ANUAR BIN HASSAN ( DREAM KAYA TEAM )
NO 32 JALAN BERLIAN TAMAN RENGGAM JAYA
86200 SIMPANG RENGGAM,
JOHOR 13 Dis 2007 Tuan ,
PEMBERITAHUAN STATUS
PELABURAN SWISSCASH ( SWISS MUTUAL FUND )
Dengan segala hormatnya saya merujuk kepada perkara di atas .
1. Pertamanya marilah kita bersama menadahkan tangan tanda kesyukuran kepada Illahi kerana masih hidup hingga ke hari ini . Mari kita bersama mensyukuri nikmat yang dianugerahkan kepada kita dan jangan bersifat kufur nikmat . Jadilah kita semuanya insan yang redha denga ketentuan Illahi dan akur dengan ketetapan takdir yang telah ditetapkan untuk kita. Percayalah kita pada rukun imam yang enam itu terutamanya yamg keenam , iaitu Percaya kepada Qada' dan Qadar . Jika kita ada rezeki tiada siapa yang akan dapat menghalangnya , sama juga jika kita tiada rezeki , tiada siapa akan dapat menolongnya .
2. Saya mewakili Dream Kaya Team iaitu wakil rasmi atau jurucakap bagi pentadbiran swisscash ( swiss mutualfund ) dengan ini memaklumkan kepada semua pelabur-pelabur Malaysia bahawa segala produk berkaitan swisscash iaitu SIP15300 dan SIP25 telah ditutup dan ditamatkan secara rasminya .
Perkara yang sangat mendukacitakan ini terpaksa dilakukan kerana :
2.1 Memandangkan tekanan dari Suruhanjaya Sekuriti Malaysia , pihak swisscash telah mengalami kerugian yangbesar disebabkan pembekuan akaun pelabur-pelabur Malaysia .
2.2 Tindakan seperti ini pada mulanya tidak berlaku di negara-negara luar tetapi dimulakan oleh Malaysia yangakhirnya , menjad ikutan negara-negara lain , yang menyebabkan akhirnya swisscash terpaksa menamatkanoperasinya .
2.3 Kerakusan politik di Malaysia yang mengambil kesempatan ke atas pihak pelabur-pelabur dengan melabelkanswisscash sebagai pelaburan skim cepat kaya atau skim labu peram juga adalah antara penyumbangterbesar dalam kejatuhan swisscash . Sebenarnya kewangan kerajaan Malaysia sangat kritikal hingga terpaksamencari dana tambahan terutama sekarang bagi membiayai jentera pilihanraya Barisan Nasional , tambahmemburukkan keadaan. Pihak ini iaitu kerajaan Malaysia memandang swisscash sebagai lubuk untukmereka memperolehi " wang mudah " , jadi swisscash dikorbankan.
3. Sebenarnya pihak swisscash memang berhasrat memulangkan modal pelabur-pelabur beserta keuntungannyasekali . Malangnya pihak swisscash tidak dapat menunaikan tugas itu kerana bimbang kerajaan Malaysia melalui Suruhanjaya Sekuriti akan merampas pembayaran tersebut kerana melalui sumber-sumber yang boleh dipercayai , kerajaan Malaysia memang berhasrat melakukan perkara tersebut , mereka hanya menunggu masa sahaja. Kami merayu kepada semua pelabur-pebur swisscash agar jangan memfailkan saman terhadap kami iaitu Dream Kaya Team kerana kami sama sahaja seperti anda semua , pelabur-pelabur biasa swisscash yang tutut teraniayai atas tindakan kejam kerajaan Malaysia ini . Kami Cuma wakil rasmi atau perantara pentadbir swisscash dengan pelabur-pelabur Malaysia , itu "sahaja . Jangan dilayan fitnah yang mengatakan bahawa pihak Dream Kaya Team ialah pemilik swisscash yang sebenanya , itu sebenarnya hanya fitnah dan tohmahan yang direka-reka oleh pihak-pihak yang tidak bertanggunjawab .
4. Harapan kami, agar pihak yang bersalah sebenarnya iaitu kerajaan Malaysia di bawah pimpinan Dato' SriAbdullah Ahmad Badawi dipertanggungjawabkan sepenuhnya . Marilah kita sama-sama mendesak supaya kerajaan Malaysia memulangkan hak-hak pelabur swisscash Malaysia yang jelas teraniayai .
