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China
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Blogs about China Investment |
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Related Information Links
to International Media |
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Greater China stock market summary. Quamnet
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Greater China stock market summary. Forbes
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The Report 'China Alcohol Market Report
2008' Provides Statistics of the Sales Scope of Such Alcohol and
Provides Predictions on Their Market Size from 2007 to 2011. Market
Watch
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Foreign direct investment in China surges
46% in first half. Market Watch
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Asian stocks close
mostly down on credit crisis, inflation woe.
ABS-CBN
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Health support for China investors. Asia Times
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Curbing China investment a mistake. The
Australia News
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China inflation pressures still large-stats
official. The Guardian
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China Bulls Get Shanghaied.
Forbes
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Hong Kong Companies May
Shut 20,000 China Plants as Costs Rise
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Don't
fear China inflation after fuel price rise. Reuters
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China fuel hike shakes up markets.
Asia Times
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China's Stocks Surge, Snapping Record
Decline; Sinopec Climbs. June 18, Bloomberg
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Hong Kong's stock index rises as mainland
China markets gain; Sinopec 7.8 percent. June 18, IHT
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Asian stocks close mostly up as China
rebounds. June 18, ABS CBN News
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China stocks fall will not persist
-adviser. Reuters India
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China may open its securities industry.
Daily Times
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Big post-Olympics China growth slowdown
unlikely: report. AFP
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China, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan: Asia
Local Bond Preview. June 9, 2008. Bloomberg.com
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China braces for leap in gas prices. LA
Times
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China's food crisis will exacerbate global shortage.
NDTV
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China shares outlook - Lower on share
supply worries. Forbes June 5, 2008
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China govt advisor says dollar moves to
dictate pace of yuan rise - report. Forbes
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China yuan ends at record 6.9230 to US
dollar vs 6.9465 in OTC trade. Forbes
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Greater China stock market summary. June 5,
08
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China yuan ends at 6.9465 to US dollar vs
6.9390 in OTC trade. June 5, Forbes
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China shoemakers move inland to flee rising
costs. Reuters
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China to remain world's
'engine of demand' for
metals, bulk
commodities- Moody's.
Forbes
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Why, In China, Gas Is $2.49 A Gallon.
Forbes
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China May Allow Foreigners to Buy Commodity
Futures Bloomberg
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Yuan to Rise
7%, China's Best Tool to Lower Inflation, Says UOB.
Bloomberg
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China Quake Won't Shake Economy. Business
Week
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China earthquake could fuel inflation
problem. National Post
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China Raises Bank Reserve Ratio as
Inflation Surges Bloogberg
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China inflation near 12-year high, c.bank
acts. The Guardian
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Hong Kong shares close lower on China
inflation worries, oil price spike. May 9, Forbes
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Producer prices in China on the rise. May
9, IHT
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China FX regulator says
to tighten monitoring May 9, Reuters, India
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China B-shares close
higher led by telecoms May 8, Forbes
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China yuan ends at 7.0052 to US dollar vs
6.9871 in OTC trade. May 8 Forbes
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Olympic Stocks Tumble in China on Profit Concerns .
Bloomberg.com
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China may be KFC's salvation as U.S. faces
recession. By Samuel Shen Reuters
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China Economy Risks
Overheating, Rates May Rise, Officials Say. May 5,
2008 Bloomberg.com
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China's April Inflation
Likely at 8.1%, Business Journal Says. Bloomberg.com
May 4, 2008
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Sell China, Buy Japan The Motley Fool
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China yuan central parity rate
set at record 7.0252 to dollar vs 7.0436
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Greater China stock market
summary. CNN Money Mar. 19
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China yuan ends at 7.1081 to usd vs 7.1060 in OTC
trade. Forbes
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The major challenges
Americans are facing in doing business in China:
Sources:
White Paper of
2000 issued by China American Merchants Association |
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Investment in Mainland China |
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More Related
Information Links:
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Investors required to sign risk notices on
warrants
Aug. 2, 2007 - Chinese mainland stock
exchanges started Wednesday to require investors to sign risk
acknowledgement memos with brokers before they begin trading warrants, in
the latest attempt to curb potential irregularities.
- Agricultural, real estate shares push index to new record
May 23, 2007 - After a quick and deep slip, Chinese stocks bounced back
and advanced to a new record high today, led by companies in the
agriculture and real estate sectors. (Click
for details.)
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China: full of opportunities, but investors beware,
Mar. 26, 2007 Cosmeticsdesign.com, Mar. 26, 2007
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Report: China makes major new oil find, Business
Week, Mar. 28, 2007
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China's economy, inflation growing, Chicago
Tribune, April 20, 2007.
Regulations
for overseas stock exchanges' agencies
Xinhua
Jan. 14, 2006 - China will not approve the establishment of overseas
bourses' agencies before regulations on the management of the business are
made, a senior securities regulatory official said Saturday. The country
is mulling over measures to regulate overseas bourses' agencies in the
country, Tu Guangshao, vice chairman of the China Securities Regulatory
Commission (CSRC) said. Applications of overseas stock exchanges to set
agencies in China will be examined and approved only after the regulations
come out, said Tu, without elaboration. Earlier reports said that China
has granted applications of the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq
Stock Market. Stock exchanges from the United States, Britain, Singapore
and the Republic of Korea have launched a series of promotions in China
over recent years, encouraging local enterprises to go public there.
However, analysts worry that overseas listing of domestic companies,
especially those report outstanding performance and with high-growth
potentials, will slower the growth of China's capital market.
China's foreign debts exceed US$300
billion
At the end of September this year, China's outstanding foreign debts
amounted to US$304.976 billion (excluding those of Hong Kong, Macao and
Taiwan regions), which is $23.931 billion or 8.52 percent more than at the
end of 2005, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange announced in
Beijing on Thursday. Medium and long-term debts accounted for $136.387
billion, an increase of $11.485 billion. Short-term debts comprised
$168.589 billion or 55.28 percent of the total. Of the total $207.876 of
registered debts, sovereign debt ¨C borrowed by ministries under the State
Council ¨C was $33.888 billion, 16.3 percent of the total, while the
amount borrowed by financial institutions was $66.041 billion, or 31.77
percent. Foreign-funded enterprises borrowed $57.227 billion, accounting
for 27.53 percent, and debt owed by foreign financial institutions in
China reached $46.707 billion, 22.47 percent. Domestic enterprises
borrowed $3.746 billion, or 1.8 percent of the total; leasing companies
borrowed $97.1 billion and other institutions $267 million.
China relaxes QFII
rules to attract more overseas investment
BEIJING, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- China
announced Friday its revised rules on qualified foreign institutional
investors (QFII) in a bid to attract more non-speculative overseas
investment for its stock markets. Under the new rules, more overseas
foreign institutional investors will be eligible as qualified
investors in the Chinese A-share markets as the threshold for QFII was
slashed significantly. The China Securities Regulatory Commission,
which made public the rules in cooperation with the country's foreign
exchange watchdog and the central bank, said it will also increase the
quota of foreign investment in the Chinese stock markets.
Half of China's listed
companies exaggerate profits
China
Daily, Nov. 10, 2006 - More than half of China's listed companies
would have exaggerated profits in their 2005 annual reports if
certified accountants had not stopped them, the China Institute of
Certified Public Accountants (CICPA) said. In a report released
Thursday, the CICPA said 776 Chinese listed firms out of a total of
1,371 were ready to declare 38.8 billion yuan (4.9 billion U.S.
dollars) of fictive profits in their 2005 draft annual reports if
accountants had not intervened. (Click
for full report)
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