wheels moving to change the 2008 constituion to reduce the influence of the Tatmadaw. |
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Entropy72
Master |
23-Feb-2021 18:40
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Myanmar coup: Indonesia downplays purported Asean plan for new elections as outrage builds in YangonProtesters rallied at the Indonesian embassy in Yangon to ask that Jakarta respect the outcome of last November&rsquo s election rather than push the junta for new polls The Indonesian government said its position on Myanmar remained &lsquo unchanged&rsquo and that it was still &lsquo identifying common positions&rsquo within the Asean blocAnother demonstrator, 22-year-old Zaw Myo Htet, told  This Week in Asia  that the protesters were angered by the news of Indonesia&rsquo s reported plan. &ldquo The reason we don&rsquo t want another election is we already had a fair and clean election in 2020,&rdquo he said. &ldquo There&rsquo s no place for a military coup.&rdquo The party of elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, the National League for Democracy, won a landslide victory in the elections, but Myanmar&rsquo s junta chief, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, claimed the elections were riddled with fraud and justified the junta&rsquo s move to take control during a state of emergency. The junta said it would hold elections, but has not specified a timetable. This Week in Asia Newsletter By submitting, you consent to receiving marketing emails from SCMP. If you don' t want these, tick here A report by Reuters on Monday said Indonesia was pushing for Asean to agree on a plan calling for the junta to abide by its promise to hold new elections, with international monitors to ensure they are fair and inclusive. The plan would also call for Asean to mediate between the junta and protesters. However, Teuku Faizasyah, a spokesman for Indonesia&rsquo s Foreign Ministry, told  This Week in Asia  that the report had &ldquo jumped to an early conclusion&rdquo about Indonesia&rsquo s proposal.
&ldquo Indonesia is still discussing the response to political developments in Myanmar with Asean members and the possible outcomes of the special Asean foreign ministers&rsquo meeting,&rdquo Teuku said. Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi last week visited Brunei, the current Asean chair, as well as Singapore to discuss how best to handle the Myanmar issue, and also spoke with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi. Teuku said it was &ldquo too early to talk about the outcome&rdquo of Retno&rsquo s visits because Indonesia was &ldquo still in the process of gathering proposals and identifying common positions&rdquo . He added, though, that &ldquo Indonesia&rsquo s national position remains unchanged&rdquo on Myanmar and that Indonesian President Joko Widodo had congratulated Suu Kyi after her election victory last year. &ldquo We hope for an inclusive process toward a peaceful solution, while honouring the wishes of Myanmar people,&rdquo he said.   On Twitter, opponents of Myanmar&rsquo s coup said Indonesia, of all countries, should support Myanmar&rsquo s democratic transition, which began about a decade ago after close to 50 years of direct military rule. Indonesia was dominated by the powerful military under the authoritarian New Order government led by the general-turned-dictator Suharto for just over three decades. Following Suharto&rsquo s resignation in 1998 amid the devastating effects of the Asian financial crisis, the country embarked on a democratic transition known as Reformasi. Where the armed forces for decades had enjoyed all-encompassing power in the archipelago, including holding parliament seats and cabinet positions, it was at the start of the Reformasi period that it was split into two different institutions, and it retreated from civil affairs. Several experts have warned that imposing sanctions and isolating the military regime in Myanmar will not achieve tangible results. Instead, they said, the focus should be on bringing the junta and the NLD to the negotiating table. Senior regional officials told Reuters that getting the junta to hold elections was the best way to ensure a return to representative government.    
  But opponents of the coup in Myanmar, like Yangon-based author and social entrepreneur Win Ko Ko Aung, say Asean, China and the international community should deal a &ldquo harsh blow&rdquo to the junta and not recognise it as legitimate. &ldquo The people of Myanmar expect not just statements from other countries, but actions that would push the military toward accountability for what they have done to the people of Myanmar in international courts&rdquo like the International Criminal Court and International Court of Justice. Smaller crowds continued to gather  in Myanmar on Tuesday as the US announced it would penalise two more generals for links to the military coup, while the European Union is considering sanctions that would target businesses owned by the army but ruled out any curtailing of its trade preferences to avoid hurting poor workers. While the junta&rsquo s security forces have shown more restraint in the current protests than it did at other times during Myanmar&rsquo s five decades of direct military rule, fears are rising in the region of worsening violence and bloodshed. At least three protesters and a police officer have died in clashes in the past few weeks. Retno on Tuesday told Reuters the &ldquo number one priority&rdquo now was the well-being and security of Myanmar people.She called for all parties to &ldquo deploy maximum restraint to avoid bloodshed&rdquo . The foreign ministers of the Group of 7 rich countries issued their own statement on Tuesday, saying any violence against the anti-coup protesters was unacceptable and that the perpetrators must be held to account, &ldquo We condemn the intimidation and oppression of those opposing the coup,&rdquo the foreign ministers said. &ldquo We remain united in condemning the coup in Myanmar. We call again for the immediate and unconditional release of those detained arbitrarily, including State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint.&rdquo Additional reporting by Reuters.     |
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MarcLim
Veteran |
23-Feb-2021 12:21
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Go back 0.19? Not so fast. got buyers, don' t know which fund buying/collecting 🤔 180-181 bottom. Watch this!
