China Succession Intrigues (FXI, FXP, EEM, VWO, TAO)
Jim Trippon: US China watchers are eager to gauge the presumed next leader of China, Vice-President Xi Jinping, when he visits the White House next month. The visit, announced by the Read more…
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Jim Trippon: US China watchers are eager to gauge the presumed next leader of China, Vice-President Xi Jinping, when he visits the White House next month. The visit, announced by the Read more…
Jim Trippon: The latest economic data from China (NYSEArca:FXI), which included factory output, retail sales, fixed asset investment and the all-important GDP numbers, initially failed to move Read more…
Jim Trippon: China’s (NYSEARCA:FXI) recently released data showed that December consumer inflation had retreated to a 4.1 percent annual growth rate. China’s slowing economy as well as Read more…
Jim Trippon: With many in the financial media in the west raising their voice about China (NYSEARCA:FXI) as an economy in imminent danger of plunging off a cliff, it’s obvious that the Chinese government doesn’t share that view. The Chinese policymakers have been attempting to address and Read more…
JT Long: China (NYSEARCA:FXI) has become the $5.88 trillion question in the world financial equation for 2012. In an attempt to gauge the direction of this economic elephant, Cambridge House Read more…
Dian L. Chu: Goldman’s Jim O’Neill noted in a recent interview that the world’s future prosperity depends on China’s (NYSEARCA:FXI) growth. While we don’t totally agree with that assessment as we Read more…
Jim Trippon: With the report out from China’s official government sources on its latest inflation numbers, all indications are that China will continue its economic policies more toward easing. Inflation for November, measured by the consumer price index, rose a surprisingly low 4.2 percent compared to Read more…
David Zeiler: Despite the recent downturn in China’s (NYSEARCA:FXI) stock market, investors need to remain focused on the profit-generating long-term growth potential of the Asian powerhouse. Read more…
Dominique de Kevelioc de Bailleul: The dog fight between Thailand’s Marc Faber and Singapore’s Jim Rogers is on. The point of contention is: Which way will commodities prices go now that China’s (NYSEARCA:FXI) bubble economy appears to be headed for some sort of economic slowdown, Read more…
NYSE:EEM, NYSE:FXI, NYSE:FXP, NYSE:GLD, NYSE:SLV, NYSE:TAO, NYSE:VWO
Kerri Shannon: The damaging global economic effects that Europe’s unfolding debt crisis pose have caused a sharp reversal in China’s monetary policy – one that will lead to a greater expansion of the Red Dragon’s economy. Read more…
Jim Trippon: China’s Vice Premier Wang Qishan reiterated his country’s plan to meet the global economic slowdown by keeping ready $1.7 for trillion strategic spending. Most China watchers know this isn’t entirely news, as China has let it be known that it would deploy financial resources to meet the global Read more…
Jim Trippon: As the ongoing saga known as the European debt crisis has moved media attention from Greece over to Italy, at least temporarily, with seemingly daily shifts in sentiment regarding the possibilities for resolution or not, many of the players and observers have been eagerly seeking out China Read more…
Jim Trippon: China’s inflation slowed in October as its consumer price index rose 5.5 percent year over year. China’s consumer price index had been rising at least 6 percent year over year in the last several months, so October’s data represents what may be a significant drop. September’s inflation rate was Read more…
Jim Trippon: With China’s GDP slowing unexpectedly according to recent figures, some observers are wondering if its usually red hot economy may now be headed for a hard landing or not. China’s National Bureau of Statistics released data that showed China’s GDP grew 9.1 percent year over year for its third Read more…
Jim Trippon: With the recent news that China’s (NYSE:FXI) trade surplus was lower in September, many have observed that China’s trade surplus momentum is slowing down. The export advantage China has routinely had was lower in September as its trade surplus was $14.5 billion. August figures showed Read more…
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