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  • 7月 31 週二 201208:59
  • 大前研一:維他命10國 取代金磚/ 台日應攜手進軍世界

 




 














【經濟日報╱特派員陳世昌/東京專訪】 



2012.07.31 04:10 am







 







日本趨勢觀察大師大前研一新書《大資金潮:大前研一預言新興國家牽動的經濟新規則》在台上市,引發熱賣及討論,本報搶先摘錄書中十大重要趨勢預言。明天(8月1日)起,將針對每一項趨勢預言,採訪國內知名專家學者評論,以系列方式呈現給讀者,共同掌握大資金潮下不可不知的十大趨勢。














 
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日本趨勢專家大前研一
東京特派員陳世昌/攝影

日本趨勢專家大前研一洞燭先機,他觀察了這10年台灣在中國繁榮的經驗後,語重心長地表示:「中國的好景已過,台灣必須要尋找下一個階段的品牌發展模式。」他說,最好的選擇,就是趁著日本經濟衰退、許多知名企業奄奄一息時,買下日本企業,與日本企業攜手走向世界。


大前研一最近將他寫的《大資金潮》一書,授權台灣出版,書中指出世界的經濟已經從「金磚四國」(BRICs),繼續流向「維他命十國」(VITAMIN)等新興國家,台灣過去10年享受了在中國的繁榮,必須要緊急思考當中國開始走入低迷後,要如何調整身段走出困境。


以下是大前研一專訪內容:


問:寫《大資金潮》的期待為何?


答:這本書的概念非常重要,錢的流動如果以數百年為單位來觀察,先進國家過去以殖民地策略來掠取財產,這是帝國主義時代的思考。20世紀以後工業化以製品的附加價值賺取財富,這也是日本戰後加工貿易立國。台灣相同,都是沒有什麼資源,所以輸入材料製造加工,以賺取的差價來買糧食,再買材料前來加工。


工業國家有了錢,但開發中國家缺錢,20世紀後半又發展出先進國家將錢透過ODA(政府開發援助)再還原到開發中或未開發國家。


21世紀後,情況有些改觀。美國高盛發表「金磚四國」(BRICs,巴西、俄羅斯、印度、中國)名詞,寫了「2050年看BRICs發展的遠景」報告,這報告一出來,世界的錢開始往BRICs集中,為什麼會如此?應該說是21世紀的宿命吧!20世紀時發展成功的先進國家都人口老化嚴重,其最大特徵是有很多存錢都不會去投資,現在看世界的高收入國家,投資都不會超過1%。


問:資金就像水一樣,往低處流?


答:不錯,21世紀與20世紀不同,以前是國家間的錢流通,現在是民間對民間的流通。世界的高齡國家將積蓄往開發中國家流動,只要能夠有10%的獲利那就很滿足了,實際上至少有7%~8%的利益。為什麼會如此?因為先進國家的狀況很多,例如義大利、西班牙狀況不好,更早的愛爾蘭、希臘也是如此。


在BRICs之後,錢的流動還會集中到「VITAMIN」(越南、印尼、泰國、土耳其、墨西哥、伊朗、伊拉克、奈及利亞、阿根廷、南非)。如果你有100元的閒錢,要放哪裡?當然是考慮VITAMIN了。


問:曾幾何時還說RRICs,現在馬上又出現了VITAMIN?


答:BRICs成長速度太快,VITAMIN還有許多成長空間。在雷曼事件、希臘危機之後,VITAMIN成了最好的避風港。這個轉變很快,四、五年前我們都看好中國市場,可是中國現在有些走下坡,巴西、印度也顯得有些疲憊,但VITAMIN國家如土耳其、印尼等,則還是充滿活力。














 
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  • 6月 27 週三 201214:53
  • 分析銀行股股票價格6大指標

