China
Related Investment Information Sources |
China Domestic Sources
International
Sources
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Reports/Comments
from outside China |
-
Chinese investment in U.S.
projects breaks record (click
link for full story)
-
An
Investor's Guide to Buying
Influence in China (details)
-
China's murky ownership
rules: Who owns what? The
perils of investing where
the law is unclear (details)
-
How to find 'safe' stocks in
China (details)
-
China's boom beginning to
show cracks: Analysts (click
for details)
-
Why not to invest in
China: Let’s count the
reasons (click
for details)
-
'China Is the New
Dot-Com,' Says Outgoing
Securities Chief . (click
for details)
-
What's behind the rush for
HK IPOs? (details)
-
Locke: China Becoming 'Less
Welcoming' to Foreign
Companies (click
for details)
-
Population power: Should
investors bet on India or
China? (click
for details on the Economic
Times)
-
Chinese dating site files
for US listing (click
for details on Financial
Times)
-
China to ban foreign
investment in villas (click
for details on Reuters)
-
Is Warren Buffett's China
Car Deal A Smart Move? (click
for details on SFgate)
-
Special Report: Warren
Buffett's China car deal
could backfire (click
for details on Reuters)
-
Majority of mid-sized China
firms seek more capital:
survey (click
for details)
-
China's tightening weighs on
stocks (click for details)
-
Six Things To Do When
Launching A Business In
China
-
U.S. lawsuits against China companies
face hurdles (click
for details)
-
China’s wayward stock market - By Jamie
Chisholm (click
for details)
-
China's economy roars. Why do its
stocks stink? (click
for details)
-
Five Chinese trade tricks (click
for details on CNN Money)
-
Why Investors Need China in Their
Portfolios - China represents
more than 10% of the world's GDP,
adjusted for purchasing power, but few
investors have anywhere near a 10% China
allocation (click
for details on the Wall Street Journal)
-
Asia markets fall on China worries (click
for details)
-
Q+A - What do China YouTubes' IPOs offer
investors? (click
for details on Reuters)
-
Survey: China to be world's top
investment market in 2011 (click
for details)
-
China Jitters: Macro & Micro - Investors
in Chinese stocks were jolted last week
by both macro and micro events,
including a RINO International sell
recommendation.
(Click for details
on Barron's)
-
China's economic tightrope - By
Jonathan Fenby (Click
for details on BBC)
-
hina’s online-video market goes legit,
Commentary: And Apple gears up to crack
Chinese market - If there is one sector
that has lived up to the China
growth-story hype with truly big
numbers, it is media and telecoms,
with 450 million Web users, 800 million
cell-phones users, and roughly 370
million TV households. By Craig
Stephen -- (click
for details on Market Watch)
-
Chinese Economic Growth May Face `Big
Drop,' CIC Chairman Lou Jiwei Says (click
for details on Bloomberg)
-
The Morning Leverage: Why China Is The
Place To Be For PE (click
for details on the Wall Street Journal
Blogs)
-
China
property tax may start from next year
-media (click
for details on Reuters)
-
China Day Ahead: SouFun Holdings Surges
After IPO; Macau Casino Outlook (click
for details on Bloomberg)
-
Foreign investment in China - Even
harder than it looks (click
for details on the Economist)
-
China promises foreign investors
equal treatment (click
for details on Business week)
-
Is China's Real Estate Bubble
Becoming Visible? (click
for details of the blog on the Atlantic)
-
China vows to treat foreign business
fairly (click
for details on Financial
Times)
-
Foreign Investment in China Climbs for
12th Month (click
for details)
-
Why China is winning the economic war (click
for details)
-
Taiwan to allow investments in China
markets - By Robin Kwong (click for
details on
Financial Times)
-
China's challenge is ours, too -
Commentary: Building our relationship
with an evolving nation (click
for details on Market Watch)
-
Foreign Companies Shy Away From China
- Corporate executives are concerned by
what they see as barriers preventing
their entry into the market. (click
for details on Forbes)
-
Summary Box: China Promises Investors
Bigger Role (click
for details on ABC News)
-
How To Invest In China - There are
big traps to avoid and big trends to
catch (click
for details on Forbes)
-
China welcomes foreign investment (click
for details)
-
Google makes further investment in
Chinese music site (click
for details)
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Red White And Blue In Red China (click
for details)
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Did a China Indicator Lead the Market
Down? (click
for details)
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China - not yet a miracle - By Benjamin
A Shobert (click
for details)
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Don't plant seeds in the AgBank IPO -
Commentary: Shareholders won't harvest
many profits from deal (click
for details)
-
We like China a bit more than India:
Jeroen Touw, Head of Equities, APG Asset
Management (click
for details)
-
China – dispelling the myths (click
