Getting a business loan in China and why it won’t happen for your company

January 3rd, 2012 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in Bank

Getting a business loan in China and why it won’t happen for your company

Article by Matt

Last year a friend of mine came to me with a project for an American company that was trying to get a business loan from a major bank here in China.

I asked some banking lawyers in Hong Kong what they thought the client’s chances for obtaining a loan in China were and they all agreed that it would be pretty unlikely.

Basically it is most unlikely that a foreign company without a track record of dealing with Chinese banks will obtain credit lines from Chinese banks.Chinese banks are moving toward becoming standard Western commercial banks – they always look for profitable and safe investment, but this is a very slow movement.

When they do extend credits to what may look like risky borrowers, it is always because either they are pressed by local governments or some key bank managers are otherwise influenced in the decision making.

In practice, local governments may act in favor of major FIEs that matter to local economy, but perhaps not a “pure” foreign company.

So, unless they have a track record of doing a significant amount of business in China or they have funded major investments in infrastructure development or they employ a large number of Chinese workers they don’t have much of a chance.You might be able to get financing if you can persuade a local government to give the banks a nudge, meaning you either employee a huge number of local Chinese in your company or JV or you have enough pull with the local government to get them to go to bat for you.

It got me to thinking about Chinese banking, the big 4 Chinese banks have some of the largest holdings of bank in the world, how do they make loans? Why would foreign businesses have such a difficult time getting funding? The answer comes down to a practice called “Window Guidance”.

Window Guidance is a favorite tool of the PBOC, this is an idea that is borrowed from the Japanese banking system.

The PBOC uses window guidance to “guide” the lending polices of the big 4 banks.

This is accomplished through a combination of moral pressure, to support the national government’s policy wishes, and the hidden threat of “complications” with money supplier from the central bank, as the PBOC controls this lending.

By allowing the market to make an “educated guess” as to what the lending policies of China’s biggest banks will be, the PBOC allows the largest banks to appear to act independently but in actuality, they are somewhere in between the planned economy and a completely market based economy.

While the central bank does not technically direct the lending of the big four banks, they do apply pressure in the banks to follow the governments policies.

The big four banks generally adhere to these policies because the PBOC provides the banks with loans.

These direct loans from the PBOC to the commercial banks are a very useful tool in maintaining the stability of the financial system.

Providing banks with a gift wrapped mini bail out allows them to work through difficult times without being completely accountable to shifts in the market.

The opposing argument, often heard regarding U.S. financial market bailouts, is that these types of low interest loans will encourage the banks to engage in risky behavior with less restraint, because they expect to be taken care of.

These financial institutions will then become too big or important to fail, forcing a government to take more responsibility in overseeing the operations.

Having the government’s monetary policy so closely intertwined with what are regarded as independent private banks in the west is a troubling thought for those that tout the free market over all.

But judging by the manner in which recklessness and greed played such an integral part in the deep troubles of the American and European banking systems, maybe having a government oversight committee is an intelligent move.

Giving the committee some real power to act and intervene when it sees potential abuse seems to be an intelligent solution to the West’s current banking system difficulties.

Window guidance is a very important tool for the PBOC, it will play a major part in the Chinese government’s 2009 economic stimulus plan.

The central bank has made it very clear that they expect their contributions to the economic stimulus package to be matched, on a 1 to 1 ratio, by the big four central banks.

This is also a policy that the West should strongly consider using, there needs to be some balance between allowing a free market to guide itself and making the big national banks into puppets that are incapable of making intelligent decisions of their own free will.

The type of cooperation that China promotes between the responsible government agency and the banking sector is a model that the west should attempt to emulate with the shares they have acquired “bailing out” western banking entities.

Matt is apart of Southern Perspective SZ and has been working in China for the last six years.










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Peter Thomas Senese’s THE DEN OF THE ASSASSIN Surrounding Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea’s Desire to Create a New World Order Exclusively on Amazon

December 29th, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in News

Los Angeles, CA & New York, CA (PRWEB) December 21, 2011

In the wake of recent international events, including Iran’s capture of a U.S. drone spy plane by possible cyber-hacking combined with Russia’s immediate protective agreement to develop major oil fields in southern Iran, along with the death of North Korea’s isolationist dictator, Kim Jong, II, author Peter Thomas Senese is pleased to announce the release of his geopolitical thriller The Den of the Assassin on e-book exclusively on Amazon. E-book versions of The Den of the Assassin will be released in Spanish, French, and German in January, 2012.

