According to a scholar and an investment manager I just saw interviewed, both of whom are experts on China, 300,000,000 Chinese people will move into the urban/suburban middle-class in the next 15 years.
That's as many people as we have in the entire USA. That's almost 400,000 people per week.
China will need houses, roads, bridges, hospitals, schools, water-treatment, telecommunications, electricity, cars, computer systems...
My clients and I are and will continue investing in China, both in China-based firms and firms that do business with China.
Showing posts with label china. Show all posts
Showing posts with label china. Show all posts
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Thursday, June 3, 2010
The "real" Price of Gold?
Gold may have a lot of upside price potential, even with the major run-up it's had in recent years. It is about 30% below its all-time high price, if you adjust for inflation, and demand is likely to increase. A lot.
Gold prices historically have risen in times of fear and of inflation. And then there is good-old supply-and-demand.
There is already fear. The world's major economies are struggling, obviously.
There could well be inflation. The loose fiscal and monetary policies governments are using to fight-off recession and depression usually result in inflation.
And then there are China and Japan... China has just 1.6% of its currency reserves in gold, and Japan just 2.5%. The USA has 70% and Germany, another major developed economy, has 66%. In a world where the value of currencies is dubious at best right now, gold is probably going to be coveted.
What could this mean? Well, if China and Japan were to increase gold reserves to just 10% (nowhere near the 70% of the USA), the increase in demand for gold would be 3.5 times annual mine production. That would drive prices up, both for the gold itself and, presumably, for the stocks of gold mining companies.
Gold prices historically have risen in times of fear and of inflation. And then there is good-old supply-and-demand.
There is already fear. The world's major economies are struggling, obviously.
There could well be inflation. The loose fiscal and monetary policies governments are using to fight-off recession and depression usually result in inflation.
And then there are China and Japan... China has just 1.6% of its currency reserves in gold, and Japan just 2.5%. The USA has 70% and Germany, another major developed economy, has 66%. In a world where the value of currencies is dubious at best right now, gold is probably going to be coveted.
What could this mean? Well, if China and Japan were to increase gold reserves to just 10% (nowhere near the 70% of the USA), the increase in demand for gold would be 3.5 times annual mine production. That would drive prices up, both for the gold itself and, presumably, for the stocks of gold mining companies.
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