Saya mewakili Dream Kaya Team dengan ini menyeru kepada semua pelabur agar memfailkan saman tuntutan terhadap kerajaan Malaysia yang zalim ini . Kita juga hendaklah memprotes dengan cara TIDAK MENGUNDI PARTI BARISAN NASIONAL dalam pilihanraya umum yang akan datang ini .Saya yakin dengan kekuatan 75 000 orang pelabur swisscash di Malaysia ini , kalau tidak dapat menumbangkan kerajaan sekarang , tapi jelas akan menggoncang kerajaan ini. Telah lama saya mendiamkan diri tetapi telah tiba masanya untuk kita bertindak . Perjuangan ini baru sahaja bermula , marilah kita sama-sama menuntut hak-hak kita . Tuan-tuan boleh menghubungi saya atau pembantu-pembantu saya di bawah, jika sudi beramai-ramailah terus datang ke rumah saya , rumah saya sentiasa terbuka 24 jam untuk anda untuk kes kita sama-sama menyaman kerajaan Malaysia yang kejam dan zalim ini , kerajaan Malaysia ini lebih zalim dari kerajaan Israel yahudi .
Hubungi atau sebaik-baikknya datang terus ke alamat d bawah ini :
1. Anuar Bin Hassan - 019-7130219 - No 32 Jln Berlian ,Tmn Renggam Jaya , Smpng Renggam , 86200 Johor5.
2. Haji Zurin Salleh - 019-7114287 - Taman Kulai Jaya
3. Cikgu Ismail Power Batu Pahat - 013-72747175.
4. Encik Zaidi Mokhtar Muar - 019-70888800 / 013-2221990 - No 35 , Jalan Tunku Bendahara , Kampung Kelantan8400 Muar Johor.
Harap mendapat tindakan segera pihak pelabur swisscash agar semua wang kita yang telah dirampas oleh kerajaan Malaysia ala-ala firaun dan yahudi ini dikembalikan segera , bersama ikut saya saman kerajaan Malaysia yang terkutuk ini .
19/12/07
16/12/07
Fed to propose new rules for mortgage lenders.Central bank hopes to stop shady practices contributing to housing mess
WASHINGTON - People taking out home mortgages may gain new protections soon against shady lending practices as the Federal Reserve seeks to back even the riskiest borrowers, already hit hardest by the housing and credit crunches.
Rules expected to be proposed Tuesday would apply to loans made by all types of lenders, including banks and brokers. The plan from the Fed, which has regulatory powers over the nation's financial system, could be finalized next year. The effective date would be know then.
The Fed is considering:
Investors await earnings, housing data
NEW YORK - This week's data on investment bank earnings, the housing downturn and inflation will help investors decide how the economy and corporate America are faring as they head into the new year.
Wall Street hit a few snags last week: the tools in the Federal Reserve's arsenal look as if they may not be sufficient to battle the credit crisis, and inflation appears to be accelerating, which could prevent further rate cuts.
Last week, the Dow ended 2.10 percent lower, the Standard & Poor's 500 index finished down 2.44 percent, and the Nasdaq composite index ended down 2.60 percent.
Goldman Sachs reports its fourth-quarter results on Tuesday, Morgan Stanley reports on Wednesday and Bear Stearns reports on Thursday. Wall Street anticipates Goldman to have performed well this quarter, as it did in the third quarter, but expects big credit losses to hurt Morgan Stanley and Bear Stearns.
In other earnings this week, Best Buy Co., Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. and Palm Inc. report on Tuesday; General Mills Inc. reports on Wednesday; Discover Financial Services, ConAgra Foods and Research in Motion Ltd. report on Thursday; and Circuit City Stores Inc. and Walgreen Co. report on Friday.
Early in the week, Wall Street will get snapshots of the housing market. The National Association of Home Builders on Monday releases its December housing index, which economists are expecting to hold at November's reading of 19, and the Commerce Department reports Tuesday on November housing starts and building permits, which economists predict will dip compared to October.
On Thursday, the Commerce Department releases its final reading on third-quarter gross domestic product. Economists are anticipating GDP to come in at 4.9 percent, as estimated last month; however, they are less optimistic about growth in the quarters to come.