The multi-dimensional plot is set on Wall Street and is based upon historical events that jettison the reader on a thrilling global geopolitical journey into the hidden and unseen worlds that exists within nations that have different global agendas than the United States and the West, including but not limited to China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran. Most concerning, as each nation has become more reliant on one another in our global society, a new level of extraordinary vulnerability to our national security has been created, one perhaps we may not be prepared for. In The Den of the Assassin, believe readers will find the uniquely accurate information on this subject that is carefully weaved through an intricate, entertaining storyline to be quite fascinating – and disturbing.

Peter Thomas Senese commented, “In THE DEN OF THE ASSASSIN it was my hope and intent to create a historical novel readers will not want to put down due to a cleverly created plot combined with a high dose of important facts and information that I believe important to share that when combined, drives the story in a way that both entertains, educates, and causes my readers to think about the subject matter presented. As our global society continues to shift, the subject matter presented in THE DEN OF THE ASSASSIN is highly relevant.”

Amazon Hall of Fame book reviewer Daniel Jolley stated, “This is one seriously good thriller. Billed as “a novel of international finance and espionage,” Den of the Assassin is a super-realistic exploration of frightening possibilities, unsurpassed heroism, Lucifer-like evil, and terrorism of the worst kind . . . Peter Thomas Senese does a masterful job traversing the inner hallways of diverse institutions as he slowly brings all of these diverse elements together for a slam-bang climax … “Peter Thomas Senese displays a wealth of knowledge of geopolitics, espionage, and international finance, describing all the technical intricacies of the story’s elements and implications with great attention to detail -without ever letting the pace get bogged down or become confusing to the reader. He also keeps a number of secrets close to the vest, saving them for just the right time in the story . . . Many a writer of thrillers seem to drop the ball somewhere in the middle of their novels, but Peter Thomas Thomas’ knowledge of geopolitics, international finance, and 21st century terrorist threats keeps the fires of detailed complexity and story evolution stoked and red-hot for the entire ride. Tyler Boxter is no James Bond, but Den of the Assassin proves to be just as exciting as any 007 caper – and much more realistic.”

Peter Thomas Senese is a historical fiction novelist. His deeply personal Chasing the Cyclone – a story of a father’s unending love and quest to reunite with his internationally abducted child – was recently released in E-book format on Amazon. 100% of the author’s royalty earnings generated from sales related to The Den of the Assassin and Chasing the Cyclone will be donated to the I CARE Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping stop child abduction.

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Marketsensus: China Pharmaceutical Market Shows Signs of Phenomenal Growth of 26.5%

December 8th, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in Forex

Hong Kong (PRWEB) September 15, 2011

This Marketsensus report provides complete overview on the China pharmaceutical Market

The Chinese hospital prescription pharma market generated sales of $ 22.9 billion in 2009, with an annual growth rate of 26.5% between 2008 and 2009. Key growth drivers include Chinas support of foreign direct investment, low operating costs, growing economic wealth and a government stimulus of $ 125 billion to be spent on healthcare reforms during 20092011.

Overview of socioeconomic and demographic trends, healthcare system, regulation, pricing and reimbursement and intellectual property position in China

Assesses the size of the Chinese pharmaceutical market by prescribing setting, therapy area, leading brands and by leading companies

Examines the Chinese generics and biosimilars landscape in terms of regulatory issues, level of penetration, key players and degree of brand erosion

Quantifies the R&D and manufacturing infrastructure for the leading pharmaceutical companies, including key metrics and domestic M&A analysis

Report Highlights

The combination of Chinas rising population to 2030, plus the expansion of the elderly population, as a proportion of the total population, will create additional pressure on the government in terms of healthcare provision especially for the elderly.

According to the Ministry of Health, by the end of October 2010, the three public health insurance schemes covered 1,233 million Chinese citizens, accounting for more than 90% of the total population.

Domestic manufacturers dominate the Chinese generics market, accounting for nearly 99% of generics sales of both branded and unbranded generics. The domestic industry has expanded rapidly as companies have improved their manufacturing capacities.

