Khamis, 10 Januari 2013

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KL shares remain firm at mid-morning

Posted: 10 Jan 2013 05:53 PM PST

Share prices on Bursa Malaysia remained firm at mid-morning today, with gains mostly seen in bluechips, dealers said.

As at 11.05 am, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) rose 2.39 points or 0.142 per cent to 1,686.96 after opening 8.14 points better at 1,684.57.

On the local front, the Finance Index advanced 33.19 points to 15,398.91, the Plantation Index increased 3.68 points to 8,169.08 and the Industrial Index gained 6.37 points to 2,804.47.

The FBM Emas Index added 16.02 points to 11,469.04, the FBMT100 increased 13.92 points to 11,314.35, the FBM Mid 70 Index was 5.5 points better at 12,462.65 and the FBM Ace Index rose 12 points to 4,267.30.

Losers led gainers by 280 to 225, with 270 counters unchanged, 860 untraded and 23 others suspended. Volume remained thin at 469.97 million shares worth RM308.27 million.

Among actives, Patimas Computers rose 2.5 sen to 12.5 sen, Takaso
Resources-WA fell four sen to 15 sen and Takaso Resources declined five sen to 31.5 sen.

Of the heavyweights, Maybank increased two sen to RM9.04, Sime Darby improved one sen to RM9.58 and CIMB rose three sen to RM7.66. -- Bernama

US stocks rise on China trade data

Posted: 10 Jan 2013 03:29 PM PST

NEW YORK: US stocks scored solid gains Thursday after stronger-than-expected Chinese trade data boosted growth hopes for the world's second-biggest economy.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 80.71 points (0.60 per cent) to 13,471.22.

The broad-based S&P 500 advanced 11.10 (0.76 per cent) to 1,472.12, while the Nasdaq Composite increased 15.95 (0.51 per cent) to 3,121.76.

China said that in December, exports and imports hit new single-month highs, rising 14.1 per cent to US$199.2 billion and six per cent to US$167.6 billion, respectively.

"Investors appeared to take the cue from the potential for a global growth recovery with Chinese exports gaining the most in seven months and ECB President Mario Draghi's expectation of a gradual rebound later in 2013 in the eurozone," Charles Schwab analysts said.

European Central bank chief Draghi, in a post-monetary policy meeting news conference, said the decision leave its key interest rate unchanged was "unanimous" and cited a number of improvements in the troubled eurozone economy.

Financial shares surged higher. On the Dow, Bank of America shot up 3.1 per cent and JPMorgan Chase gained 1.5 per cent.

One day after announcing it would cut 1,600 jobs, Morgan Stanley soared 3.7 per cent.

Ford shares jumped 2.7 per cent after the auto giant said it would double its quarterly dividend for 2013.

General Motors added 1.6 per cent after saying it would hire 1,000 workers for a new tech centre in Georgia.

Delta Airlines rose 1.5 per cent after Morgan Stanley upgraded it to "overweight".

Jeweller Tiffany and Co. sank 4.5 per cent after issuing a profit warning, saying that its holiday period sales were at the low end of expectations.

Rare-earths producer Molycorp dived 22.7 per cent after announcing that it would not proceed with the second phase of a major manufacturing project until market conditions improve.

Nokia rose 18.7 per cent after signalling that fourth-quarter earnings would be stronger than expected due to good sales of its new Lumia smartphone. -- AFP

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Not too late to get flu vaccine, FDA urges - CBS News

Posted: 10 Jan 2013 08:35 AM PST

A nationwide rise in flu activity has Americans on edge.

As of Wednesday, 44 U.S. states are declaring widespread flu activity, CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook reported, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention added that the percentage of Americans going to the hospital has doubled within the past month.

Boston, a major Northeast city with a population of at least 600,000 people, declared a public health emergency on Wednesday after confirming 700 cases -- by this time last year there were only 70 confirmed influenza infections in the city. Hospitals in Chicago are seeing so many flu patients that several had to turn away ambulances. One Pennsylanvia Hospital, Lehigh Valley Hospital, had to set up tents outside its emergency room to deal with the extremely busy flu season.

With influenza sweeping the country, the Food and Drug Administration is reminding everyone 6 months and older to get a flu shot, warning the disease could be especially dangerous for kids.

"Everyone seems to know that the elderly are particularly vulnerable, but so too are children," Dr. William Rodriguez, a pediatrician at the FDA said in a statement Wednesday. "Severe complications are most common in children under age 2."