分析銀行股股票價格,以下幾個指標值得關注:  
  首先、股票價格對每股賬面值:公式是股票價格/每股賬面值。
銀行的資產最主要是貸款,貸款很少受到市況而使其的估值改變,因此P/B是衡量銀行股的重要指標。股票價格不應偏離賬面值太遠,一般來說,P/B數值越高,反映出股票價格越高。經濟好、股票市場旺的時候,銀行股的P/B相對較高,例如一些中小銀行,在市道好的時候股票價格對每股賬面值約有2倍,但在股票市場低迷時,則只有1倍左右。
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  • 5月 24 週四 201215:30
  • (尚未設定標題)

No Deal More Fashionable Than Guess as Cash Lures LBO
No Deal More Fashionable Than Guess as Cash Lures LBO
By Tara Lachapelle - May 24, 2012 4:15 AM GMT+0800
Guess? Inc. (GES) is turning into the cheapest takeover candidate in the fashion industry.
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  • 5月 16 週三 201214:38
  • 中港台三地最佳分析師評選結果出爐


中港台三地最佳分析師評選結果出爐

2012年 05月 14日 16:12  http://cn.wsj.com/big5/20120514/rmk161624.asp
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  • 10月 01 週六 201121:13
  • QFII & QDII

 
由於中國大陸並未開放證券及外匯市場,現況下,外資只能透過QFII 額度,投資中國大陸證券市場;大陸民眾則只能透過購買獲批QDII額度的機構所發行的海外投資商品,間接投資境外金融市場。 
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  • 8月 10 週三 201111:06
  • Buy Panic, Sell Hysteria

You should nearly always buy into panic just like you should sell hysteria. -
in CNBC, August 9, Jim Rogers
Definition: In a market that's up one day and down the next, strategists told CNBC Wednesday there are definitely buying opportunities—but there are also places to sell.
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  • 6月 07 週二 201113:22
  • Why It's Time To Buy


Why It's Time To Buy


The Clouds Haven't Quite Parted, But the Long-Term Case for Home Ownership Is Looking Stronger


By RUTH SIMON and JESSICA SILVER-GREENBERG


Back in June 2006, when the housing market peaked, the prospect of a five-year national housing bust seemed unimaginable to most people. And yet here we are, with the latest Standard & Poor's Case-Shiller index showing that prices hit new bear-market lows, falling back to 2002 levels nationally and to 1990s levels in some battered regions.




April Home Prices


See the change in home prices from April 2010 to April 2011, state by state.








View Interactive








Home Prices, by Metro Area


See data from the 20 metro areas Case-Shiller tracks.








View Interactive








 




Despite all the gloom, however, there are growing indications that it is a good time to buy. Mortgage rates, which fell to 4.55% for the week ending June 2, according to Freddie Mac, are near 50-year lows. Homes have become more affordable than they have been in years: According to Moody's Analytics, the ratio of home prices to income is now 20.9% lower than the 15-year average through 2010, and 12.5% lower than the 1989-2004 average. A historic glut of homes, meanwhile, has created a buyer's market: There were about 15 million vacant homes in the U.S. last year, according to John Burns Real Estate ConsultingInc.—some 3.1 million more than normal.


Such conditions might not last long. Moody's Analytics predicts that the number of distressed sales will begin to fall in 2013, and that prices will begin to edge upward then. Home building is at a virtual standstill, so the supply overhang isn't likely to get much worse. Meanwhile, demographic indicators such as "household formation"—the number of new households each year—are on the rise, and promise to take a bite out of the glut in coming years.




Lending



As rates hover near historic lows, experts expect banks to ease borrowing standards over time.








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HOUSING5

Getty Images

Greenwich, Conn.





HOUSING5

HOUSING5





Psychology



If prices stabilize, it could tip the balance away from fear and pull more buyers back into the market.








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HOUSING2

Getty Images

Chicago





HOUSING2

HOUSING2





Affordability



In several markets, it's becoming cheaper to own than to rent.








View Full Image




HOUSING3

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cleveland Heights, Ohio





HOUSING3

HOUSING3





Demographics



The rate of "household formation" is expected to climb in coming years.








