SEE_Research

SEE_Research | Joined since 2019-12-16

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2023-01-09 12:40 |

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2023-01-09 10:45 |

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2023-01-09 09:45 |

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2023-01-09 09:17 |

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2023-01-08 20:59 |

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2023-01-08 20:57 |

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2023-01-08 19:04 |

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2023-01-08 10:57 |

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2023-01-08 10:56 |

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2023-01-08 10:55 |

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2023-01-07 23:10 | Report Abuse

Unfortunately, inside the biggest losers list of the biggest down for this current week from

2 January to 6 January 2023 ( 5 trading days )

in terms of RM value are extracted from

KLSE EXCHANGE

and the data are publised in the main stream media

Page 18 __ Star Biz Week of

7 January 2023



Biggest losers of the Plantation stocks in KLSE

A. KL Kepong/ 2445 /

RM 21.86 minus RM 0.50



B. Gen Plant / 2291 /

RM 6.03 minus RM 0.37



C. Sime Darby Plantation / 5285 /

RM 4.37 minus RM 0.28



D. B L D Plantation / 5069

/ RM 9.99 minus RM 0.27



E. IOI Corp / 1961

/ RM 3.91 minus RM 0.14



3. The 5 plantation stocks in KLSE are the biggest losers in terms of RM ___ therefore there is no positive breakout with upwards bias.



4. IT IS WISE ____ DO NOT ISSUE ANY BUYING ORDERS YET AS YOUR LIMITED CAPITAL FOR THOSE WHO HAVE CAUGHT AT THE PEAK PRICES OF

25 , 26 , 27 , 28 , 29 APRIL 2022



5. WAIT FOR THE SIGNAL OF

K L Kepong/ 2445 __ is the prime mover of the 41 + 1 stocks in KLSE

to navigate properly for its turn around



6. Should there be clear positive signals on the slight resumption of small return to a bullish signal will follow up further reports on the plantation stocks in KLSE for the benefits of the investors who had bought at the higher prices so that the necessary actions can be well taken to place some buy orders to average up if there are further need to do .

Stock

2023-01-07 23:04 |

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2023-01-07 23:02 | Report Abuse

DDD. In the context of the first outlay of
RM 115, 000.00 for 1, 000 lots will automatically shrink to current available lots from
5 lots share consolidation exercise in becoming 1 lot
as per explained below

Consolidation of every
5 existing ordinary shares in

Scomi Energy Services Bhd ("SESB") into 1 ordinary share ("Share Consolidation")

Ex-Date 27 Feb 2020

Entitlement date 28 Feb 2020

Entitlement time 5:00 PM

Financial Year End

Share transfer book & register of members will be to close from
(both dates inclusive) for the purpose of determining the entitlement
a.Securities transferred into the Depositor's Securities Account before 4:30 pm in respect of transfers
28 Feb 2020


$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

Stock

2023-01-07 23:02 | Report Abuse

first triggered the PN17 status on
Oct 31, 2019


after its shareholders’ equity on a consolidated basis fell below 50% of its issued share capital as at
30 June 2019 .

Stock

2023-01-07 22:59 | Report Abuse

CCC. By 31 October 2019 ,
barely another
42 days later __ on 31 October 2019
Scomies / 7045
first triggered the
PN 17 classification , after its shareholders ' equity on a consolidated basis fell below 50 % of its issued share capital as at June 30 , 2019


as issued by the report of
The Edge as per below for quick reference .



Scomi Energy’s PN17 status confirmed, Scomi Group gets letter of demand over RM42m loan
Syahirah Syed Jaafar
/
theedgemarkets.com

January 21, 2020 20:38 pm +08

KUALA LUMPUR (Jan 21):
Scomi Energy Services Bhd’s / 7045
Practice Note 17 (PN17) status is confirmed,

after its waiver application was rejected by Bursa Malaysia .


In a statement today, Bursa said
Scomi Energy / 7045
joins its parent company

Scomi Group Bhd on the list, and is the 24th company on the bourse to be listed as PN17.

Scomi Energy / 7045
first triggered the PN17 status on
Oct 31, 2019


first triggered the PN17 status on
Oct 31, 2019

Stock

2023-01-07 22:56 |

Post removed.Why?

