
“In Hong Kong, you have reasonably good corporate governance, you have very-well-managed companies, which are owned largely by families. So the families are ready to be conservative in their dealings. They have low leverage. So if you believe that China is bottoming out and going up, I would own some Hong Kong shares, as I do. Another recovery play—a market that has a similarly poor performance to China over the last few years—is Vietnam, which is very cheap, which has deleverage and improving fundamentals in terms of growing trade surplus, rising exports and so on. So I think Vietnam is better than China itself, if you believe in the Chinese recovery.”
Related posts:
The Persecution of Rita Hutchens
Why Congress Wants to Revoke Your Passport
Nokia: Yes, we decrypt your HTTPS data, but don’t worry about it
Italian 5- and 10- year debt yields fall to record low
In Rush to Strike Syria, US Tried to Derail UN Probe
San Francisco Doctor Accepts Bitcoin to Protect Patient Privacy
The U.S. Plot to Nuke the Moon
The FED’s $500 Billion/Year Mortgage Subsidy Has Backfired
Bloomberg Article Describes the Death of Digital Privacy: Snowden’s Revenge
Law enforcement uses smart meter parking apps to spy on everyone
Coke cans toxic caramel coloring but Pepsi still packs 8 times the 'safe' amount
Stop CISA, Broad "Cybersecurity" Surveillance Legislation
The Charity That Just Gives Money To Poor People
Federal Prosecution for Jesse Benton and a Free Pass for James Clapper
Cops accused of stiffing family for vet bill after shooting their dog