View Full Image




HOUSING4

Reuters

Providence, R.I.





HOUSING4

HOUSING4





Employment



The strength of the housing recovery depends on job growth.








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HOUSING6

Associated Press

Dallas





HOUSING6

HOUSING6








Journal Community



  • Discuss: Is home ownership a good investment?




The upshot: "While we might not see rapid growth in the next couple of years, there are a tremendous number of positive signs that could lead to a rebound," says Anthony Sanders, a real-estate finance professor at George Mason University.


The short-term outlook isn't encouraging. Job growth remains weak, foreclosure sales are making up more of the market, and economists are predicting that home prices will fall more in the coming months.


But the long-term benefits of homeownership remain very much intact. For now, at least, you can deduct the mortgage interest on your taxes—a big perk for people in higher tax brackets. You get to paint your walls any color you wish, without having to clear it with a landlord. And assuming you can buy a home for about the same price as you can rent one, buying will give you the ability one day to live rent-free. Come retirement time, a paid-off mortgage means your monthly expenses are significantly reduced, and you have a chunk of equity to play with.


So what might the next five years look like? Once the foreclosure mess begins to clear up, say housing economists, the traditional drivers of the housing market—demographics, affordability, loan availability, employment and psychology—should take over.


Here is a glimmer of what the future may hold: While overall home prices fell by 7.5% in April over the same period a year earlier, according to CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, Calif., provider of real-estate data and analytics, if you exclude distressed sales, prices were off just 0.5%. So if you are in a market that isn't battered by foreclosures, you may be close to a bottom already.


"The regular marketplace is hanging tough," says CoreLogic chief economist Mark Fleming.


Here is a look at five key factors that will govern local markets over the next several years:


Demographics

Household formation fell during the economic downturn as a weak economy led some people to stay in school, double up with roommates or move in with family members. According to Moody's Analytics, the number of new households renting or owning a home dropped to 578,000 in 2008 from nearly 2 million in 2005, just before the peak of the housing boom.


But household formation increased to nearly 950,000 last year, says Moody's, and should average 1.2 million over the next decade.




Worksheets



  • The Mortgage Calculator

  • How Much House Can You Afford?

  • How Much Second Home Can You Afford?


 




That, combined with increased obsolescence and higher demand for second homes, should begin sopping up excess inventory in much of the country over the next two years, Moody's says.


"Whatever the excess supply of housing is, it is shrinking pretty fast," says Thomas Lawler, an independent housing economist.


Some of the uptick in household formation is likely to come from the leading edge of the echo baby boomers, who have been waiting for the economy to recover before striking out on their own, says William Frey, a demographer with the Brookings Institution. That is likely to fuel an increase in demand for both rental apartments and starter homes.


The portion of people moving across the country has fallen to the lowest level since World War II, he adds. That is a sign that many people have put their lives on hold because of the weak economy.


"When things do pick up, there will be this pent-up demand for everything involved with starting a household," Mr. Frey says.


Of course, when prices in healthier regions begin to rise, many would-be sellers who have sat on the sidelines could begin putting homes on the market, muting the price gains at first, says Susan Wachter, a professor of real estate and finance at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Even so, she expects home prices to stabilize and begin to strengthen over the next two or three years.








View Full Image




HOUSING_CHART1




HOUSING_CHART1

HOUSING_CHART1




There also are some powerful demographic cross-currents worth considering. The first baby boomers turned 65 in January, an age when demand for new homes falls and many begin to think about downsizing. "The baby-boom generation pushed prices up as they got older," says Dowell Myers, a professor of urban planning and demography at the University of Southern California. But in the coming years, "boomers will start flooding the market on the supply side" with larger homes, while fueling new demand for smaller properties with more services and amenities.


Affordability

Rising home prices made renting cheaper than buying in many parts of the country. But that dynamic has begun to change: Housing affordability, as measured by the ratio of median home prices to median household incomes, has fallen below pre-housing bubble levels in just over two-thirds of the country, according to an analysis of more than 380 metro areas by Moody's Analytics.