Reasons to Purchase

Evaluate the evolving regulatory landscape and the impact of pricing and reimbursement controls on market access in China

Quantify the size and growth of the prescription pharmaceutical market in China, analyzing key therapy areas, brands and companies

Assess drivers and resistors of generic and biosimilars uptake in China

About the Strategic Pharmaceutical Analysis Team 2

Geographic specific reports: 2

Global issue reports: 2

Executive Summary 3

Introduction 3

Strategic scoping and focus 4

Key findings – Healthcare drivers and resistors in China 5

China – Socio-demographic and economic analysis 8

Socio-demographic trends 8

Socio-economic trends 9

China – Healthcare system and drug regulatory analysis 11

Healthcare expenditure 11

Healthcare system 12

Healthcare insurance 12

Regulatory issues 12

Pricing and reimbursement issues 13

China – Prescription pharmaceutical sales analysis 15

Pharmaceutical market size 15

Leading therapy areas 15

Leading prescription pharmaceutical brands 15

Leading pharmaceutical companies 15

China – Drug expiry analysis 17

China generics market 17

China brand erosion post patent expiry 17

China biosimilars market 17

China – Pharmaceutical Industry Infrastructure analysis 19

Related reports 21

Upcoming related reports 21

Table of Contents 22

2. China – Socio-demographic and economic analysis 23

China – Key findings 23

Socio-demographic trends 23

Socio-economic trends 23

China – Demographic trends 25

Chinese population growth rate expected to slow 25

Birth rate in China is declining 28

Proportion of elderly people in the China expected to rise 29

Life expectancy will continue to increase in China and across other markets 30

China – Disease burden 31

No longer Kingdom of Bicycles, but still Kingdom of Cigarettes 33

Demographic changes lead to increase in more Westernized chronic conditions 33

Tuberculosis prevalence is high but is declining 34

Hepatitis incidence increasing despite universal vaccination coverage 34

China – Regional score card analysis 36

Mainland China is divided into 31 administrative regions (22 provinces, 5 autonomous regions, and 4 municipality cities) 37

Total healthcare scores of different regions in China 38

The eastern coastal provinces are more densely populated than the western interior 39

Disparity of economic development directly impacts the healthcare expenditure 40

Most hospitals are situated in big cities in China 45

Lifeexpectancy is higher in the eastern coastal provinces 51

China – Political climate 52

Overview of Chinese governmental departments and healthcare reform policies 52

China – Economic climate 55

Government’s stimulus plan compensates for the global recession 55

Pharma has historically been relatively well insulated from the recession 58

China – Business environment 59

Factors responsible for driving China’s strong GDP growth 59

Foreign direct investment is contributing to economic growth 59

Low cost manufacturing drivers exports 60

Taxation system in China – complex but R&D tax credits exist 61

Corruption remains widespread 61

Cultural differences and the language barrier can impact business with Western companies 62

China’s unemployment rate – official versus unofficial reports 62

Renminbi (RMB) appreciation and its impact on the pharmaceutical industry 63

3. China – Healthcare system and drug regulatory analysis 66

China – Key findings 66

Healthcare expenditure 66

Healthcare system 66

Healthcare insurance 66

Regulatory issues 67

Pricing and reimbursement issues 67

China – Healthcare expenditure 69

China – Healthcare system 71

Regulatory healthcare bodies 71

Ministry of Health sets the high-level policies 72

Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security oversees the national medical insurance system 72

The National Council for Social Security Fund is often surrounded by scandals 72

China Insurance Regulatory Commission regulates private insurance sector 72

National Development and Reform Commission oversees overall policy development 72

State Administration for Industry and Commerce 73

China’s healthcare reform 73

China healthcare reform, 2010-2020 The Glorious Ten? 75

China – Health insurance 77

China – Social health insurance 78

The introduction of the urban employee Basic Medical Insurance System has improved health insurance coverage in cities 79

The unemployed are offered a very basic health insurance 80

Rural health insurance coverage is increasing but the benefits are insufficient 80

China – Private health insurance 82

Primary versus secondary care 83

China – Regulatory issues 84

State Food and Drug Administration is the watchdog for drug registration and safety issues 84

Evolution of the SFDA 85

Drug classification in China 87

Drug Monitoring Period 87

Drug registration in China 87

New Provisions for Drug Registration led to a fall in drug approvals 91

New pathway for expedited drug approval 91

GMP regulation in China 92

Intellectual property protection 93

State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO) 93

China provides 6 years of data exclusivity for pharmaceuticals, but it is not applied adequately in practice

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Weaving Back the Hands of Time at the China National Silk Museum

October 25th, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in Bank

Weaving Back the Hands of Time at the China National Silk Museum

Article by Pushpitha Wijesinghe

Pleasantly situated along the banks of the West Lake in Zhejiang’s Hangzhou City, the China National Silk Museum is the premier authority on what has for generations been perceived as an indigenously Chinese industry. Built in the early 90′s, the museum offers guests a comprehensive look at the country’s proficiency in creating the world’s finest silks, its method, its history and illustrious legacy that still holds true to form today.

