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Showing some of the ways that the shorts have shown not to be credible including what has seemed to be forged documents. It also gives and example of Barry Minkow and how the shorts think.

This is about one of the best possible stocks to own and why they are above and beyond better than the rest of the China small cap stocks. It states who is invested, what groundwork has been done, shareholder policies, etc. It is worth a look as on top of this, China MediaExpress has amazing fundamentals and growth

ETF Funds - Now that China has overtaken the U.S. as the world’s biggest car market, investors should be asking themselves if China is simply a better place to put their money.

international investment - A small article in today’s China Daily reported a startling number that revealed the true depths of China recession - giving investors pause for any near-term recovery in the country’s blistering economic growth of years past.

International investment - China’s bold measures to confront the economic crisis make it a great place to invest, says Don Miller. And the best places to find profits are in infrastructure, consumer goods and energy sectors.

The jury is still out on whether China’s massive infrastructure-based stimulus package is the best way to rescue the economy. But Martin Hutchinson says it is great news for suppliers of raw materials. He picks 5 companies that will benefit from the injection of cash. Of those, Martin says Brazil’s iron ore producer Vale (ADR: RIO) is the best value buy.

Despite the historic trade agreement signed earlier today between Taiwan and China, Taiwan’s TSEC weighted index (^TWII) closed down 2.43%. It seems that fears of global recession trumped this historic economic breakthrough. This turn of events now presents investors with the question: Is it time to get into ^TWII?

Keith Fitz-Gerald says the recession that is now inevitable in the US and Eurozone will not necessarily evolve into a worldwide contraction. US influence in the global economy is waning, while China’s is growing rapidly. Keith says countries with high cash reserves and low external debt should bounce back strongest in the long term.

No Refuge in Emerging Markets

Posted by MurrayRothbard on October 23rd, 2008

You can stick a fork in the U.S. economy. It’s done. Hope for an abbreviated European slowdown has also evaporated. So now the world turns its desperate eyes towards the developing world. And it ain’t looking good there either.

Why You Cannot Afford to Ignore China

Posted by MurrayRothbard on October 22nd, 2008

China’s economy is slowing. But the country is still investing heavily in the future says Irwin Greenstein. He says the post-Olympic malaise will soon be replaced with massive construction and infrastructure projects that will last decades. Irwin thinks these are the trends that long-term investors cannot afford to ignore.

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