In the last 10 flu seasons, between 43 and 153 children have died from flu in the United States, according to Rodriguez, with an average of 20,000 children under 5 hospitalized each year.

Play Video

CDC warns of flu season with high rate of attack

The CDC's most recent flu report, which measured disease activity for the week of Dec. 23 through Dec. 29, shows 18 children have already died. The agency updates the public on U.S. flu activity every Friday.

The CDC has said there's "no excuse" to skip the flu shot. However LaPook reports only about 37 percent of Americans have been vaccinated this year, which is about average.

For those heeding the advice to get a flu shot this week, the FDA notes that immunization takes several weeks to take effect. While many people have been immunized in the fall, they still should be protected through the remainder of the flu season, which typically peaks in January or February. Cases, however, can continue through the spring.

"This is particularly late in the flu season for very young children, because to optimize immune response, children between the ages of 6 and 35 months need two shots, four weeks apart, during their first season of vaccination," said Rodriguez. "However, even one shot provides some protection, so even now there is time to get some benefit."

It is true that the flu shot does not guarantee protection against the virus -- the vaccine has been about 60 to 70 percent effective in recent years, according to LaPook.

Play Video

Boston declares flu a public health emergency

Dr. William Shaffner, an infectious disease researcher at Vanderbilt University who served on the committee that decided what went into the vaccine, told the CBS Evening News Wednesday that this year's shot is well-matched to most of the strains out there.

However, "There is an influenza B strain that's out there, an additional strain that's causing about 10 percent of the mischief," he said. "And that's not in the vaccine and that accounts for some of the influenza that's out there."

One misconception about the shot, LaPook notes, is people will get the flu after getting vaccinated. The CDC told him that's not true, but the vaccine can cause a reaction that might cause flu-like symptoms such as aches, pains and a low-grade fever. The symptoms typically go away in a day or two.

Besides vaccination, maintaining proper hygiene with everyday actions such washing hands with soap and water, avoiding close contact with sick people, keeping your hands out of your eyes, nose and mouth could reduce risk.

"Lincoln," "Life of Pi" lead Oscar race - CBS News

Posted: 10 Jan 2013 08:48 AM PST

Last Updated 9:55 a.m. ET

(CBS News) BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. - "Lincoln," Steven Spielberg's drama of the 16th president's fight to eradicate slavery, leads the race for this year's Academy Awards, with 12 nominations, including Best Picture.

Close behind was fellow Best Picture nominee "Life of Pi," Ang Lee's mystical fable of a young man stranded on a ship's lifeboat with a voracious Bengal tiger, which received 11 nominations.

Joining them in the Best Picture category are: "Les Miserables," an adaptation of the stage musical of love and vengeance in France against a backdrop of revolution, which earned 8 nominations total; "Argo" (winner of seven nominations), in which a CIA operative tries to evacuate Americans trapped in Tehran during the 1979 hostage crisis by pretending to be a film crew, based on a true story; and "Zero Dark Thirty" (five nominations), an account of the hunt and ultimate killing of terror leader Osama bin Laden.

Also nominated: "Amour," Michael Haneke's intimate portrayal of an aged couple grappling with illness and the specter of loss, a top-prize winner at Cannes and the European Film Awards; "Beasts of the Southern Wild," a Sundance favorite that uses magical realism to evoke a child's world in the Louisiana bayou; "Django Unchained," Quentin Tarantino's violent tale of bounty hunters and slaveowners; and "Silver Linings Playbook," a comedy-drama of a man released from a mental institution, probably prematurely, which received eight nominations in all.

Photo gallery: And this year's Oscar nominees are ...
List of 2013 Oscar nominations

Recent changes in Oscar rules for Best Picture ballots - which use preferential voting to tally a particular film's support, with each Academy member listing a maximum of five choice - mean that the number of first-place votes a particular film garners determines how many nominees there will be, between five and a maximum of 10. This year's roster indicates that other prospective nominees "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel," "The Dark Knight Rises," "The Master," "Moonrise Kingdom" and "Skyfall" failed to earn enough first-place ballots to qualify.