Divided into eight impressive halls, the museum houses a Weaving Hall, the Preface Hall, Folk-custom Hall, Relics Hall, Modern Achievements Hall and a Dyeing Hall. The Preface Hall documents the 5000 year old history of China’s silk tradition with captivating exhibits, facts and figures that trace back the birth and evolution of the industry. As the first country to use sericulture and filature techniques it is also important to note that it was in China that silk was first used to create garments. The significance of the Silk Road in world commerce in the past is also examined as it served as China’s connection to the rest of the ancient world. Another highlight is the Relics Hall which houses relics from China’s prosperous dynasties with exhibits that were literally unearthed along the Silk route and from destinations across the country. The prized possession in this quarter is undoubtedly the 5,630 year old brocade fragment which is supposedly the oldest silk material ever found. The complicated process of producing silk is dealt with in detail at the Weaving and Dyeing Halls while guests can also partake in weaving activities thanks to the museum’s interactive exhibits. The growth of China’s silk industry and its modern stature, the business of silk trading and silk research findings are found in the Modern Achievements Hall while free audio guides, informative brochures and professional guides are also provided. Accessible to the disabled, visitors can also buy souvenirs, trinkets and silk products at the museum store in addition to refreshments which are available in the Tea House.

Quietly nestled on West Lake’s shores with stunning views over Xiling Bridge and Solitary Hill Island, the Shangri-La Hotel Hangzhou is a Hangzhou luxury hotel with an enviable location. Home to a wide range of recreational activities and cosy accommodation, this stylish Hangzhou hotel also offers peace of mind away from the bustle of the city.

Pushpitha Wijesinghe is an experienced independent freelance writer. He specializes in providing a wide variety of content and articles related to the travel hospitality industry.










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Google Ends Censorship in China

September 3rd, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in News

Google Ends Censorship in China

It was January 13th that Google announced to stop censoring search result in China after a lot of cyber attack they found out in mid- December last year from China, which made off with intellectual property of Google and in case Chinese government does not like, it will pull out this market. After the investigation, it became more obvious that lots of other countries were similarly targeted, including finance, technology, Internet, media, and chemical.

 

Google has declared to stop censoring search results in China

 

The investigation showed that lots of Gmail accounts from US, China, Europe has been attacked by third parties via phishing scams or malware but not a security breach at Google.Despite of Google‘s preventative measures, the attacks’ nature has pushed the search giant to go a further step.

 

Google told that it no longer wants to censor China

 

Google told that it no longer wants to censor China, so it will discuss whether to provide this country with unfiltered results.

If that isn’t viable, Google will be likely to shut down Google.cn and its offices in this country.

 

The Chinese’s reaction to Google’s announcement about stopping censoring

The largest news website of Tibet, phayul.com has shut itself down in honor of SFT’s protest against Google’s censorship in China and Tibet

I am 45 years old.I am now working for a technology company. I love reading book and writing technology article.

china@importgenius com,intitle:Google Censorship in China

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Outlook 2011 & The Next Decade: Is The Smart Money Right About China?

August 9th, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in Loans

Outlook 2011 & The Next Decade: Is The Smart Money Right About China?

By Dian L. Chu, EconForecast

China has been ranked as the top growing country among the G20 since 2001 and is expected to retain that title for at least another five years (See Growth Chart). However, the news coming out of China for the past three months has not been good. It is looking more and more that it is not a question of if China is a bubble and going to burst, but when.

The country has major infrastructure issues, troubling population dynamics, poorly aligned employment outcomes, inflation problems, a real estate bubble, an opaque and potentially insolvent banking system (had mark-to-market accounting been applied), geo-political problems with North Korea and Taiwan, and an underperforming stock market in 2010 (see stock comparison chart).

Smart Money Rushing Out

While the hot money is flooding into China, the smart local money is doing everything they can to get their money outside of China, which partly explains why Shanghai SE Composite has underperformed other markets for the past year or so (see Comparison Chart).

The many issues of China could conspire to become the biggest train wreck waiting to happen, and potentially dwarf any little budget problems in Europe by a factor of ten.

Big Trouble In Big China

China has a population related societal structural problem. The nation has tried to utilize the vast manpower to its advantage over the last two decades building a powerhouse manufacturing economy through the availability of low cost workers, which supplied the world with lower cost goods.

Nevertheless, the harsh reality is that the nation’s infrastructure, quality jobs, food, and overall resources are too scarce to support such mass population, while achieving the government`s goal of a smooth transition to a developed middle class to sustain an internal demand model going forward.