for details)
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China buys what everyone is selling:
Europe (click
for details)
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Global Stocks Rise
On Chinese Optimism
-
Private Equity Faces a Choice in China (click
for details)
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Destination China - Irish companies have
been decamping to China for years, so
what are the challenges and
opportunities of outsourcing? (click
for details)
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Expedia Charts Local Path in China
- Online Travel Company Relies on its
Autonomous Chinese businesses to Help
Lead International Expansion Efforts (click
for details)
-
Korean Crisis Brings Interesting
Investment Opportunities (click
for details)
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Foreign investment in China up 25
percent in April (click
for details)
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China's economic shift may put cap on
oil, gas consumption: Morgan Stanley
chief (click
for details)
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Red flags over China's hot property
market - By Gabriel Chen (click
for details)
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China's worst run for 16 months (click
for details)
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China's Stock Market and Economy May
Crash Within 12 Months (click
for details)
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Why China is the key to Europe's debt
crisis (click
for details)
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In China, real estate's meteoric rise
resembles start of U.S. bubble (click
for details)
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China bubbles away - By Robert M Cutler
(click
for details)
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Daniel H. Rosen: The End of China’s
Property Boom– A Bang or a Blip? (click
for details)
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China’s Home Prices to Fall 20% This
Year, BNP Says (click
for details)
- China
shares flat amid unease over housing
policy (click
for details)
- Fear of
bears running wild in China stocks (click
for details)
-
Shanghai exchange launches China's first
index futures (click
for details)
-
China's curbs on overheating property
market are a good start - Anyone who
thinks China doesn't have a property
bubble should listen to those in the
know. (click
for details)
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China
cools its enthusiasm for red-hot property market (click
for details)
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Doing Business in
China
-
The Trouble with
China - Google couldn't find a way to
work within Beijing's limits, and
employees of mining giant Rio Tinto
wound up behind bars. What's the key to
succeeding in the world's largest
marketplace?
-
It could be time
for China to back down - China may be
preparing to battle for economic
dominance with the US.
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Will China's
Economy Collapse?
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China can switch
from external to domestic demand
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How to shake hands
(wisely) with China's government
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China Film Group
plans domestic listing (link to CBC.ca)
-
Will China Dump
U.S. Debt? Blog by Michael Schuman
-
China Options Show
Biggest Risk of Stock Drop in Year (link
to Business Week)
-
China Property
Stocks ‘Worth Another Look,’ Credit
Suisse Says (link to Business Week)
-
China in a Dilemma
as Home Prices Soar (link to ABC news)
-
Is China an
investment sweet spot or a sour lesson?
By Tony Jackson
-
China’s rise good
news for everyone - By Daniel J. Ikenson
and Alec van Gelder
-
The China
Syndrome: Cooling the Economy - Beijing
Worries About Bubbles (link to Smart
Money)
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China Economy Will
Slow, Hurt Commodities, Faber Says (link
to Business Week)
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Tighter policy to
keep leash on China stocks, dog Asia
(link to Reuters)
-
Baidu tops
forecasts, sees gains from Google-China
spat (link to Reuters)
-
China's global
hunt for food security - Many see the
desire for Kazakhstani agricultural land
as another tentacle of Beijing's
creeping imperialism (link to Vancouver
Sun)
-
China's Taiwan
Stance May Damage U.S. Defense Firms -
Threatened sanctions over dealings with
the island could keep American players
from capitalizing on Chinese growth
(link to Forbes)
-
China's housing
market keeps on rising - Eager buyers
jostle as they queue up outside a city
centre housing complex in Beijing on a
cold Sunday morning. (link to BBC News)
-
China on the Edge - Ten Myths About
China for the New Decade
By Derek Scissors (link to the Cutting
Edge News)
-
Tightening fears bring China buy
opportunities - By Richard Wong (link to
Financial Times)
-
China's Stimulus Dilemma - Too much good
data is bad news for an economy growing
at 10.7%. (link to Forbes)
-
What's next for China's hot economy?