Edelstein on the ravishingly strange "Life of Pi"
N.Y. film critics pick "Zero Dark Thirty" as year's best
Edelstein: "Zero Dark Thirty" no easy moral tale

Spielberg (left) was nominated for his seventh Best Director Oscar (he has won the award twice, for "Schindler's List" and "Saving Private Ryan"). He was joined by Michael Haneke, "Amour"; Benh Zeitlin, "Beasts of the Southern Wild"; Ang Lee, "Life of Pi"; and David O. Russell, "Silver Linings Playbook."

Among Thursday's surprises were the absences of two of the leading Best Picture contenders' directors: Tom Hooper of "Les Miserables" and Kathryn Bigelow of "Zero Dark Thirty." Also missing from the Best Director lineup were Quentin Tarantino ("Django Unchained") and Wes Anderson ("Moonrise Kingdom"), although each received Best Original Screenplay nominations.

Oscars nominations' surprising director snubs: Affleck, Bigelow
"Beasts of the Southern Wild" director: Giant movie on tiny shoulders
Spielberg's "Lincoln" more than 10 years in the making

Daniel Day-Lewis (an Oscar winner for "My Left Foot" and "There Will Be Blood") received his fifth Academy Award nomination for Best Actor as the president in "Lincoln." He is joined by Bradley Cooper as a bipolar man trying to straighten out his life after a stint in a mental institution in "Silver Linings Playbook"; Hugh Jackman as ex-con Jean Valjean in "Les Miserables"; Joaquin Phoenix (previously nominated for "Gladiator" and "Walk the Line") as a WWII veteran who becomes the fiercest defender of a cult in "The Master"; and Denzel Washington (an Oscar-winner for "Glory" and "Training Day") as a pilot battling both an NTSB probe into a fatal plane crash and his own alcoholism in "Flight."

Bradley Cooper: A Philly boy through and through
Daniel Day-Lewis on playing Lincoln
Watch: Hugh Jackman's role of a lifetime
Watch: Denzel Washington takes "Flight"

Among Best Actress nominees are Jessica Chastain as a CIA analyst instrumental in the hunt for Osama bin Laden in "Zero Dark Thirty"; Jennifer Lawrence as a young widow who acts as a go-between for her bipolar friend and his estranged wife in "Silver Linings Playbook"; Emmanuelle Riva as an octogenarian stroke victim who is the center of her husband's universe in "Amour"; Quvenzhane Wallis as an imaginative and self-reliant child in "Beasts of the Southern Wild"; and Naomi Watts as a wife and mother whose family is shattered by a natural disaster in "The Impossible";

Chastain was nominated last year for Best Supporting Actress for "The Help." Lawrence was previously nominated for Best Actress for "Winter's Bone." Watts was previously nominated for "21 Grams."

Wallis, who was just 5 when she first auditioned for the role in "Beasts" and who turned 9 after the movie opened, becomes the youngest female ever nominated in an acting category. [The two previous youngest child nominees ever were Justin Henry (a Best Supporting actor node for "Kramer vs. Kramer" at age 8 years, 9 months), and Jackie Cooper (as Best Actor for "Skippy" at age 9 years).]

Riva, whose film credits include "Hiroshima, Mon Amour" and "Three Colors: Blue," becomes the oldest performer to receive a Best Actress nomination. [Previously, Best Actress winner Jessica Tandy for "Driving Miss Daisy" and nominee Edith Evans for "The Whisperers" were honored at age 80.]

Watch: Jessica Chastain on "Zero Dark Thirty"
Jennifer Lawrence: "I'm considered a fat actress"
"Beasts" star Quvenzhane Wallis: Fearless

Best Supporting Actor nominees: Alan Arkin, "Argo"; Robert De Niro, "Silver Linings Playbook"; Philip Seymour Hoffman, "The Master"; Tommy Lee Jones, "Lincoln"; and Christoph Waltz in "Django Unchained." For Best Supporting Actress the nominees are: Amy Adams in "The Master"; Sally Field for "Lincoln"; Anne Hathaway in "Les Miserables"; Helen Hunt in "The Sessions"; and Jacki Weaver in "Silver Linings Playbook."

/ CBS

Two-time Oscar-winner Sally Field (for "Norma Rae" and "Places in the Heart") joins her "Lincoln" co-star Day-Lewis as a Best Supporting Actress nominee, for playing first lady Mary Todd Lincoln. Also nominated: Amy Adams as the wife of a cult leader - with a powerful will of her own - in "The Master"; Anne Hathaway as the tragic factory worker Fantine in the musical "Les Miserables"; Helen Hunt (an Oscar-winner for "As Good As It Gets") as a sex surrogate in "The Sessions"; and Jacki Weaver as the mother of a mentally unstable son in "Silver Linings Playbook."

