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Ng Ser Miang running for IOC vice-president post

SINGAPORE: Singapore's Ng Ser Miang is aiming to become one of four International Olympic Committee (IOC) vice-presidents when elections for the IOC executive board take place on Friday.

The elections take place during the 121st IOC Session and XIII Olympic Congress in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Mr Ng, 60, is currently an IOC executive board member, a vice-president of the Singapore National Olympic Council (SNOC) and chairman of the Singapore Youth Olympic Games Organising Committee (SYOG).

IOC president Jacques Rogge is also seeking a new term, which will be his last.

The 15-member IOC executive board, the highest decision making body within the Lausanne-based IOC, consists of the president, four vice-presidents and 10 members.

source: Todayonline.com-9Oct2009

 
Lessons from get-rich courses

Moneymaking classes can impart strategies but can't buy you time or teach self-discipline.

Wed, Oct 07, 2009
The Straits Times

It is difficult to ignore the many advertisements in the newspapers these days offering different ways to create wealth from the stock and property markets.

That millionaires seem to have made their money in such ways is a big draw for many.

One advert claimed: 'Our graduate made 7,700 per cent profit and turned $1,000 into $78,000 from forex trading in two months.'

Another said: 'How to create wealth in the stock market 30 minutes a day.'

Well, I'm sure many of us can spare 30 minutes a day, but most people don't realise that it takes more than just interest and a desire for wealth to reap the fruit of such courses. This is especially so if you are new to the scene.

Critical success factors include discipline and ensuring you can set aside time to put into practice the knowledge imparted to you.

Here are some considerations before you sign up:

Discipline

If you are too lazy to read an annual report now, would you have the discipline to plough through the techniques you have learnt once you are left on your own?

Be realistic

If you're planning to quit your job immediately, you would do well to think twice.

Course trainers typically advise participants to keep working and aim for a small, steady investment income before going into it in a big way. Among other things, pressure to succeed immediately is likely to lead to costly mistakes.

Setting aside time

There is no point attending a course if you cannot find time to practise what you have learnt.

Track record

Check the track record of the training firm and trainers. Talk to past participants and find out if the course includes hands-on sessions and allows follow-ups.

Don't invest more than you can afford to lose

Investments do not always turn out right. Even the best investors pay 'tuition fees' from time to time. But as long as you have enough ammunition, you are still in the game and can start again, hopefully wiser from your investment mistakes.

I realised these considerations only after I had enrolled for an options trading course along with about 500 Singaporeans recently.

Our objective was simple: We were eager to learn how to make money outside our regular jobs. The more ambitious were dreaming of making millions, while the rest of us simply aimed for an extra few thousand dollars a month.

I realised that some had no or little experience trading stocks and absolutely no idea what options trading was. Some signed up for the course because their friends had recommended it.

The course I attended was organised by education firm Wealth Mentors. It stretched over four full days and cost some of us more than $5,000. Others had discounts because they enrolled in pairs, and some were past students allowed to attend for free as a refresher course.

We started out with the basics, learning the differences between call and put options and how they differ from stocks.

In a nutshell, an options contract confers the right to buy or sell an underlying asset - a stock or an index - at a specific price on or before a certain date.

But just buying an option doesn't mean you are obliged to carry out the transaction. In fact, professional option traders buy and sell just to earn the difference in premiums and not for the purpose of owning the underlying asset.

After the basics, the American trainer began teaching us strategies including option trading on US shares and US indexes. In all, about four strategies were taught.

By day four, I felt that my mind was bursting from information overload. We registered for options trading accounts and were advised to start trading virtually for a while before putting our money in.

Maybe it's because I was not hungry enough or I was just too busy with my work and family. It did not help that I fell ill immediately after the course.

But the result was that I was unable to follow through with the strategies I had learnt. And before long, the memory of how to apply them had faded.

To be fair, Wealth Mentors still invites me for refresher talks and is willing to sit me through a one-to-one mentor programme, but I cannot find the time.