If you think having riots in Greece over the pension retirement age being raised is bad, just wait till riots breaking out in Beijing and other cities over a 90 cent bowl of noodle soup now costing four dollars due to food shortages, and a runaway inflation problem. 

Loose Lending = Non-performing Projects

This is only reinforced by some of the news events taking place over the last three months. Let`s start with the raising of banks reserve requirements by the central bank, which is the sixth such increase in 2010. 

These measures are meant to curb the excess lending which has fueled much of the overbuilding and real estate speculation occurred over the past two years as China`s central bank initially wanted to avert a recession by artificially creating demand for workers and construction projects to replace lagging demand from the developed economies.

The problem is that too much lending has occurred, and bad lending at that. Because of the cheap available credit, now you have cement companies and manufacturing firms getting bank loans to invest in endeavors such as real estate, which is outside of their core expertise and competency.

Real Estate Misery Loves Company – China & Spain???
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?The result is a bunch of excess inventory and poorly thought-out construction projects which have no means of recouping the initial investment needed to repay the bank loans.

This practice is similar to Spain`s situation now where they have entire uninhabited building complexes that have yet to be marked to market, and will probably ultimately be demolished. But at least in Spain, even though it was a construction boom, it was engineered by developers in Spain, and not by some manufacturing outfits like those in China.

So, multiply the bad business project factor by ten and you get an understanding of the magnitude of bad loans on the books of Chinese banks. The problem is being further exacerbated by the practice similar to Spain`s of banks making additional loans to the businesses just so that they can then turnaround and pay back the interest owed on the original loans.

The only way this would work out is if these projects magically develop revenue streams. Unfortunately, in the case of Spain, a 20% unemployment rate, coupled with a still overvalued housing market in which prices still need to come down significantly, would suggest that by the time the Spanish economy recovers enough to support the excess inventory, the abandoned projects are run down and uninhabitable.

A similar scenario could play out in China as well.

True Smart Money Wary of the Write-off Domino 

Furthermore, China`s practice of overbuilding at the height of real estate valuations makes even haircuts on loan write-offs an untenable practice for banks, and by further throwing good money after bad, the ultimate mark- to-market effect could be catastrophic for Chinese Banks.

This is the main reason all the major Chinese banks have gone to the market in 2010 to raise more capital before investors wise up to the underlying deficits these banks face, as these bad loans eventually would need to be written off the books.

Victor Shih, a Northwestern University professor estimates that Chinese local governments borrowed some 11.4 trillion renminbi at the end of 2009, and that local government financing loans to be roughly one-third of China’s 2009 GDP. 

Shih reckons the most likely scenario over the next few years is that there would be increases of non-performing loans ratio from local governments. This would require a large scale of recapitalization of the Chinese banking system, which would eat up a large share of China’s foreign exchange reserves and possibly slow down growth.

I do believe Beijing is quite capable of  a few bailouts and surviving a widespread banking crisis, but this most definitely will not bode well for the financial markets.  That’s most likely why you see insiders removing capital from direct exposure to the inevitable re-pricing that will happen throughout Chinese markets from real estate to the stock market. 

This can be seen at this early stage by the underperformance of the Chinese stock market compared to other global markets. Remember, foreigners cannot invest directly in these markets, so these capital outflows are truly the smart money.

Logistic Gridlock Crimping the Middle Class

Next let`s look at the recent news regarding a severe cutback in automobile registrations in Beijing to 240,000 in 2011 from 700,000 registered in 2010 by the municipal government. Other large cities in China are bound to follow. This is most likely related to the reported 9-day traffic jam on the Beijing-Tibet expressway in August, and other extended traffic jams throughout China in 2010.

China is trying to build infrastructure projects after the fact; whereas with proper central planning these should have been established far ahead of the massive transition from a rural, agricultural based populous to that of a modern, large city based business and manufacturing concentration.

Simply put, it is impossible for all the Chinese citizens who want and can afford automobiles to be able to own and utilize this form of transport without a total breakdown in the transportation system. We are seeing the early stages of complete and counterproductive gridlock in the transportation system of China, and it is only going to get worse over the next decade.

No Jobs for College Grads

For all the talk about how China graduates more engineers each year, and other college educated young people who have strong backgrounds in the hard sciences than most developed nations combined, this is actually another sign of problems to come over the next decade in China.

China`s wealth and emergence into the second largest business economy hasn`t been built around the need for these types of mind and skill set. So literally you have a large mismatch between the types of available jobs in China, that are supported by the heavy manufacturing and construction intensive focus of the past twenty years, to that of the recently educated pool of graduates who have grown in sizable numbers over the past five years.