(link to The Globe and Mail)
-
China auto makers
must merge (link to Straits Times)
-
China's high-tech
boom (link to New Brunswick Business
Journal)
-
'China Syndrome'
at Davos - Blog By Stephanie Flanders
-
Japan's
love-bubbles for China - Hatoyama's
advances to China raise
-
China’s Line:
Trains, Soy Milk and a Dollar Peg (link
to the blog of New York Times)
-
Why The China
Property Bubble Doesn't Exist - By
Clay Fisher
-
50 emerging market
business leaders (link to Financial
Times)
-
China will remain
the dominant financial story this year,
conference hears
"China's economy has been heating up
fast, at 10.7-per-cent pace in Q4."
(link to Montreal Gazette)
-
China's economy -
Not just another fake: The similarities
between China today and Japan in the
1980s may look ominous. But China’s boom
is unlikely to give way to prolonged
slump
(link to the Economist)
-
Chinese economy –
and worry – surge (The Globe and Mail)
-
The 21st century
belongs to China - It will be world's
largest economy if incomes grow- By
William Hanley
-
CURRENCIES: Dollar
Stays Up Vs. Riskier Currencies On China
(CNN Money)
-
Back in China with
an eye on domestic politics - By Jamil
Anderlini
-
New Investment
Tools Approved by Regulator in China
(The New York Times)
-
Factbox: China
becomes the world's No.1 auto market
(Reuters)
-
Contrarian
Investor Sees Economic Crash in China
(The New York Times)
-
Fear of the dragon
- China’s share of world markets
increased during the recession. It will
keep rising (The Economist)
-
Prepare for
treacherous ride as risks multiply in
China - By Robert Cookson
-
China 9 Months
Investment in Africa Rises 77.5% to $875
Million (Bloomberg)
-
China Vows to Cut
Red Tape for Foreign Investors (ABC
News)
-
2 Ways to Play
China's Market - By Alex Kolb
-
Housing bubble
threatens China's boom (The Globe and
Mail)
-
China
Stocks May See ‘Full-Blown’ Bubble in
2010, BofA Says (Business Week)
-
Deep
concerns greet China’s rapid economic
growth (Business Daily Africa)
-
Google v.
Baidu: Which company will win China? (Blog
on CNN Money)
-
China video site
Youku raises $40 million for expansion
(SFgate.com)
-
Accept China as true partner (the
Economic Times)
-
Analysis: China
property boom may trigger policy action
(Money Control)
-
China pledges
steady as it goes - By Olivia Chung
-
Shaolin Temple's
kung fu monks prepare IPO - The
1,500-year-old Shaolin Temple, the
birthplace of kung fu, is preparing for
a 1bn yuan (£85m) initial public
offering (IPO), government sources have
confirmed.
-
China Can Boost
Growth as It Cools Property, Merrill
Says (Bloomberg)
-
China’s Property
Stocks Will Rebound, CLSA Says
(Bloomberg)
-
‘Bulls’ Control
China’s Stocks: Technical Analysis
(Bloomberg)
-
China showing
economic strength (UPI)
-
The China Bubble -
China's economy is humming along in high
gear, thanks to a fast-growing pile of
dicey debt. Such booms tend to end
badly. - By Gady Epstein
-
China real estate
faces bubble fears (The China Post)
-
Playing the China
boom - It's not too late to buy into the
Asian giant's stock rally. Just be
prepared for some whiplash. (CNN Money)
-
China remains top
investment spot for U.S. firms: study
(Reuters)
-
China should stop
property stimulus now -c.bank paper
(Forbes)
-
Taking a view on
China emerging stronger - By Peter Marsh
-
Hong Kong shares
up on bullish bank outlook; China rises
(Reuters)
-
China Stocks Rise
to a Three-Month High on Domestic
Spending (Bloomberg)
-
China data shows
world's workshop back in business
(Reuters)
-
China’s Economy
Strengthened in October, Boosting Yuan
Calls
(Bloomberg)
-
Property
investments in China to sustain
growth
(The Montreal Gazette)
-
Green
lights for Chinese investments -
CHINA'S push into Australia's
vibrant resources sector
continues to gain regulatory
approval, with $285.8 million in
deals approved this week.