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FlyingCat
Master |
22-Feb-2021 10:33
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abt time to go back up, if it cant go back up then maybe its really chui | ||||
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Entropy72
Master |
21-Feb-2021 21:43
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Monitor the developments of ASEAN/China discreet negotiations with the Tatmadaw. The Asia way is pragmatic and less theatrical. But this must progress fast before things get further out of hand with more bloodshed on the streets.
How to step down without losing face and without getting charged for treason will be MAH concern. If these 2 issues can be supported / assured by ASEAN/China, there is hope of redemption. From the way CDM is going on, the. Tatmadaw should realise it has little chance of pacifying or oppressing Myanmese people into "normal life". The young ones simply will not accept it. A potential upside will be the change of constitution for reduced military representation in the parliament. But no one can be certain of the outcome at this moment. Whether long or short Yoma, it is high risk. |
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ysh2006
Supreme |
21-Feb-2021 20:26
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Tomorrow heard CNA news said bigger demonstration coming on Mon ?...
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vicloo
Supreme |
21-Feb-2021 20:18
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Check your facts, Grab stopped collecting commission temporarily from Myammar drivers to help they make more income... there was no mention of stopping business in Myanmar.
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/garage/grab-suspends-commissions-in-myanmar-rolls-out-perk-for-bikers
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uiop1223
Supreme |
21-Feb-2021 16:45
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Long term is a convenient and noob excuse not to cut loss. How many listed companies actually recovered?
Those who cut loss at 0.21 could have buy back at 0.15 at later stage if for some strange reason, die die must buy YOMA Grab stop biz for 1 mth due to internet cut by military.
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nghonpo
Veteran |
21-Feb-2021 09:45
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Savy investors knows what to do. Opportunity. Mid to long term investment. dyodd
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vicloo
Supreme |
21-Feb-2021 07:35
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Because it drop from 33c to 19c, 40% drop already.... just like SIA at 3.5 and DBS at 17 last time, hit bottom liao 😏
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ysh2006
Supreme |
21-Feb-2021 06:37
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Why this share still green ?...which fund still dare buying ? Push up to run ...
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Entropy72
Master |
20-Feb-2021 21:59
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BANGKOK ? At least two people were killed in Mandalay, Myanmar?s second-largest city, on Saturday when police opened fire to disperse protests against the military coup, according to local media.
This brings the number of deaths among protesters to three, including a woman who died on Friday. In Mandalay on Saturday, police opened fired and witnesses said at least 20 people were injured while 30 were detained. It was the bloodiest day since the armed forces seized power on Feb. 1. Of the two dead, one protester was shot in the head, according to Reuters. The other was shot in the chest, the report said. Security forces reportedly clashed with striking shipyard workers and other demonstrators. Some of the protesters fired slingshots and police responded with tear gas. Gunshots were fired, though it was initially unclear whether live ammunition or rubber bullets were used. Demonstrators were already grieving over Mya Thwate Thwate Khaing, a 20-year-old woman who died Friday of a shot to the head sustained at a protest in Naypyitaw on Feb. 9. She had been in critical condition, and on life support, for 10 days. On Saturday, protests continued in Yangon, the country?s largest city, while people mourned her death with wreaths and photographs. Some gathered outside the Chinese Embassy in Yangon for a moment of silence. ?She was young and had a lot of opportunities, but now everything has been destroyed,? one man said of Mya Thwate Thwate Khaing. ?The military is just [staying in power with] weapons, and it keeps threatening us.? Mya Thwate Thwate Khaing?s older sister said her funeral would be held on Sunday in Naypyitaw, the capital. ?I really want the international community to help our country, rather than just watching,? she said.
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Entropy72
Master |
20-Feb-2021 21:05
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Situation escalated: Two killed in Myanmar city of Mandalay after police fire live rounds | ||||
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