Hallo,
"Aktien sind doch immer noch viel zu teuer!"
Diese Aussage ist ganz generell vollkommen richtig,
aber es gibt auch jetzt schon beachtenswerte Ausnahmen.
Und für alle Langfrist-Investoren, die auch für den Fall
einer Inflation nicht (oder nicht nur) auf Metalle setzen
möchten, werden im nachfolgenden Artikel zwei Werte ge-
nannt, die m.M. nach in dieser Hinsicht zur ersten Wahl
zählen, was die jetzt bekannt gegebenen umfangreichen
Insiderkäufe nur bestätigen.
Zur Frage, ob man jetzt schon kaufen oder noch warten
sollte, können vielleicht Wellen- bzw. Chart-Techniker
etwas sagen.
Gruß
G.
----
HUTCHISON AND CHEUNG KONG
Li Ka-shing and staff buy $57m in shares
HONGKONG - Hongkong tycoon Li Ka-shing and his staff at Hutchison Whampoa and Cheung Kong Holdings have paid HK$253.1 million (S$57.2 million) to raise their personal stakes in the companies after Mr Li hinted their stock prices were too low.
The purchases come after Mr Li hinted the stock prices were too low. -- AFP
Last Friday, Mr Li paid HK$8.4 million, or HK$70 a share, for 120,000 Cheung Kong shares and HK$6.7 million, or HK$67 a share, for 100,000 Hutchison shares.
He also bought HK$210 million worth of notes linked to Cheung Kong and Hutchison stock, Cheung Kong spokesman Winnie Cheong said.
The purchases came after Mr Li told reporters last Thursday that Cheung Kong's book value was close to the market price and that he would buy if the price remained low.
Cheung Kong and Hutchison shares have fallen by almost 30 per cent this year.
'Any stock that he has touched since 1993 has gone up an average of about 16 to 17 per cent three months after,' said Mr Robert Halili, managing director of Asia Insider, a company that tracks insider trading activities.
Six Cheung Kong and Hutchison directors, including Hutchison managing director Canning Fok and Cheung Kong deputy chairman Victor Li, Mr Li's eldest son, also bought shares last Friday.
Mr Fok paid HK$6.8 million, or HK$68 a share, for 100,000 Hutchison shares, bringing his holdings to 1.2 million shares.
Mr Victor Li bought HK$10 million worth of notes linked to Cheung Kong shares.--Bloomberg News
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