BlackRock Inc.'s chief investment officer Bob Doll and BlackRock president Rob Kapito said in a research note that further rate cuts by the Fed are necessary to bolster the economy.
"Our expectation has been, and remains, that the U.S. economy will avoid a recession, but the call is a close one, since we expect growth over the next few quarters to be well below the economy's long-term potential," they wrote.
The main drag on the economy has been, of course, the housing market, but the question remains how much further it has to fall.
Citigroup chief economist Lewis Alexander said he believes the housing market will remain weak well into 2008, but that it is more likely that the economy will keep growing than head into recession. Housing slumps of this magnitude in the past have led to recession, but he said this situation is different — unemployment remains relatively low, and consumer spending, while weakening, has not dropped too sharply.
In previous housing downturns, "the macro economy drove housing, not the other way around," Alexander said, noting that the current situation is more a housing bubble "that's correcting on its own."
Late in the week will be the Labor Department's report on personal income and spending in November, which will also include the Fed's preferred inflation measure: the core personal consumption expenditures deflator. Core PCE is expected to show year-over-year growth of 1.9 percent — within the Fed's comfort range of 1 percent to 2 percent.
Anything above that range could worry investors; last week, the consumer price index spiked and elevated jitters that the Fed might not be able to lower rates further because of accelerating inflation.
Swisscash online will be back jan 8th 2008
Dear all Investor Swisscash,
Thanks you very much for your opportunity for stay in loyalitas wait swisscash.
We have working hard to solve all the problem and things the swisscash legalitas, with now finished december 6th 2007.
We are very expected that swisscash will be back and on line on jan 5th 2008. All investor please donot screaming and stay relax patientce. We will paid all amount investor money and not any apoint anymore because we are (swisscash) lost much money.
Thank you,
Michael Mansfield.
SMF International, ltd.
Swisscash and Suntraders
Swisscash will be returning By 5th Of Jan with a new Website with latest Features tied up with Suntraders where Investors will be paid monthly commisions trough bank transfer or wire transfer.
By doing this the System is more Legal and you would get An online product and a Free website where You can Sell your own Products .
So cheer Up and wait for the good News. lets wait till 5th Jan else we have to Declare Swisscash is Scam
15/12/07
Fed Plans Steps to Crack Down on Shady Lending Practices
WASHINGTON -- People taking out home mortgages may gain new protections soon against shady lending practices as the Federal Reserve seeks to back even the riskiest borrowers, already hit hardest by the housing and credit crunches.
Rules expected to be proposed Tuesday would apply to loans made by all types of lenders, including banks and brokers. The plan from the Fed, which has regulatory powers over the nation's financial system, could be finalized next year. The effective date would be known then.
(Advertisement)
The Fed is considering:
* Barring lenders from penalizing subprime borrowers -- those with spotty credit or low incomes -- who pay their loans off early.
* Forcing lenders to make sure that borrowers, especially subprime borrowers, set aside money to pay for taxes and insurance.
* Restricting loans that do not require proof of a borrower's income.
* Examining lenders' failure, in some cases, to consider a borrower's ability to repay a home loan.
* Improving financial disclosure so people better understand the terms and conditions of their mortgages and get this information when it is most useful.
* Curtailing abuses in mortgage advertising.
"We have an obligation to prevent fraud and abusive lending," the Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, said earlier this year. "At the same time, we must tread carefully so as not to suppress responsible lending or eliminate refinancing opportunities for subprime borrowers."
The issue has taken on heightened importance given the meltdown in the housing and credit markets that has led to record numbers of home foreclosures. The crisis has raised the odds that the economy might fall into a recession, roiled Wall Street and has given Democrats and Republicans much fodder to blame each other.
On prepayment penalties, consumer advocates say these deter homeowners from refinancing on more favorable terms. Those penalties can be hard on borrowers who want to get out of adjustable-rate mortgages that reset from a low introductory rate to a much higher one they have trouble paying off.
Mortgage industry representatives say prepayment penalties ensure that lenders receive a minimum return if loans are paid off early. They also say people with mortgages that include such penalties often get a benefit of lower upfront costs or lower interest rates.
Of the nearly 3 million subprime adjustable-rate loans surveyed by the Mortgage Bankers Association from July through September, a record 4.72 percent entered the foreclosure process during those months. At the same time, a record 18.81 percent of the subprime adjustable-rate loans were past due.
