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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 10:44 am Post subject: |
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Buffet buys brands--which are exceptionally hard to find in native form. Indeed, after a century of ripping off and "decontenting" it's own, the chinese defy many of the nation builders of old like food, retail, autos, submarines and medicine. Baidu and China Rail are perhaps the exception that proves the rule. Petro China and Bank of China are probably the biggest expression of nationalism--but hardly a brand.
If for only this reason alone, I continue to say this is the Best of All Possible Depressions. Meanwhile, what brand springs to mind for Warren when he's thinking china?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QBKwTSBBn7U _________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 6:58 am Post subject: |
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While London finds a new fret I will say right now that the Chinese (and thus the brazilians) will fund the ESFS in a meaningful way. Indeed they aleady are. This is the secret behind the euro's stalwartness this last six months. _________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Fri Oct 14, 2011 8:01 am Post subject: |
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A survey of 1207 Chinese firms found that 51.3% had put money into the underground banking system. 42.7% had taken money from private lenders. _________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Thu Oct 06, 2011 9:52 am Post subject: |
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Just coincidence that the Rail crash happened in Wenzhou? The "shadow" here is on generational family savings:
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2011/10/06/695126/chinas-shadow-banking-sector-needs-a-bail-out-says-socgen/
| Quote: | | According to the PBoC’s Wenzhou branch office, the size of the underground banking in the city is estimated to have reached CNY 110bn, equivalent to 18% of Wenzhou’s CNY 602bn formal bank loans. The central bank also estimates that close to 90% of households and 60% of local enterprises are participating in this credit boom. |
_________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Sun Aug 14, 2011 9:31 am Post subject: |
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Sound familiar?
| Quote: | Its levers of control within the industry have grown subtler. Directors who produce unauthorized films that overtly challenge the government can face temporary work bans or more serious harassment. But more often, officials rely on the acquiescence of directors who seek to reach a broad audience. China does not forbid independent filmmaking, but it does control distribution, so filmmakers who want their work to be widely seen end up submitting themselves to a capricious censorship process. Access to a lucrative domestic market is at stake, and government support can help international sales, so censors have become gatekeepers to money and fame.
The drive among prominent directors to expose uncomfortable truths appears to have diminished as the country has grown wealthier. Once-rebellious artists, like the director Zhang Yimou, have been showered with largess after agreeing to work within the system they once disdained.
“Together,” which was submitted to censors, avoids mentioning the government’s long cover-up of H.I.V. and AIDS in China. And Mr. Zhao was asked by officials to make a number of cuts. One Chinese film expert, after watching “Together” in Hong Kong, said Mr. Zhao had “gone to the other side.” |
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/14/world/asia/14filmmaker.html?_r=1&hp _________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Sat Aug 06, 2011 9:12 pm Post subject: |
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The little train that couldn't:
http://www.economist.com/node/21525419
| Quote: | | This approach does not fly with the Wenzhou crash. The leaders have pinned their own and the country’s prestige to high-speed rail. From a standing start, China has built the world’s longest high-speed network—a genuine achievement, but one the leaders exaggerated. High-speed rail was a patriotic symbol and the next great export. Yet even before the crash, the network was plagued by breakdowns. Earlier this year the railways minister was sacked on suspicion of vast corruption. A darling programme is in trouble. |
_________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Sat Apr 30, 2011 5:45 am Post subject: |
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You can't have a "world class" city without "no-smoking" signs--er, good luck with that:
http://www.latimes.com/health/la-fg-china-smoke-20110430,0,1092056.story
| Quote: | | China National Tobacco Corp. is a state-owned cigarette monopoly and the world's largest tobacco company. In 2009, more than 7.5% of government revenue, or $77.3 billion, came from taxes and profits related to tobacco, according to the China Daily. |
_________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Sat Jan 22, 2011 8:34 am Post subject: |
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Amazingly the chinese drop their "indigenous innovation" campaign. Viewing Korea as what it always has been, war with the West, we have to say the exercises late last year that included a US General pushing for live fire we're a turning point. China was suddenly on the defensive all across its "sphere of influence" and the prospect of becoming the "bully" that worked so well against America hit home. Now, after a grand gala in Washington, everything is changed.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/22/opinion/22sat1.html?hp=&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1295706048-z8JadYVw2GVUAxA9ywWo3Q
Once again, politics anyone?
I'll make an exaggerated prediction here to underscore the point: we have seen china's peak trade surplus--at least in our lifetimes Thanks for that Jimmy Rogers. Sorry I didn't (directly) take your advice. But now you can retire. Demographics will be the kicker. _________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Tue Jan 11, 2011 9:49 am Post subject: |
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Stealth Fighter sent airborne on Gates arrival:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/12/world/asia/12fighter.html?_r=1&hp
This could backfire when it is revealed how little "china" is in this chinese aircraft. But time will tell. _________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Mon Sep 27, 2010 12:29 pm Post subject: |
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Ratings oligopoly crashing head-on with china. Between Dodd-Frank and this no wonder Buffett is getting out. It will be a pivotal moment when "developing naitions" (which China still likes to claim) become the standard of truth (state secrets forbidding).
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2010/09/27/353781/dagong-fires-back/ _________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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Posted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 2:59 am Post subject: |
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You keep your banks while we raise you one:
| Code: | | China’s rules would be stricter than capital requirements announced Sept. 12 by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision in response to the global financial crisis, and give lenders less time to comply. |
| Quote: | | The capital requirement would cut loan growth to 12 percent to 16 percent, a rate that more closely tracks nominal gross domestic product expansion, from 20 percent now as banks try to avoid triggering the “countercyclical” buffer, Ma and Xu said. China’s banks extended a record $1.4 trillion of new loans in 2009, fueling asset bubbles and concerns about bad debts. |
Of course Tier 1 targets of 8 percent is where it "naturally" wanted to be.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-16/china-s-stricter-bank-capital-rules-to-restrict-loan-growth-goldman-says.html _________________ Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday! |
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rffrydr Moderator


Joined: 30 Oct 2005 Posts: 16440 Location: Sunny California
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