Renting is still cheaper than buying in most markets, but rising rents and falling house prices mean that, in some areas, this won't be the case for long. Buying a home is already cheaper than renting in Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit and Orlando, Fla., according to Moody's Analytics. In other markets, including Dallas, Las Vegas and Sacramento, Cailf., the equation is likely to soon turn in favor of homeownership if current trends persist, the firm says.


In Ann Arbor, Mich., where home prices fell 11.2% between 2007 and 2010, according to Fiserv Case-Shiller, housing affordability has risen well above historical levels, according to Moody's Analytics.


That is good news for home buyers such as Steven Upton, a 42-year-old photographer, who in June will close on four-bedroom brick house on 10 acres in an upscale community in Ann Arbor. Mr. Upton paid $400,000 for the home, which previously listed for $600,000. "It's a tremendous deal," he says.


Before buying a house, it is wise to compare rental prices for similar properties. To be ultraconservative, wait until the monthly outlays, including taxes and insurance, are equal. You also could factor in the tax savings of owning, which would make buying more attractive even if the gross monthly outlay is slightly higher.


Employment

The strength of the housing market depends largely on the economy. Rising incomes and increased employment tend to give more would-be buyers confidence and buying power. For now, job growth remains sluggish: On Friday the Labor Department reported that just 54,000 jobs were created in May, far below expectations.


But signs of how a stronger job market could fuel housing demand are evident in the Dallas metro area, which added 83,100 new jobs in the 12 months ending in April—the largest gain in the nation, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Dallas never had a big housing boom or bust and has benefited from trade with Mexico, a strong telecommunications sector and a central location.








View Full Image




HOUSING_CHART2




HOUSING_CHART2

HOUSING_CHART2




The opportunities for a job with more responsibility drew Duane and Linda Elmer to Dallas from Des Moines, Iowa, where Mr. Elmer was a banker for nine years. The couple has agreed to pay $415,000 for a four-bedroom, four-bath house with a Jacuzzi and pool. Their Des Moines home, purchased nine years ago for $410,000, is on the market for $390,000. "We are willing to take the loss for the opportunity to live in a more diverse community and to take a job with greater breadth of responsibilities," Mr. Elmer says.


Borrowers like the Elmers who are relocating for job opportunities are a big driver of home sales in nearby Plano, Texas, says Harry Ridge, a real-estate agent. He says such sales accounted for 20% of his business last year.


A similar influx of job seekers is fueling housing demand in the Washington area, where 25,700 new jobs were added in the 12 months since April 2010. Washington was the only one of the 20 cities tracked by Standard & Poor's and Case-Shiller that saw home prices rise both on a month-to-month and year-over-year basis.


Credit

Mortgage financing remains plentiful for borrowers with good credit scores and solid employment histories. But for borrowers who don't fit traditional lending standards, getting a loan can still be nearly impossible. In the first quarter, about 10% of banks tightened standards for nontraditional loans, according to the Federal Reserve. Meanwhile, higher down-payment standards are locking some would-be buyers out of the market. Just 35% of renters have the minimum 3.5% down payment needed for an FHA loan on the median-priced home in their market, according to a recent survey by Zelman Associates.


Credit is likely to remain tight for at least the next six months, says Clifford Rossi, a former Citigroup Inc. consumer-lending executive who teaches at the University of Maryland.


But conditions should improve over time, he says: "There's no question that it will gradually get easier."


That will be welcome news to borrowers like Greg Silver. The 50-year-old real-estate developer would like to buy a second home, but hasn't been able to secure a jumbo mortgage because his income consists of capital gains from sales of the properties he develops. Mr. Silver closed three sales in the past 12 months, netting him a total of more than $25 million, but didn't record any capital gains in 2008 and 2009. Sure, he could use some of that cash to buy a home outright, but he would prefer to mortgage it, get the tax deduction and keep his cash free for business purposes.


