October 17, 2011 at 3:14pm
Singapore Hot Stocks-Rig builders up on order hopes
The stocks of the rig builders have been recovering from a
recent sell-down due to concerns about a possible slowdown in
orders amid a weakening global economy.”As long as oil price doesn’t plunge and the Petrobras
orders are out there, there is still some hopes for positive
news,” said a local trader.DMG & Partners Securities said Sembcorp management is seeing
higher enquiries for semi-submersible rigs and remains upbeat on
new order intake, especially on potential rig orders from
Brazilian state oil company Petrobras .Macquarie Equities Research had initiated coverage on both
Keppel and Sembcorp with an outperform rating. Its target prices
for Keppel and Sembcorp were S$11.19 and S$5.41, respectively.Macquarie said it expects Keppel to secure a record S$9
billion ($7.1 billion) of orders in 2011, driven by 23 jack-up
rigs year-to-date, followed by an estimated order flow of S$6.7
billion in 2012.Keppel’s rival Sembcorp is forecast to win S$3.9 billion of
orders in 2011, Macquarie said, adding that it expects an annual
order inflow of S$4-5 billion to be the new norm for Sembcorp.($1 = 1.266 Singapore Dollars)
October 13, 2011 at 3:18pm
Netflix gets more shows from CBS, Warner Bros
By Yinka AdegokeOct 13 (Reuters) - Netflix Inc’s U.S customers
will be able to watch shows like “Gossip Girl” and “The Vampire
Diaries” online after it signed programming deals with CBS Corp and Warner Bros for shows from their joint venture, The
CW television network.The programming deal, for shows from the current schedule
through 2014-15 season, is the latest in a string of deals
Netflix has been reaching to bulk up its streaming service and
convert more subscribers from its more costly DVD mail delivery
service.Programmers had initially appeared hostile to what appeared
to be Netflix’s threat to the lucrative cable TV programming
ecosystem but have recently been reaching new deals. Warner
Bros. is owned by Time Warner Inc , whose chief
executive Jeff Bewkes had been one of Netflix’s loudest critics
until a few months ago.In the past few months Netflix has reached programming
deals with Lions Gate Entertainment Corp and Sony
Pictures Entertainment for award-winning shows
“Mad Men” and “Breaking Bad”, as well AMC Networks for
“Walking Dead” and other shows.The new deals with Netflix appear to have tighter
restrictions such as when they can first be shown, for
example.In The CW pact, older-season episodes of some shows,
including “One Tree Hill” and “Nikita”, will available Oct. 15
while others are set for January.But episodes of all scripted shows of The CW this season
will only be available to Netflix subscribers in the fall of
2012. Other shows through 2014-15 will have about a year’s
delay before running on Netflix.Netflix has inked the CW deal in the wake of a major
fallout with its subscribers after a series of missteps by
Chief Executive Reed Hastings in the last few months.Last week, in response to a subscriber uproar, Netflix was
forced to drop a plan to split off its DVD business with a new
Qwikster brand.Before that the company had already raised its prices by 60
percent for many customers who want to get both online
streaming and DVDs, leading to hundreds of thousands of
subscribers dropping the service.Netflix shares have dropped more than 60 percent since
early July when it first announced the price hikes.Netflix shares rose 2.7 percent to $116.75 on Nasdaq at
mid-afternoon.