When home values weakened, borrowers were left with loan balances that eclipsed the value of their homes. They also were clobbered when their loans reset with much higher interest rates.
As for the idea of setting aside money to cover taxes and insurance, consumer groups worry that subprime borrowers do not know about these expenses or might not be able to budget for them. These groups also have raised concerns about lenders quoting subprime borrowers monthly payments that do not include taxes and insurance costs.
The Mortgage Bankers Association has some problems with mandating escrow accounts -- where those costs specifically are set aside each month -- for borrowers. The association does support efforts to make sure borrowers have the appropriate information about their obligations to pay taxes and insurance.
The Fed says loans to subprime borrowers typically do not include such an account, while loans to people with better credit and lower risk to the lender usually do.
The central bank also says that lenders sometimes will make a loan without documenting or verifying a borrower's income. Lenders may charge higher rates for such loans, the Fed says.
Mortgage lenders say these loans are appropriate for many borrowers, including those who are self-employed and cannot easily document their income. Consumer groups say many borrowers who could document their income are not aware they are getting a loan at a higher interest rate. These loans are sometimes called "liar's loans" because critics believe they can be used to perpetrate fraud.
Majority Democrats in Congress have been vocal in urging the Fed to act against abusive practices.
Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, and other House Democrats said in a recent letter to the Fed that tougher rules are overdue and "needed to help eliminate the kinds of predatory lending practices that exacerbated the current subprime lending crisis."
The House has passed legislation that would put into law some of the same actions the Fed is considering. A similar bill is pending in the Senate. Supporters are heartened the Fed is moving ahead because they think the Fed might be able to finalize action before Congress does.
On the Net
Federal Reserve: www.federalreserve.gov/
Rules expected to be proposed Tuesday would apply to loans made by all types of lenders, including banks and brokers. The plan from the Fed, which has regulatory powers over the nation's financial system, could be finalized next year. The effective date would be known then.
(Advertisement)
The Fed is considering:
* Barring lenders from penalizing subprime borrowers -- those with spotty credit or low incomes -- who pay their loans off early.
* Forcing lenders to make sure that borrowers, especially subprime borrowers, set aside money to pay for taxes and insurance.
* Restricting loans that do not require proof of a borrower's income.
* Examining lenders' failure, in some cases, to consider a borrower's ability to repay a home loan.
* Improving financial disclosure so people better understand the terms and conditions of their mortgages and get this information when it is most useful.
* Curtailing abuses in mortgage advertising.
"We have an obligation to prevent fraud and abusive lending," the Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, said earlier this year. "At the same time, we must tread carefully so as not to suppress responsible lending or eliminate refinancing opportunities for subprime borrowers."
The issue has taken on heightened importance given the meltdown in the housing and credit markets that has led to record numbers of home foreclosures. The crisis has raised the odds that the economy might fall into a recession, roiled Wall Street and has given Democrats and Republicans much fodder to blame each other.
On prepayment penalties, consumer advocates say these deter homeowners from refinancing on more favorable terms. Those penalties can be hard on borrowers who want to get out of adjustable-rate mortgages that reset from a low introductory rate to a much higher one they have trouble paying off.
Mortgage industry representatives say prepayment penalties ensure that lenders receive a minimum return if loans are paid off early. They also say people with mortgages that include such penalties often get a benefit of lower upfront costs or lower interest rates.
Of the nearly 3 million subprime adjustable-rate loans surveyed by the Mortgage Bankers Association from July through September, a record 4.72 percent entered the foreclosure process during those months. At the same time, a record 18.81 percent of the subprime adjustable-rate loans were past due.
When home values weakened, borrowers were left with loan balances that eclipsed the value of their homes. They also were clobbered when their loans reset with much higher interest rates.
As for the idea of setting aside money to cover taxes and insurance, consumer groups worry that subprime borrowers do not know about these expenses or might not be able to budget for them. These groups also have raised concerns about lenders quoting subprime borrowers monthly payments that do not include taxes and insurance costs.
The Mortgage Bankers Association has some problems with mandating escrow accounts -- where those costs specifically are set aside each month -- for borrowers. The association does support efforts to make sure borrowers have the appropriate information about their obligations to pay taxes and insurance.
The Fed says loans to subprime borrowers typically do not include such an account, while loans to people with better credit and lower risk to the lender usually do.
