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Foreign Investment: China is decoupling

Posted April 25, 2008

“This place is one big construction site. You cannot turn around without finding scaffolding, piles of materials, construction equipment and the like [no matter where you look] here.” — Keith Fitz-Gerald

by Mike Caggeso

Baltimore – (TFN): When Asia expert Keith Fitz-Gerald first returned to this country a week ago, he was overwhelmed by a single impression.

“This place is one big construction site,” Fitz-Gerald said. “You cannot turn around without finding scaffolding, piles of materials, construction equipment and the like [no matter where you look] here.”

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Pocket 1142% on the Biggest China Play in 30 Years

China’s top money producing industries are now “burning” precious crops with acid rain and contaminating the limited water supply with toxic chemicals. To solve a problem of this magnitude, China plans to spend $486 billion on pollution control in the coming months.

Gains of 1,142% or more are pocketed by the fortunate few investors who have insider access to companies that stand to reap billions in profits from China’s spending spree. Receive your free report.

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With the U.S. economy suffering its worst downturn in years, and China’s stocks down more than 40% in the past six months, the bustle of construction-related activity in this Asian giant seems incongruous - if not downright contradictory.

Foreign Investment: China’s economy decoupling

Surprisingly, it’s neither. This divergence between China’s ailing stock market and its still-spunky economy is an early manifestation of “economic decoupling” - an emerging trend being fueled by the globalization of worldwide markets. Read on to learn more.

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