(The Australian Business)
-
China's
Wild, Wild West - By one
measure, the new ChiNext is an
expensive place to find earnings
(The Globe and Mail)
-
Risks
and Rewards on China's New Stock
Board
(The New York Times)
-
Profits soar at
China's Baidu.com
-
China's leading
search engine company Baidu has reported
a sharp increase in profits but warned
revenue would be hit by moving to a new
advertising system.
(BBC News)
-
China’s investment
in Africa rises 78.6%
(Business Daily)
-
China ready to
launch Nasdaq-style index
(The China Post)
-
China roars back -
Stimulus spending is driving investment
and boosting domestic consumption, but
fears of overcapacity mount
- Carolynne Wheeler
-
Positive signs
about China's economy
(Montreal Gazette)
-
China launches own
'Nasdaq'
(Financial Times)
Click for more report links
(or news archives)
The major challenges
Americans are facing in doing business in China:
Sources:
White Paper of
2000 issued by China American Merchants Association |
Click for more China investment related information
and news |
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Funny Pictures from
China
Chinese
stock market in China is as slow as T'ai chi ch'uan |
Administration, Organizations,
Associations |
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China Related Stock Markets |
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Fields of Investment in China |
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Other China Investment Related Links |
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More
Readings about China Investment |
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List of Asia's Forbes 50
Companies (2008-09) |
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1.BHP Billiton (Australia)
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2.Brambles (Australia)
-
3.CSL (Australia)
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4.Origin Energy (Australia)
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5.Rio Tinto (Australia)
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6.Sims Group (Australia)
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7.Woolworths Ltd (Australia)
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8.Angang Steel (China)
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9.China Construction Bank (China)
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10.China Mobile (China)
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11.China Shenhua Energy (China)
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12.China Vanke (China)
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13.Citic Securities (China)
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14.Gome Electrical Appliances (China)
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15.Gree Electric Appliances (China)
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16.Lenovo Group (China)
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17.Sinopec (China)
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18.Suning Appliance (China)
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19.Tingyi Holding (China)
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20.ZTE (China)
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21.Cheung Kong Holdings (Hong Kong)
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22.Esprit Holdings (Hong Kong)
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23.Jardine Matheson Holdings (Hong Kong)
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24.Li and Fung (Hong Kong)
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25.Noble Group (Hong Kong)
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26.Bharat Heavy Electricals (India)
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27.Bharti Airtel (India)
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28.HDFC Bank (India)
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29.Infosys Technologies (India)
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30.ITC Ltd (India)
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31.Larsen and Toubro (India)
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32.Mahindra and Mahindra (India)
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33.Reliance Industries (India)
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34.Tata Steel (India)
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35.Wipro (India)
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36.Bank Rakyat (Indonesia)
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37.Chiyoda Corp (Japan)
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38.Nintendo (Japan)
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39.Yahoo Japan (Japan)
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40.IOI Corp (Malaysia)
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41. PLDT (Philippine)
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42.Doosan Corp (South Korea)
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43.LG Corp (South Korea)
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44.Acer (Taiwan)
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45.Asustek Computer (Taiwan)
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46.Delta Electronics (Taiwan)
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47.Hon Hai Precision Industry (Taiwan)
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48.HTC Corp (Taiwan)
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49.Wistron (Taiwan)
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50.Kasikornbank (Thailand) (ANI)
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More Related
Information Links:
-
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.)
-
China: full of opportunities, but investors beware,
Mar. 26, 2007 Cosmeticsdesign.com, Mar. 26, 2007
-
Report: China makes major new oil find, Business
Week, Mar. 28, 2007
-
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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