The central bank also says that lenders sometimes will make a loan without documenting or verifying a borrower's income. Lenders may charge higher rates for such loans, the Fed says.
Mortgage lenders say these loans are appropriate for many borrowers, including those who are self-employed and cannot easily document their income. Consumer groups say many borrowers who could document their income are not aware they are getting a loan at a higher interest rate. These loans are sometimes called "liar's loans" because critics believe they can be used to perpetrate fraud.
Majority Democrats in Congress have been vocal in urging the Fed to act against abusive practices.
Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, and other House Democrats said in a recent letter to the Fed that tougher rules are overdue and "needed to help eliminate the kinds of predatory lending practices that exacerbated the current subprime lending crisis."
The House has passed legislation that would put into law some of the same actions the Fed is considering. A similar bill is pending in the Senate. Supporters are heartened the Fed is moving ahead because they think the Fed might be able to finalize action before Congress does.
On the Net
Federal Reserve: www.federalreserve.gov/
Wall street indexes fall as inflation worrios weigh
By Caroline Valetkevitch Sat Dec 15, 8:12 AM ET
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks swooned on Friday on concerns that surging inflation may prevent the Federal Reserve from lowering interest rates enough to pull the economy out of the grip of a housing and credit crisis
The three major indexes tumbled more than 1 percent each, and posted their worst week since November 11, after a report showing a jump in the consumer price index in November. Combined with a sharp rise in producer prices, the reading highlighted concerns voiced by the Fed earlier in the week when it lowered rates modestly.
With inflation making further rate cuts look less likely, retailers, banks and industrial stocks were sold off. Retailer Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N) fell 1.5 percent and credit card company American Express Co (AXP.N) slid 2.9 percent.
"The main driver was nervousness. You've got some people using the stagflation word, and you hear that and it messes up the psyche of the average investor," said Joe Saluzzi, co-manager of trading at Themis Trading in Chatham, New Jersey.
The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was down 178.11 points, or 1.32 percent, at 13,339.85. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) was down 20.46 points, or 1.37 percent, at 1,467.95. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) was down 32.75 points, or 1.23 percent, at 2,635.74.
For the week, the Dow was down 2.1 percent, the S&P was down 2.5 percent and the Nasdaq was down 2.6 percent. It was the worst weekly percentage drop for the indexes since November 11.
The inflation data followed a decision by the Fed on Tuesday to lower interest rates modestly, and a move by the world's central banks to make it easier for stressed banks to borrow.
But investors saw both responses as inadequate and speculation has grown in the markets about what the Fed might do next.
Higher interest rates make it more expensive for consumers and businesses to borrow money. Shares of Wal-Mart were down 1.5 percent at $47.63, while shares of American Express were down 2.9 percent at $52.29.
Energy company shares edged lower following a 1 percent decline in crude oil prices. Shares of Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N) declined 1.7 percent to $91.18 as crude oil prices in New York fell 98 cents to settle at $91.27 a barrel.
Morgan Stanley cut ON Semiconductor (ONNN.O) and the stock fell 3.5 percent to $8.24 on Nasdaq. Shares of Intel Corp. (INTC.O) were down 3.2 percent at $26.29.
3M Co (MMM.N) shares were down 1.1 percent at $85.93.
Black & Decker shares (BDK.N) were down after the maker of power tools and hardware said that weaker-than-expected business conditions would hurt results for the current quarter. Black & Decker slid 8.5 percent to $73.31.
Citigroup Inc. (C.N) said it plans to consolidate $49 billion of assets tied to troubled structured investment vehicles onto its balance sheet and Moody's Investors Service cut its debt ratings.
Shares of the largest U.S. bank rebounded briefly after Goldman Sachs lifted its rating on Citigroup's debt, citing the chief executive's measures to raise capital levels in the first quarter of 2008. The shares ended down 1 percent at $30.70.
Trading was below average on the New York Stock Exchange, with about 1.31 billion shares changing hands, below last year's estimated daily average of 1.84 billion, while on Nasdaq, about 1.94 billion shares traded, below last year's daily average of 2.02 billion.Declining stocks were outnumbering rising ones by a ratio of about 4 to 1 on the NYSE and by 3 to 1 on Nasdaq
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks swooned on Friday on concerns that surging inflation may prevent the Federal Reserve from lowering interest rates enough to pull the economy out of the grip of a housing and credit crisis
The three major indexes tumbled more than 1 percent each, and posted their worst week since November 11, after a report showing a jump in the consumer price index in November. Combined with a sharp rise in producer prices, the reading highlighted concerns voiced by the Fed earlier in the week when it lowered rates modestly.