Adams has been nominated three times before as Best Supporting Actress, for "Junebug," "Doubt" and "The Fighter." Hathaway was previously nominated for Best Actress for "Rachel Getting Married." Weaver was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for "Animal Kingdom."

Sally Field: How her pluck won her role in "Lincoln"
Watch: Hathaway, Jackman on "Les Miserables"

Screenplays

Kara Hayward as Suzy and Jared Gilman as Sam in Wes Anderson's "Moonrise Kingdom."

/ Focus Features
Tarantino, a past winner for "Pulp Fiction," was nominated for Best Original Screenplay for "Django Unchained." Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola were also nominated for "Moonrise Kingdom," a picaresque story of puppy-love in which two kids escape for an idyllic sojourn on an island off the New England coast.

Other nominees: John Gatins for "Flight," Michael Haneke for "Amour," and Mark Boal for "Zero Dark Thirty."

Best Adapted Screenplay nominees are all Best Picture nominees: "Argo" (Chris Terrio), "Beasts of the Southern Wild" (Lucy Alibar & Benh Zeitlin), "Life of Pi" (David Magee), "Lincoln" (Tony Kushner), and "Silver Linings Playbook" (David O. Russell).

Download screenplays of Oscar contenders

Best Foreign Film

Alicia Vikander and Mads Mikkelsen star as a Danish queen and the royal court physician engaged in "A Royal Affair."

/ Magnolia Pictures
"Amour" (Austria), Michael Haneke's intimate portrayal of an aged couple grappling with illness and the specter of loss, leads the Best Foreign Language film category. Also nominated: Denmark's "A Royal Affair" (left), starring Mads Mikkelson and Alicia Vikander as the royal physician in an 18th century Danish court who beds the young queen; "War Witch" (Canada), Montreal director Kim Nguyen's harrowing tale of Congolese child soldiers; "No" (Chile), in which director Pablo Larrain tells the true-life story of the voters' referendum that effectively ended the reign of Chilean dictator Gen. Pinochet; and "Kon-Tiki" (Norway), Joachim Ronning and Espen Sandberg's epic retelling of Thor Heyerdahl's 1947 trans-Pacific voyage.

Review: "Amour," a lifetime's love tested
"Amour," "The Master" top L.A. film critics awards

Music

Last year only two songs qualified for an Oscar nomination (with the award going to a ditty about Muppets). With a rewrite of rules, five nominees were announced today, which promises no shortage of decibels in an Oscar show songfest featuring Adele ("the "Skyfall" theme), Hugh Jackman ("Suddenly," a song added to "Les Miserables"), and a talking stuffed bear ("Everybody Needs A Best Friend," from "Ted"). Also nominated: "Before My Time," from "Chasing Ice"; and "Pi's Lullaby," from "Life of Pi."

Composer John Williams broke his own record for most Oscar nominations (among living recipients) by earning his 48th, for the score of "Lincoln." He is joined among Best Original Score nominees by "Skyfall's" Thomas Newman (his 11th nomination, with no wins), Dario Marianelli ("Anna Karenina"), Alexandre Desplat ("Argo"), and Mychael Danna ("Life of Pi").

Animation

Victor and his pet Sparky in "Frankenweenie."

/ Disney
Nominees for Best Animated Feature include "Frankenweenie," Tim Burton's 3-D stop-motion animated tale of a young boy who - inspired by the legendary Dr. Frankenstein - brings his dead dog back to life. (The feature is a remake of Burton's 1984 short produced for Walt Disney, which the studio shelved.)

Also: "Brave," Pixar's tale of a Scottish princess trying to undo a witch's curse upon her clan; "ParaNorman," A 3-D stop-motion animation comedy from the creators of "Coraline," about a young boy who talks to the dead; "The Pirates! Band of Misfits," in which Pirate Captain is out to win Pirate of the Year Award in this comedy from Aardman, creators of Wallace & Gromit; and "Wreck-It Ralph," Disney's critically-praised homage to 1980s video arcade games.

