Anyone that lives near one of these get together with your neighbors complain to the council and do not stop until the council take it down. Outside peoples homes, businesses, on the roof of schools... These have no place in our communities.
Anyone that lives near one of these get together with your neighbors complain to the council and do not stop until the council take it down. Outside peoples homes, businesses, on the roof of schools... These have no place in our communities.
The Singapore stock market has alternated between positive and negative finishes through the last five trading days since the end of the two-day winning streak in which it had added more than a dozen points or 0.4 percent. The Straits Times Index now sits just above the 3,060-point plateau and it's likely to see a narrow trading range on Monday.
The S&P 500 slumped 1.8% on Monday and Tuesday, thanks to China Evergrande, the Chinese property company that looks like it is ready to default on its more-than $300 billion in debt. Cries of the next Lehman Brothers—or maybe the next Silverado?—echoed through the canyons of Wall Street as investors prepared for the worst.