News & Blogs

2023-01-07 19:29 | Report Abuse

DDD. In the context of the first outlay of
RM 115, 000.00 for 1, 000 lots will automatically shrink to current available lots from
5 lots share consolidation exercise in becoming 1 lot
as per explained below

Consolidation of every
5 existing ordinary shares in

Scomi Energy Services Bhd ("SESB") into 1 ordinary share ("Share Consolidation")

Ex-Date 27 Feb 2020

Entitlement date 28 Feb 2020

Entitlement time 5:00 PM

Financial Year End

Share transfer book & register of members will be to close from
(both dates inclusive) for the purpose of determining the entitlement
a.Securities transferred into the Depositor's Securities Account before 4:30 pm in respect of transfers
28 Feb 2020


$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

News & Blogs

2023-01-07 19:28 | Report Abuse

first triggered the PN17 status on
Oct 31, 2019


after its shareholders’ equity on a consolidated basis fell below 50% of its issued share capital as at
30 June 2019 .

??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

News & Blogs

2023-01-07 19:27 | Report Abuse

CCC. By 31 October 2019 ,
barely another
42 days later __ on 31 October 2019
Scomies / 7045
first triggered the
PN 17 classification , after its shareholders ' equity on a consolidated basis fell below 50 % of its issued share capital as at June 30 , 2019


as issued by the report of
The Edge as per below for quick reference .



Scomi Energy’s PN17 status confirmed, Scomi Group gets letter of demand over RM42m loan
Syahirah Syed Jaafar
/
theedgemarkets.com

January 21, 2020 20:38 pm +08

KUALA LUMPUR (Jan 21):
Scomi Energy Services Bhd’s / 7045
Practice Note 17 (PN17) status is confirmed,

after its waiver application was rejected by Bursa Malaysia .


In a statement today, Bursa said
Scomi Energy / 7045
joins its parent company

Scomi Group Bhd on the list, and is the 24th company on the bourse to be listed as PN17.

Scomi Energy / 7045
first triggered the PN17 status on
Oct 31, 2019


first triggered the PN17 status on
Oct 31, 2019


Stock

2023-01-07 12:18 |

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2023-01-07 12:18 |

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2023-01-07 08:16 |

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2023-01-07 07:40 |

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Stock

2023-01-07 01:35 |

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News & Blogs

2023-01-07 00:54 | Report Abuse

According to EHM, apart from the period under Japanese rule, Malaya’s share of the world’s supply of rubber did not fall below 30% until the late 1980s.

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History

British Malaya

Palm oil trees were introduced to British Malaya by the British government in early 1870s as ornament plants from Eastern Region and The Oil River Protectorate, Nigeria, West Africa. The first commercial palm oil cultivation was done in Selangor in 1917 at Tennamaran Estate. In the early stage of development, the government focused on increasing its palm oil output by rapidly increasing the land area for the palm oil cultivation.

Malaysia

In the early 1960s, palm oil cultivation increased significantly under the government diversification program to reduce Malaysia's dependency on rubber and tin.[5] The FELDA land settlement schemes were introduced surrounding most of the palm oil plantation fields to eradicate poverty among the local people. In the same period, Malaysia also became the world's largest palm oil exporter. In the 1980s, the government nationalized three major palm oil companies, which were Guthrie, Golden Hope and Sime Darby.[6]

Around in 1985

Meanwhile, the large plantation companies themselves--outfits like Guthries, Harrison & Crosfield and Sime Darby--are abandoning rubber in favor of oil palms, a crop that delivers a quicker and, for now, better return on their money

A drive through the Malaysian countryside shows the change well under way. The rubber groves that used to march across the rolling hills are coming down, replaced with squat legions of new oil palms.

In the natural rubber business, there is no product for seven years after the decision has been made to plant: one year for soil preparation and another six years before the trees are ready to bear the natural latex. That’s a long time to tie up money for an uncertain price.

Oil palms begin producing in three years. The palm produces “fruitlets” that are crushed to yield an oil for cooking and other uses.

“I have 500 workers here now,” the plantation’s manager said. “I’ll need half that many when we make the changeover to oil palms.”

Rubber trees are tapped every other day for maximum yield. It’s a job that takes a fine touch, handed down through families that have been on the plantations here for generations.