The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Waste

This results in a large human asset class that China is currently wasting, as most of the newly educated workforce is working in jobs which require little or no advanced education at the university level. So you have highly educated university graduates in areas like engineering and accounting working low level service and sales jobs that pay less than many manufacturing jobs.

In short, there are too many highly educated Chinese citizens graduating each year for the number of jobs available needing their skill set because China`s economic model isn`t built around these type of jobs. This type of misaligned employment outcomes never ends well; it usually manifests itself in increased civil and social unrest.

8% Inflation in 2011

The next major challenge for China is a skyrocketing inflation, which at its root is the fact that there are too many people chasing too few resources. This fundamental flaw in population dynamics underpins many of the problems that China faces going forward.

Recent CPI data for November illustrates the inflation problem in China with a reading of 5.1% from a year ago comparison, this is up from a 4.4% reading for the previous month. Couple this with the latest 4% hike in fuel prices in China because of rising oil prices, you could expect future CPI and PPI reports to reflect even higher rates of inflation.

For now, most of the year over year spike has revolved around higher food prices as energy has mainly been flat for 2010 thanks mostly to government subsidies. Now that energy prices have entered the picture, China will start to experience even more inflation pressures in 2011. 

Furthermore, with the undervalued yuan pegged to the dollar, it is only getting worse for China in 2011 due to Fed’s QE2 pressures on the dollar.  The real inflation rate for Chinese citizens for 2011 will probably approach 8% next year.

An Asian Contagion by China?

This escalating inflation concern is further compounded by Beijing’s lack of decisive action to combat the problem by delaying a much needed currency appreciation, and hiking interest rates in a timely fashion. There is no getting around the fact that these two things need to occur as soon as possible.

By the time the Chinese government is forced to implement these tightening tools, the damage to the economy is most likely already done. The longer China delays the inevitable serious tightening measures, the harder the economic crash that will occur in the aftermath of these policy changes. And it is unlikely to end well. The resultant impact will probably take the rest of the Asian economies down with it – an Asian Contagion scenario.

History Repeats Itself

Eventually central planners and finance ministers around the world might start to understand that policies which lead to bubbles being formed in the first place are counterproductive in the long run. But until that lesson is learned, it seems like we are doomed to repeat the same mistakes over and over again.

Right now, there are more and more signs coming out of China that all is not well with its economy, and the likelihood of a more severe downturn in the future is a distinct possibility, unless its policy makers take decisive and prudent actions to minimize the damage of a hard landing.    

Dian L. Chu, Dec. 25, 2010 | Mobile Reader, Website | | Facebook | Twitter

Sponsored: Watch, Learn, Market Trend TV | Revealing new perspective on China and Japan

Written by EconForecast
CPSM, C.P.M. MBA, & Chartered Economist. Market analyst and financial writer

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The nyse trip of china internet enterprises

June 1st, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in News

The nyse trip of china internet enterprises

Article by Ligang

The last may, a total of four of China’s Internet enterprises listed, respectively is everyone to nets, nets qin, century flanges, phoenix new media better. In addition, rice washing nets, thunderbolt, potatoes will also listed in the near future to completion.

Everyone in the U.S. this month network is nyse listing for trading of the first China’s Internet company, the ensuing nets qin, century, phoenix new media better margins are to nyse’s arms. But only a few days, the listed several nets enterprises will have the embarrassing situation of breaking encounter.

Four nets soaring stock situation:

Everyone company shares first 14 dollars, .50, by opening; .98 Friday in barrel

Nets .50 first qin shares, with shares opened by .65 on Friday in barrel;

Century better price, first margin in shares, by opening; .36 Friday in barrel

Phoenix new media for , the first price for 11.15am the cathedral yuan, by opening Friday 11.37 dollars in barrel.

It is reported, China’s Internet enterprise altogether three wave to a listing of the boom: the first wave came in 2000 with sina, sohu, around, netease, etc, as a representative of the gateway website login us stocks; The second wave is in 2003, nasdaq, lit investors ctrip.com concept enthusiasm, then investment, grand, baidu, air nets and a number of entrepreneurial type company follow-up; The third wave will began last September, actor, dangdang network by the excellent vanguard representatives.

According to reports, in everyone nets, nets qin, century preferred margin after an IPO, potato nets, thunderbolt etc also will have hit the us stock market. Grand literature, happy nets, where nets, rice washing nets, PPlive etc to the news of the IPO spreads around fast.

