Archive

Author Archive

BABA got really close …to $50 a share

October 24th, 2022 No comments

 

Like I boldly predicted a couple of years ago when BABA was $300 a share. All the bulls were running in the china house.

What changed over the last couple of years? What led BABA to $58.02 a share today?

Is that the bottom? Definitely no. Enjoy the implosion while it lasts.

image

Categories: Predictions Tags:

Alibaba hits $300 a share

October 9th, 2020 No comments

It is not a company that will stay at this level for long. Sell it when you could.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/alibaba-stock-hits-record-11602236816

The biggest systemic risk for BABA and other tech companies operating in China is the constant change of government policies. I won’t be surprised if BABA falls to $200, $100 or even $50 levels over the next few years.

 

Buy me a beer if this works out well for you!

Categories: Predictions Tags:

China Home Prices Drop in September For First Time in a Year

October 20th, 2011 No comments

China’s home prices fell 0.03 percent from a month earlier in September, the first decline in a year, said Soufun Holdings Ltd. (SFUN), the country’s biggest real estate website owner.

Residential prices rose in 54 of 100 cities tracked by Soufun and fell in 44 cities, with average home values nationwide at 8,877 yuan ($1,396) a square meter, Soufun said in an e-mailed statement today. Compared with the same month last year, average prices rose 6.15 percent, Soufun said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-08/china-home-prices-drop-for-first-time-in-a-year-soufun-says.html

Categories: News Tags:

Andy Xie: Chinese Real-Estate Bust Is Morphing Into a Slow Leak

October 11th, 2011 No comments
Categories: Links, Opinions Tags:

Andy Xie: 50% Drop in 3 Years

August 29th, 2011 No comments
Categories: Predictions, Tycoons Tags:

Seven Ways to Short China’s Real Estate Bubble

April 26th, 2011 No comments

There is a very interesting article recently on the street, summarizing 7 ways to short China’s real estate bubble:

  1. Shorting commodity companies that directly benefit from Chinese demand
  2. Shorting Commodity ETFs
  3. Shorting Country ETFs
  4. Shorting Chinese ETFs
  5. Buying Short ETFs
  6. Shorting Chinese Real Estate-Related Companies That Trade in the US
  7. Shorting Other Chinese companies with the highest open short interest

http://www.thestreet.com/story/11060147/1/7-ways-to-short-chinas-real-estate-bubble.html

Categories: Jim Chanos, Links Tags:

1/4 of Real Estate Agencies Closed Door since April 2010

August 15th, 2010 No comments
Categories: Links, News Tags:

No Bubble in China?

August 12th, 2010 No comments
Categories: Contrarians, Tycoons Tags:

Protests, Protests, Protests

August 12th, 2010 No comments

This is some news from one of the publications under People’s Daily, CCP’s media outlet. Because of the ongoing dispute over maglev train, properties in the community below can’t even be sold on the  market, even though most of the residents there have a handsome equity (based on market value) in their properties. 

http://www.globaltimes.cn/www/english/metro-beijing/update/society/2010-08/561153.html

Residents protest maglev planned to pass communities

By Xu Tianran

At least 200 residents of the Tiancun area gathered Sunday to sign a petition against the planned S1 maglev train, which will pass near at least seven residential communities and, locals fear, may endanger their health.

The S1 line is a demonstrative project for Beijing’s low-and-middle speed maglev train. The western section of the line will pass sparsely populated areas, but residents along the eastern section wish for the line to be rerouted to avoid their communities. According to the Ministry of Railways of China’s timetable, construction on the east section will start in November 2013.

On May 6, the China Academy of Railway Sciences (CARS) issued its first environmental assessment public notification for the S1 line, saying that electro-magnetic radiation and noise would not reach harmful levels, according to the Beijing News.

Locals said the notification provided inadequate scientific evidence. Residents along the planned eastern route, including inhabitants of Hailandongyuan, Bisenli and several other Haidian district communities, protested to the Office of Letters and Calls of Beijing Committee, CARS, the Development and Reform Commission of Beijing and other relevant departments, to no avail.

CARS second notification, released August 2, insisted that the maglev train would do no harm to people’s health.

Qi Fansan, a Hailandongyuan resident and retired senior engineer from the Beijing National Railway Research & Design Institute of Signal & Communication, told the Global Times that CARS’ notification was not convincing. "In Sweden and some European countries, the limit of public exposure to magnetic fields is 0.2 microteslas, whereas the standard adopted in the notification is 100 microteslas," Qi said.

The environmental assessment claimed that electromagnetic radiation would reach a highest level of 1.2 to 1.55 microteslas one meter from the maglev line. But Qi showed the Global Times a Japanese study that found the electromagnetic levels for a similar train to the S1 in Japan were dozens of times higher than those CARS presented. "I don’t think CARS is qualified to make an environmental assessment, as city railway traffic isn’t its area of expertise," Qi said.

The S1 line’s east section will pass near area primary schools and kindergartens, and the minimum distance from the railway to residential buildings is 15 meters. "In Shanghai’s maglev train program, the safety distance proposed by German experts is 175 meters. Though S1 is a low-and-middle speed maglev line, the magnetic field is still strong enough to keep tons of weight levitating above the railway," Qi said.

Categories: Conflicts Tags:

26 Up, 74 Down in July

August 6th, 2010 No comments
July 100 City home prices down 1.32% .

http://www.chinarealestatenews.com/news/2010-08-03/10062/

according to the city price index of the 100 cities, in July 2010, the average price of per square meter residential property price fell 1.32% to 8308 yuan. The price in Harbin rose the most, by 2.95%. While southern city of Shantou posted the most decline of 4.32%.

I am not able to tell whether the numbers are for month over month or year over year. According to the Chinese version of the same report, the price drop was for month over month (compared to June 2010).

Categories: News Tags: