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Top News this Week (9 June) Financial Horse - June 9, 2024 0. How I may invest $500,000 for dividend yield / capital gains – as a Singapore Investor in 2024? Financial Horse - June 8, 2024 1. 6-month T-Bills yields jump to 3.76% – What is driving the rise in T-Bills yields? (6 June 2024 Auction Results) Financial Horse - June 6, 2024 2.
Latest Posts. Guide to Investing. Is it a good time to buy Gold? (as a Singapore Investor in 2024) Financial Horse - June 17, 2024 0. REIT & Fixed Income. 6-month T-Bills Auction on 20 June – Will interest rates cross 3.8% or drop again? Buy Fixed Deposit, Singapore Savings Bonds, Money Market Funds... Financial Horse - June 16, 2024 0.
Oct 13, 2021 · Best Investment and Personal Finance Blogs & Websites in Singapore (2022) | Financial Horse. Personal Finance. Top Weekly Reads. Best Investment and Personal Finance Blogs & Websites in Singapore (2022) By. Financial Horse. - October 13, 2021. 3.
Dec 30, 2023 · December 30, 2023. 0. So… it’s the final weekend of 2023. No matter how well (or badly) your investment portfolio did this year. The scores are reset, and it’s a new year on 1 st Jan. Now 2023 was a volatile year. The playbook for 2023 was to be long stocks/bonds in Q1 – Q2. Take profit or go short in Q3. Then flip back long in Q4.
Apr 1, 2023 · Financial Horse. - April 1, 2023. 7. We’ve been doing a lot of short term focussed macro pieces recently. A lot of the investing in 2022 / 2023 is just one big metagame of predicting where inflation will go and how will the Feds be forced to respond, and positioning accordingly.
Dec 1, 2018 · Guide to Investing. Top 10 Investment and Personal Finance Blogs & Websites in Singapore (2018/2019 Edition) By. Financial Horse. - December 1, 2018. 8. Amidst all the doom and gloom around financial markets recently, I thought it was good to take a step back from all the G20, trade war and fed hike talk this week.
Aug 6, 2022 · Financial Horse. - August 6, 2022. 20. I was reading a report by Blackrock recently. Here’s an excerpt: The Great Moderation, a long period of steady growth and low inflation, has ended in our view. We see macro and market volatility reverberating through the new regime. What changed?