New York euronext group chief executive Duncan, Creole, before China’s, he again in an interview with our reporter, said nyse has pledged to participate in Shanghai international board listing rules out the work, Shanghai international board with other listing rules should be leading global exchange listed rules have consistency. Nyse, want to be in the Shanghai international version of the first foreign companies listed.

“Are hoping to become Shanghai international board of a foreign company listed first, is to help, help ShangJiaoSuo SFC successfully launched Shanghai international board, our role is to help ShangJiaoSuo attracted to more international companies to participate in, this is our key role of Nebuchadnezzar,” Creole said, “as for DE listed the timetable, specific not now.”

In may this year, China’s e-commerce and social media and other Internet technology enterprises have hit the us market in the past six months IPO, the nyse listing company to have dangdang, optimal cool, JiHu 360 and phoenix new media, created a veritable new wave of china-related shares. But with the previously held by hot listed namely treatment what is different, this batch of enterprise appear even collective breaking phenomenon. Has analyzed that the listed companies may trigger new, intensive Chinese Internet enterprise bubble.

I am Ligang a professional editor from China Building Materials, and my work is to promote a free online trade platform. http://www.buildingmaterials-china.com/ contain a great deal of information about rough rider knives,designer reading glasses,rgb led strip, welcome to visit!

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Travel to China – West Lake in Hangzhou

May 10th, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in Bank

Travel to China – West Lake in Hangzhou

Article by Vinvent Ruan

Hangzhou is famous for its gorgeous scenery, stunning sites, Dragon Well Tea , and unique culture. The most famous attraction in Hangzhou is the West Lake. It occupies an area of over 60 square kilometers. It is surrounded by stunning scenery and plenty of cultural relics. West Lake is surrounded on three sides by mountains. The banks of the West Lake are beautifully landscaped with flowers and trees. In each of the four seasons the West Lake takes on a different look. In summer hundreds of lotus blossoms bloom, in the fall the Three Ponds are reflected in the lake, in the spring the willows lining the West Lake bud, and in the winter the plum flowers bloom in an explosion of red. There are ten famous sites of the West Lake which are famous throughout China and there is no Chinese person who doesn’t know them.

Spring arrival at the Su Causeway:The Su Causeway, located 3 kilometers from West Lake, runs from the Nanping Mountain to the Qixia Hill. A famous poet in the Northern Song Dynasty, Su Dongpo made it by using the mud that he dredged from the West Lake when he worked in Hangzhou. Later generations wanting to memorialize his contributions named the causeway the Su Causeway. At the end of winter the Su Causeway acts like spring’s emissary by telling the locals that spring has come because the green willows, in bloom along the causeway dance slowly in the breeze.

Lotus in the Breeze at the Crooked Courtyard:The crooked courtyard was a distillery located on the banks of the West Lake during the Southern Song Dynasty. Located in the West Lake near the distillery were many lotuses. In summer, when the lotus flowers were in bloom, the warm summer breezes would blow their wonderful fragrances across the area. Sitting by the banks of the West Lake sipping alcohol and enjoying the fragrant lotus blossoms is a favorite part of Summer for locals.

Autumn Moon over the Calm Lake:This site isn’t actually a particular site at all. Poets for thousands of years wrote classical Chinese poems to express their feelings and the experience of enjoying the moon reflected in the West Lake. On a quiet night, sitting in an open boat to enjoy the full moon reflected in the water is an essential part of experiencing the West Lake.

Melting Snow at the Broken Bridge:The West Lake has many ancient bridges. Of all the bridges in the West Lake, the Broken Bridge is the most famous one. The bridge got its name because during winter, when viewed from the West Lake, the bridge appears to be broken because the snow on the bridge blends in with the snow on the bank. Hangzhou rarely has snow day, but when it does snow, all of the locals take a cruise on the West Lake to enjoy the famous view.

Orioles Singing in the Willows:Along the bank of the West Lake are hundreds of willows. Orioles like to congregate in the trees and sing to their lovers. It is a wonderful time to sit in a pavilion along the bank of the West Lake with friends, drink some local Dragon Well Tea and enjoy the day.

You can visit http://www.chinaodysseytours.com to get more information about this.

About the Author

China Odyssey Tours – A China-based company provides tour packages for family, couple, individual & group. Help you plan & organize your tour to China according to your preferences.

