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Airbus Deal Shows Investors That China Profits Are Cleared For Takeoff

Keith Fitz-Gerald (July 22nd, 2009) Writes:

[Editor's Note: Fifteen trades. All profitable. Since launching his Geiger Indextrading service late last year, Money Morning Investment Director Keith Fitz-Gerald is a perfect 15 for 15, meaning he's closed every single one of his trades at a profit. And he did this during one of the most volatile periods for the U.S. stock market since the Great Depression. Fitz-Gerald says the ongoing financial crisis has changed the investing game forever, and has created a completely new set of rules that investors must understand to survive and profit in this new era. Check out our latest insights on these new rules, this new market environment, and this new service, the Geiger Index.]

Individual investors who still hold any doubts about Mainland China’s future growth potential should take a long hard look at Airbus SAS, the Pan-European commercial airliner maker that is now building airplanes …

With Inflation on the Horizon, Gold Prices are Ready to Rally

Contrarian Profits (July 17th, 2009) Writes:

With the global economy on the mend, could gold be gearing up for another record-setting run? It sure looks that way. 

After peaking north of the $1,000 per ounce price level last year, gold hit a stumbling block when deflationary fears in the world’s largest economy sucked the air out of commodities prices and sent hoards of investors stampeding into the safe-haven of U.S. Treasuries, and helped spawn a rebound in the U.S. dollar.

Since that time, the global economic outlook - especially beyond U.S. borders - has improved, and gold prices have stabilized.

The next step - many gold bulls say - is for the yellow metal to make a run for new highs.

Whipsaw Trading Patterns

Gold started 2009 at about $870 an ounce - down substantially from early 2008 when prices hit a record-high $1033.90, but significantly higher than the $712.30 an ounce it was trading at in mid-November.

Then, when talk of inflation

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With Inflation on the Horizon, Gold Prices are Ready to Rally

Money Morning (July 16th, 2009) Writes:

[Editor's Note: If you're new to the commodities-investing arena, and are uncertain about the landscape - or even if you're an "old hand" at natural-resource stocks, but want some insights into the new profit plays and new players - consider hiring a guide: Money Morning Contributing Editor Peter Krauth, a recognized expert in metals, mining and energy stocks, is also the editor of the Global Resource Alert trading service, which ferrets out companies poised to profit from the so-called “Secular Bull Market” in commodities. A former portfolio advisor, Krauth continues to work out of resource-rich Canada, which keeps him close to most of the companies he researches. Against the growing global financial malaise, Krauth says that commodities are among the most-profitable and least-risky investments available, and notes that this may well be the most powerful bull market for commodities we’ll see in our lifetimes. He …

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China Drop In Dairy Exports Could Signal Commodity Rise

Irwin Greenstein (December 3rd, 2008) Writes:

While China may blame the rest of the world for its dramatic decline in exports, Beijing has no one else to blame but itself for the steep drop in dairy exports.

An article in today’s China Daily reported that the country’s dairy exports “have ground to a halt” in the wake of the tainted-milk scandal.

The latest numbers from China’s General Administration of Customs (GAC) showed that only 1,036 tons of dairy products were exported in October 2008, down 92% year-on-year. From January to September, the monthly average export of dairy products was 12,000 tons.

Once again, China is looking to the U.S. to rescue another of its exports. With the US-China Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED) on economic, trade and food safety issues slated to begin on Thursday, China is hoping it would pave the way for the Federal Drug Administration to accept the results of a Chinese agency that tests food safety.

If

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China’s Homeowners Get a Boost, But That Won’t be Enough

Irwin Greenstein (October 22nd, 2008) Writes:

As China’s stock markets take a nose dive, the government has embarked on a plan prop up the underpinning of its share-buying public.

Beijing is now focusing on helping homeowners buy and keep their properties in the face a global real-estate meltdown.

Whether or not this is enough to sustain some kind of rally on the Hang Seng Index (HSI:HKG), which has dropped 51.4% over the past 52 weeks, is truly doubtful.

Beijing’s maneuver comes at a time when Asian stocks slumped to their lowest since December 2004 on fears that government bailouts may not be enough to prevent a worldwide recession. And with China’s reliance on exports to the West, concerns run deep on the country’s ability to sustain its blistering rate of growth.

Despite worries, China’s commercial real-estate market sees no signs of letting up.

In July, Merrill Lynch raised China’s three-year infrastructure projections from $400 billion to $725 billion - an increase

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Exporter Bailout Signals Trouble Ahead for China

Irwin Greenstein (September 24th, 2008) Writes:
Bailout fever is spreading. China is now considering a bailout of exporters. According to China Daily, Chinese exporters are suffering mightily as the global economy weakens. This is a clear indicator that the Chinese economy could be heading for trouble, says Irwin Greenstein, writing for Contrarian Profits.

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