With inflation making further rate cuts look less likely, retailers, banks and industrial stocks were sold off. Retailer Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N) fell 1.5 percent and credit card company American Express Co (AXP.N) slid 2.9 percent.
"The main driver was nervousness. You've got some people using the stagflation word, and you hear that and it messes up the psyche of the average investor," said Joe Saluzzi, co-manager of trading at Themis Trading in Chatham, New Jersey.
The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was down 178.11 points, or 1.32 percent, at 13,339.85. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) was down 20.46 points, or 1.37 percent, at 1,467.95. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) was down 32.75 points, or 1.23 percent, at 2,635.74.
For the week, the Dow was down 2.1 percent, the S&P was down 2.5 percent and the Nasdaq was down 2.6 percent. It was the worst weekly percentage drop for the indexes since November 11.
The inflation data followed a decision by the Fed on Tuesday to lower interest rates modestly, and a move by the world's central banks to make it easier for stressed banks to borrow.
But investors saw both responses as inadequate and speculation has grown in the markets about what the Fed might do next.
Higher interest rates make it more expensive for consumers and businesses to borrow money. Shares of Wal-Mart were down 1.5 percent at $47.63, while shares of American Express were down 2.9 percent at $52.29.
Energy company shares edged lower following a 1 percent decline in crude oil prices. Shares of Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N) declined 1.7 percent to $91.18 as crude oil prices in New York fell 98 cents to settle at $91.27 a barrel.
Morgan Stanley cut ON Semiconductor (ONNN.O) and the stock fell 3.5 percent to $8.24 on Nasdaq. Shares of Intel Corp. (INTC.O) were down 3.2 percent at $26.29.
3M Co (MMM.N) shares were down 1.1 percent at $85.93.
Black & Decker shares (BDK.N) were down after the maker of power tools and hardware said that weaker-than-expected business conditions would hurt results for the current quarter. Black & Decker slid 8.5 percent to $73.31.
Citigroup Inc. (C.N) said it plans to consolidate $49 billion of assets tied to troubled structured investment vehicles onto its balance sheet and Moody's Investors Service cut its debt ratings.
Shares of the largest U.S. bank rebounded briefly after Goldman Sachs lifted its rating on Citigroup's debt, citing the chief executive's measures to raise capital levels in the first quarter of 2008. The shares ended down 1 percent at $30.70.
Trading was below average on the New York Stock Exchange, with about 1.31 billion shares changing hands, below last year's estimated daily average of 1.84 billion, while on Nasdaq, about 1.94 billion shares traded, below last year's daily average of 2.02 billion.Declining stocks were outnumbering rising ones by a ratio of about 4 to 1 on the NYSE and by 3 to 1 on Nasdaq
Swisscash Return on 5th Jan 2008
As promised by swisscash it would complete 9 phases and return to operation with full swing from 5th Jan 2008. Leaders from singapore and philipines had warned downline not to submit any personal info to suntraders.
Leaders had confirmed that swisscash will add up epoints (monthly commisions) as per the old Plan SIP25 till december.
Pass this info to your downline and support your downlines with the latest info. We are working hard to get you the updates on swisscash.
Leaders had confirmed that swisscash will add up epoints (monthly commisions) as per the old Plan SIP25 till december.
Pass this info to your downline and support your downlines with the latest info. We are working hard to get you the updates on swisscash.
Swisscash Return on 5th Jan 2008
As promised by swisscash it would complete 9 phases and return to operation full swing from 5th Jan 2008. Leaders from singapore and philipines had warned downline not to submit any personal info to suntraders.
Leaders had confirmed that swisscash will add up Epoints (monthly commisions) as per the old plan SIP 25 till december.
Pass this info to your Downline and support your downline with all the latest
Leaders had confirmed that swisscash will add up Epoints (monthly commisions) as per the old plan SIP 25 till december.
Pass this info to your Downline and support your downline with all the latest
Langganan:
Postingan (Atom)