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The Post Office Gives Foreign Exchange Rate Boost for Travellers to China with New Chinese Yuan Travellers Cheques

April 26th, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in Forex

The Post Office Gives Foreign Exchange Rate Boost for Travellers to China with New Chinese Yuan Travellers Cheques










London, UK (PRWeb UK) September 28, 2010

The introduction of the new American Express Chinese Yuan Travellers Cheques exclusively at Post Offices across the UK, is expected to provide a further boost to the Chinese Yuan foreign currency following a 13 per cent year-on-year sales increase at the Post Office during the first half of 2010. This increased interest during 2010 adds to the dramatic 434 per cent increase in sales of this foreign currency at the Post Office between 2005 and 2009.

The introduction will enable UK travellers planning trips to China to carry their travel money more securely, whilst also attracting the best foreign currency exchange rates for the Chinese Yuan across the UK. The China National Tourist Association has revealed that over half a million people made trips to China from the UK last year, almost half of these were leisure tourists.

The new Yuan Travellers Cheques will also make it a more convenient way for travellers to carry their travel money as the new 500 Yuan Travellers Cheque is worth around five times as much as the largest Yuan cash denomination. Post Office customers’ taking travel money in the form of American Express Travellers Cheques have the peace of mind that it will be replaced within 24 hours if lost or stolen. Also American Express Travellers Cheques do not have an expiry date so this form of travel money can be used on all future trips.

Sarah Munro, Post Office Head of Travel Money said: “The Chinese Yuan has been one of the fastest growing foreign currencies at the Post Office in recent years with an increase in sales outstripping any other foreign currency and the pattern for 2010 confirms that demand is still on the increase.”

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2011 China Financial Technology Investment is Set to be Driven by Mobile Banking, Online Payments and Business Intelligence — Says Kapronasia

April 12th, 2011 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in Bank

2011 China Financial Technology Investment is Set to be Driven by Mobile Banking, Online Payments and Business Intelligence — Says Kapronasia











Shanghai (PRWEB) January 26, 2011

An increasingly sophisticated customer-base is pushing Chinese financial institutions to change the way they interact with their customers. In 2011, Chinese financial industry executives will be focused on developing more robust channels and customer insight to better interact with clients and understand their specific financial needs believes Kapronasia. These insights and more are detailed in the report entitled “China Financial Technology 2011 – Top 10 Trends shaping the Industry” which details Kapronasia’s predictions on the 10 key technology areas that Chinese financial institutions will be focused on in 2011.

“The Chinese financial services industry is becoming increasingly competitive,” says Elsa Yan, a Senior Consultant at Kapronasia. “Institutions are looking to develop channels and analytics to better serve customers who have an increasingly wide choice of providers. Mobile Banking, Online banking, and more robust Business Intelligence are just three of the ways banks will be accomplishing this.”

This push to innovate is largely being driven by increasing competition, not necessarily from foreign banks, who are largely, due to regulations, limited in the products and services they can offer the market. The real competition is coming from the small and medium banks in China who are looking to capture market share from the larger incumbent banks as well as their increasingly competitive peers.

Some of the key findings in the report include:


    Mobile Banking is set to grow as more banking applications are moved onto a mobile platform and consumers adopt newer richer mobile devices. However, safety and security remain the biggest concerns among consumers to readily embrace mobile banking.
    Online payment is growing rapidly, driven by the increasing popularity of online personal wealth management transactions; and it is expected to grow faster, underpinned by its cost efficiency and more value-added services provided by banks.
    Demand for business intelligence (BI) is on the surge, thanks to wider applications; Small and Medium Sized Banks are actively adopting BI solutions to increase their competitiveness.

“With China recently reporting GDP growth of over 10% in 2010, the country remains a key part of the global economic story and will only increase in importance in 2011,” said Zennon Kapron, MD of Kapronasia. “China’s financial industry is changing rapidly and so are the demands on the technology that supports it. Channels and analytics are two of the key ways Kapronasia sees the industry changing in 2011.”

Besides providing Chinese financial institutions with a look at what their competitors will be focusing on in 2011 to innovate and drive their business, the report also offers key insights for technology vendors on how best to position their offerings to complement the priorities of their customers.

The report is available through the Kapronasia website and will be distributed on January 31st, 2011.

NOTES TO EDITORS

About Kapronasia

Kapronasia is a provider of market-leading research, consulting and sales enablement services focused on the Greater China Financial Services Industry. With offices in Shanghai, Beijing, Hong Kong and Singapore, Kapronasia provides banks, tech vendors, consultancies, private equity firms and marketing agencies with the knowledge and insights that they need to make better business and technology decisions. Kapronasia is a Hong Kong company headquartered in Shanghai, China.

To find out more about Kapronasia, visit: http://www.kapronasia.com.

Press contacts:

Jane Li – Email: jane(dot)li(at)kapronasia(dot)com

Kapronasia Marketing

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