Non-Fiction

Nominated for Best Documentary Feature are: "5 Broken Cameras," covering the conflict of Palestinian villagers demonstrating against construction of a barrier through disputed land; "The Gatekeepers," in which six former heads of Israel's domestic secret service agency discuss Israeli security from the Six Day War to the present day; "How to Survive a Plague," David France's documentary about the advocacy group ACT UP and its campaign to fight apathy in the face of the AIDS crisis; "The Invisible War," Kirby Dick's investigation of rape in the military; and "Searching for Sugar Man," about a poor musician in Detroit who had no idea he was a music legend in Africa.

70-year-old musician learns he's famous overseas

Below the Line

Daniel Craig as James Bond in "Skyfall."

/ Francois Duhamel/Sony Pictures
Cinematographer Roger Deakins, who has been nominated nine times previously without a win, is hoping number 10 is the charm, with his lensing of the James Bond thriller "Skyfall." He is up against the imagery of "Anna Karenina," "Django Unchained," the 3-D "Life of Pi" and "Lincoln."

Two Snow White films - "Mirror Mirror" and "Snow White and the Huntsman" - are competing in the Best Costume Design category, against the period dramas "Anna Karenina," "Les Miserables" and "Lincoln."

The production design branch is honoring both flights of fantasy ("The Hobbit," "Life of Pi") and recreations of history ("Lincoln," "Les Miserables"), with the highly theatrical "Anna Karenina" bordering both.

The category of visual effects is a competition of science fiction and fable, with nominees "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey," "Life of Pi," "Marvel's The Avengers," "Prometheus" and "Snow White and the Huntsman."

"The Hobbit" is also competing for Best Makeup and Hairstyling against the jowls of "Hitchcock" and the tortured suffering of "Les Miserables."

And film editor William Goldenberg is competing against himself, for co-editing "Zero Dark Thirty" and his solo work on "Argo."

Snubs

In addition to Bigelow's and Hooper's absence from the Best Director lineup, there were other notable omissions from this year's nominees' list.

Ben Affleck, a Directors Guild nominee for helming "Argo," was shut out from both directing and acting categories (although as co-producer he is up for a Best Picture win). Paul Thomas Anderson directed Phoenix, Hoffman and Adams to acting nominations, but received none himself for either directing or writing "The Master."

Other actors who didn't work their way into the final five: Richard Gere in "Arbitrage," John Hawkes in "The Sessions," Denis Lavant in the French critical favorite "Holy Motors," and Bill Murray as President Franklin D. Roosevelt in "Hyde Park on Hudson." The Best Actress category is missing Marion Cotillard ("Rust and Bone"), Helen Mirren ("Hitchcock"), and Rachel Weisz ("The Deep Blue Sea).

The supporting categories were particularly tough this year, with John Goodman (who has yet to receive an Oscar nomination) a sizable omission - his competing turns as a Hollywood makeup artist in "Argo" and a gleeful provider of drugs and alcohol in "Flight" likely canceled each other out. Also excluded were Javier Bardem as the scheming Bond villain of "Skyfall"; Leonardo DiCaprio and Samuel L. Jackson in "Django Unchained"; Garrett Hedlund in "On the Road"; Dwight Henry in "Beasts of the Southern Wild"; Matthew McConaughey as a male stripper in "Magic Mike"; Ewan McGregor in "The Impossible"; and Ezra Miller in "Perks of Being a Wallflower."

Missing among the Best Supporting Actress list: Samantha Barks and Amanda Seyfried in "Les Miserables"; Doona Bae, whose standout performance among several roles in "Cloud Atlas" was as the clone Sonmi-451; Emily Blunt in "Looper"; Judi Dench (both "Skyfall" and "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel"); Rosemarie DeWitt in "Promised Land"; Ann Dowd in "Compliance"; Nicole Kidman as a sexually provocative woman trying to win the release of a convicted killer in "The Paperboy"; and Kelly Reilly as an addict who tries to accompany Denzel Washington on a path to sobriety in "Flight."

And among the films which - to paraphrase Sally Field, the Academy does not like, it really, really doesn't like - are "The Dark Knight Rises," "Cloud Atlas," "The Hunger Games," "The Perks of Being a Wallflower," "End of Watch," "Rise of the Guardians," "Looper," "Bernie," "The Cabin in the Woods," "Salmon Fishing in the Yemen," "Quartet," "Seven Psychopaths," "This Is 40," "To Rome With Love," "Trouble With the Curve," and "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2," which received a collective zero nominations among them.

Winners at the 85th Academy Awards will be presented on Sunday, February 24, 2013, at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Los Angeles.

Kredit: www.nst.com.my
 

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