“An oil palm worker, on the other hand, just needs brute strength,” the plantation boss said.

In a mature palm grove, the worker moves through the trees looking for bunches of fruitlets high among the fronds. Then he hacks or saw them down with a scythe-like knife attached to a long pole. The fruit is gathered from the ground and taken to a crusher to be made into oil.

The rubber tapper’s job requires finesse, not force. A diagonal cut is made through the bark of the tree, taking a thin peel from the edge of bark exposed by the previous cut. A thick peel is a waste, for it takes very little to start the latex running. Too deep a cut, into the wood of the tree itself, will scar the surface and make a second tap more difficult once the bark grows back.

The tapping is done in the morning. At midday the latex that has run into a small cup below the cut is taken to the plantation factory for processing. In the afternoon, the work force turns to maintenance tasks around the plantation.

“There have been efforts to mechanize rubber tapping,” the company official said. “The Japanese came up with a motorized knife, but it’s not as dependable.”

Whatever the economics from the planters’ point of view, plantation rubber producers were already facing problems with their work force.

Caught up in the rising expectations of other Malaysians, the plantation workers were steadily drifting into the cities in search of a better life.

“We may have to start looking for immigrant labor, perhaps Bangladeshis,” the plantation manager said.

Most Malaysian plantation tappers are Tamils with roots in southern India, brought here by British colonial planters as indentured laborers early in the century. The majority of smallholders are ethnic Malays.

The smallholders, private landowners, generally have unproductive trees and make a meager income from rubber. A plantation worker averages close to the nation’s per-capita income of $2,000 U.S. a year, and the planter provides housing, medical care and day-care facilities. He also gives the worker a bit of land for planting vegetables for his own use or for sale.

A national rubber workers union has pushed wages up, but not enough to dim the city lights.

“I don’t want to be a tapper,” said Saravalain, a 14-year-old Tamil boy who was gathering latex from the trees for his worker-parents during a break from school. “I want to be a lawyer.”

//////////////////////////////////////////////////////

Malaysia progress in rubber industry and subsequently followed by oil palm estates .

News & Blogs

2023-01-07 00:49 | Report Abuse

SEE_Research
The Trilogy of Fast and Furious Mode / Part 2

SEE_Research
Publish date: Wed, 04 Jan 2023, 06:46 AM
Malaysia

is well blessed with

2 landmarks resources __ one is from the ground and the sea __ this is the natural resources of the

black *** gold *** .

The other is from the land in which we first started cultivation of rubber in 1877 subsequently in 1985 / 1986 __ the country progressively changed to oil palm estates .

Rubber Cultivation

Development of the rubber industry in Malaysia

A tourist attraction in Kuala Kangsar, Perak, located near the District Office, is believed to be the first rubber tree planted in Malaysia, in 1877.

It was one of the nine seedlings brought over by Henry Nicholas Ridley, who became director of The Singapore Botanic Gardens in 1888.

Ridley was instrumental in the development of rubber plantations in Malaysia, then known as Malaya.

According to the website of Economic History of Malaya (EHM), a project run by the Asia-Europe Institute of Universiti Malaya and led by Perak ruler Sultan Nazrin Shah, natural rubber was a critical pillar of Malaysia’s export-oriented economy throughout much of the 20th century.

“The massive boom in rubber trade came in the first decade of the 20th century as prices rose as a result of the spectacular upsurge in demand from the US automobile industry and the related demand for rubber tyres.

“As global demand for natural rubber increased and rubber prices rose sharply towards the end of the first decade of the 20th century, rubber planting became highly profitable and rubber plantations spread across the Malay Peninsula. Initially, most rubber planting took place in Perak, Selangor, Negeri Sembilan and Johor — states where infrastructure already existed and was expanding,” says EHM.

It adds that high prices also encouraged smallholders to plant rubber instead of cultivating rice and doing other subsistence farming.

“By the 1930s, Malaya had become the world’s largest natural rubber producer. The use of an improved method of tapping to extract the maximum flow of latex with the minimum damage to trees helped increase supply,” says EHM.

According to EHM, apart from the period under Japanese rule, Malaya’s share of the world’s supply of rubber did not fall below 30% until the late 1980s.

////////////////////////////////////////////////////