Not long after, I was invited to attend another course, this time on making money by selling on eBay.

I attended the free two-hour briefing session and was astounded to learn that there are people who make selling on eBay a profession.

The session was a curtain-raiser for a two-day course on how to look for hot products to sell, followed by strategies on how to list products so as to get the best prices.

This time, I pondered more carefully when asked to pay the fee for the course, which can cost almost $3,000. Having learnt my lesson from the last course, I decided that I shouldn't be enrolling for such classes until I have the necessary discipline and time.

It is easy to part with money in the hope of making more money, but the reality is that you still need discipline. And that is something that cannot be taught.

 


Tuition fees

Investments do not always turn out right. Even the best investors pay 'tuition fees' from time to time. But as long as you have enough ammunition, you are still in the game and can start again, hopefully wiser from your investment mistakes.

 
SingTel wins EPL rights

The Straits Times
Oct 1, 2009
SingTel wins EPL rights

SINGAPORE Telecommunications (SingTel) has won exclusive rights to the Barclays Premier League for three years from 2010, it announced on Thursday.

These include rights for mio TV, as well as the Internet and mobile. It has also secured exclusive broadcast rights to seven sports channels from ESPN STAR Sports.

Said Mr Allen Lew, SingTel's CEO Singapore: 'Football fans can look forward to a revolutionary way of viewing 'live' soccer matches on TV, the Internet and their mobile phones."

He said users will not be charged "more than what they are currently paying to their cable TV operator", and still enjoy the convenience of SingTel's integrated platform offering.

SingTel will be working closely with the Premier League and its production partners.

This ends a bidding war between Singapore's two pay-TV giants SingTel and StarHub to broadcast live English Premier League matches live.

The deadline for submitting bids was Tuesday. SingTel was the first to confirm its interest, releasing a brief at 6pm.

 
Taufik apologises for singing national anthem incorrectly

Singapore Idol Taufik Batisah made a mistake while singing the national anthem at the Singtel Singapore Grand Prix on  27 Sep 2009.

Instead of singing "Marilah kita bersatu", (Come, let us unite), he sang "Marilah kita berseru" (Come, let us proclaim).

According to a local news broadcaster, he apologised for his error and said that he was very nervous.

He also added there was no excuse for him to have made the error and hopes the public will forgive him.

 
Finding it difficult to shoot the F1 night race?

Sun, Sep 27, 2009
The Business Times

By Christopher Lim

MOTORSPORTS presents a unique challenge for shutterbugs because of the combination of high speeds and dramatic situations.

Award-winning photographer Paul-Henri Cahier has been following Formula One for years and has captured classic photos of some of the greatest race drivers of all time.

But last year's Singapore Grand Prix race presented a unique challenge for him since it was F1's first night race.

"Night time is such a different shooting condition and the light can be so peculiar," explains Cahier, who is in town not just to take photos of this year's race, but to launch a three-week- long free outdoor exhibition along Orchard Road of his best photos from last year's Singapore Grand Prix.

"Street circuits are always a bit special because there's a lot of fencing, and that makes life difficult for photographers because your opportunities are much fewer and you have to find holes in the fences or good vantage points," he adds, commenting on the challenges of shooting here.

Cahier's insights on camera settings and lens types are particularly interesting because he was an early adopter of digital camera technology, which he continues to use, and his methods have been tried-and- tested in the field.

Unsurprisingly, his rule of thumb is high sensitivity settings for standard shots that require clarity, whereas his creative compositions are often crafted with much lower sensitivity married with slow shutter speeds of as slow as a quarter or an eighth of a second.

Cahier is planning on discovering new vantage points and trying new shooting angles during this year's race in Singapore, but he considers the last race of the season in Abu Dhabi to be the most interesting challenge yet.

"It will be a sunset race that begins during daylight and ends at night time," he points out.

"You get the best of two worlds, and you get that great end-of-day light that's very warm and soft, with long shadows. We'll also be going into darkness progressively and it will probably be very difficult but very interesting."

 
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