"It's a little devastating," says Mr. Silver, who is living in Greenwich, Conn.


Psychology

The long-term case for buying over renting remains in force. Yet nowadays, "People are simply scared," says Aaron Galvin, chief executive of Luxury Living Chicago, which finds rental apartments for wealthy clients.


Mr. Galvin says he has seen a 30% increase in business in the last year, driven by would-be home buyers who can afford to purchase a property but are choosing not to do so.


The portion of Americans who believe homeownership is a safe investment dropped to 66% in the first quarter from 83% in 2006, according to Fannie Mae, the government-controlled mortgage company.


But it isn't clear whether the fear will result in a prolonged change in attitudes, as during the Great Depression, or have little long-term impact, as was the case for the housing bust that shook California and the Northeast in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Eighty-seven percent of people surveyed by Fannie Mae said they preferred owning to renting, though access to schools, control over one's environment and other quality-of-life issues now are seen as the key benefits of homeownership, with building wealth and other financial factors viewed as less important. In addition, 67% of renters surveyed by Zelman Associates said they planned to buy a home in the next five years.


Jeffrey Connor may be a bellwether for the future of the housing market. The 40-year-old finance director at a corporate law firm says he thought briefly about buying a house when he moved to Chicago from Washington in October. But he opted instead to rent a luxury two-story apartment in downtown Chicago for $3,559 a month. Mr. Connor says it will take substantial job growth and a sharp drop in foreclosures to convince him to buy.


"The market is clearly soft," he says, "especially when we consider it good news that the unemployment rate is hovering around 9% instead of 10%." Mr. Connor says he isn't worried about missing out on today's low interest rates and will consider buying once unemployment falls to 6%.


Other buyers are showing less willingness to wait for the absolute perfect time to buy. Doug Yearly, chief executive of luxury builder Toll Brothers Inc., told investors in May that "some of our clients, after waiting so long, are starting to move off the fence and into the market, motivated by attractive pricing, low interest rates and, most important, the desire to take the next step in their lives. The family with elementary-school kids and a puppy when the housing debacle began five years ago now has middle-school kids and the dog weighs 80 pounds."


Source:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304563104576361522020024248.html#


 



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  • 1月 24 週一 201116:14
  • bull/bear market


 牛市(bull market),當股市或者經濟呈現上漲多頭格局的時候稱之。

稱為多頭市場或牛市的原因,是因為價格上揚時市場熱絡,投資人與證券經紀
人擠在狹小的證券交易所中,萬頭攢動,如傳統牛市集的圈牛群一般壯觀,故戲稱之為牛市。牛在西方文化中是財富與力量的象徵,源於古埃及。  
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  • 11月 15 週一 201015:05
  • 債券信用評級

 
債券信用評級的概述
債券信用評級是以企業或經濟主體發行的有價債券為對象進行的信用評級。債券信用評級大多是企業債券信用評級,是對具有獨立法人資格企業所發行某一特定債券,按期還本付息的可靠程度進行評估,並標示其信用程度的等級。這種信用評級,是為投資者購買債券和證券市場債券的流通轉讓活動提供信息服務。國家財政發行的國庫券和國家銀行發行的金融債券,由於有政府的保證,因此不參加債券信用評級。地方政府或非國家銀行金融機構發行的某些有價證券,則有必要進行評級。
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  • 11月 15 週一 201014:49
  • 債券基金信用評級

債券基金信用評級是指以債券基金為對象進行的信用評級。債券投資基金信用評級是國際慣例,如標準普爾目前對債券基金的評級包括“信用評級(Credit Quality Rating)”和“敏感度評級(Volatility Rating)”,前者主要評價債券基金組合對因基金資產信用風險所造成的損失的保護程度,後者主要評價債券基金收益率(Rate Of Return)和凈資產(Net Asset-Value)對市場環境變化的敏感程度。
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