Thursday, August 24, 2023

Watch Out for This Value Trap

Note: Is edwardlorilla1986.paxforex@blogger.com your correct email? You haven't clicked in a while, and we're concerned you might lose access. Please confirm your address with one click here.

Manward Financial Digest
 

Watch Out for China's Value Trap

SPONSORED

Monthly Passive Income (Only $25)

Passive Income
 

Have you seen this strange monthly income investment?

It's NOT a stock, bond or private company...
It has NO age requirements...
You do NOT need to be accredited to participate...
And you can get in for as little as $25.

Find Out What It Is Right Here

Robert Ross

Robert Ross

I keep close tabs on market sentiment.

It's a technique one of my investing mentors, Jared Dillian, taught me. And it's made me lots of money, particularly during the COVID crash in 2020 and the FTX collapse in 2022 (more on that on a bit).

Market sentiment refers to the overall feeling that investors have about a particular stock, market or investment.

When the sentiment on an asset is low, that's usually the best time to buy that asset (and vice versa).

And when I see headlines like the one below, my sentiment "Spidey sense" starts to tingle.

Investors Fear China's 'Lehman Moment' Is Looming

But as with any investment that looks cheap, we need to decide whether it's a bargain... or a "value trap."

[Stock Forecasting Champion Says One $10 AI Stock Could Deliver Windfall Profits. Details Here.]

The Worst of Times

More than 500,000 people follow me on social media.

So when the The Wall Street Journal runs a headline like the one above, I get a flurry of DMs like this:

Chineses stocks getting killed

The reader who sent me this message isn't wrong. Chinese stocks have been one of the worst-performing sectors over the last decade. Even Alibaba (BABA) - the "Amazon of China" - has delivered a mere 2% return since going public nearly a decade ago...

Alibaba

View larger image

And my reader is right that the Chinese economy is in horrible shape. One of the country's largest property developers - Evergrande - filed for bankruptcy last week. That sparked fears of financial contagion. And with retail sales cratering due to 1 in 5 Chinese youth being unemployed, the economy was already on edge.

Urban unemployment rate

View larger image

Clearly, things are bad in China. And that's been reflected in stock prices.

But that brings us back to our original question...

Is it time to buy?

SPONSORED

Wow, Putin Just MAJORLY Screwed Up!

Clown
 

Source: Wikimedia Commons

 

Vladimir Putin just made an idiotic mistake that will cost him dearly. It's going to drain trillions of dollars out of Russia... and potentially make some AMERICANS rich. What a bizarre story...

 

Investing in the "Uninvestable"

Billionaire hedge fund manager Howard Marks says that whenever something is called "uninvestable," it's typically the best time to buy that asset.

When nobody wants to buy something, you get the best deals.

My favorite example of this idea is Bitcoin in late 2022. The crypto bear market bottomed with the collapse of FTX in November. At the time, nobody wanted to invest in crypto.

But in hindsight, it was the "sentiment low" - and the best time to buy.

Bitcoin

View larger image

The big question is whether that same logic applies to Chinese stocks right now.

Sure, they may be tempting because they look cheap and market sentiment is low.

But investors should stay away... for many reasons.

There's Too Much Risk in China

The Communist Party of China (CCP) has grown increasingly hostile - both domestically and internationally - over the last five years.

Domestically, China's dictator "president for life" Xi Jinping has unilaterally cracked down on Chinese tech companies. It started back in November 2020, when Alibaba founder Jack Ma criticized the Chinese government at an event in Shanghai.

Here's what the Chinese government did to Jack Ma afterward...

  • Canceled the Ant Group IPO (which would've been the world's largest)
  • Levied a multibillion-dollar fine against Alibaba
  • Removed Alibaba's app from the country's app store.

But it didn't end there.

The Chinese government soon went after the "Uber of China," DiDi Global (DID), days after the stock was listed on U.S. exchanges. The CCP then set its sights on Tencent Holdings (TCEHY), the country's largest social media platform. Fines against Baidu (BIDU) and other consumer tech companies came soon after.

Even Chinese education companies were hit. Shares tanked as much as 80% overnight.

Cliff Dive

View larger image

Conveniently, these were all U.S.-listed securities. Many non-Chinese investors were burned.

And it may happen again.

SPONSORED

ChatGPT Creating Chaos for Big Tech Companies
Google Declares "CODE RED!"

High-tech matrix
 

Google is frantically playing catch-up after the latest artificial intelligence breakthrough forced it to declare "Code Red" and bring back its founders.

Meanwhile, this expert believes one sub-$10 stock is in PERFECT position to soar as it powers the AI revolution.

Click here to see the urgent details >>>

 

A Dangerous Game

It's clear that the Chinese are going after only certain types of companies.

China has never cracked down on any "hard tech" sectors. These include industries like telecommunications, semiconductors and AI. Instead, it's consumer-facing tech - like social media, e-commerce and gaming - that has been intentionally destroyed by the Chinese government.

Tech Trauma

View larger image

It's clear the Chinese government believes these "soft tech" companies are unnecessary... and even a net negative for society.

Xi Jinping said as much in a speech in 2021...

"We must recognize the fundamental importance of the real economy... and never deindustrialize."

He's made his agenda clear.

And finally... Americans who buy Chinese stocks typically don't actually buy Chinese securities. Instead, they buy American depositary receipts (ADRs). While an ADR represents a share of a Chinese company, most ADRs are housed in the Cayman Islands and don't give Western investors rights to the earnings these companies generate.

Unlike other downtrodden assets (like Bitcoin), Chinese stocks have unique factors that make them truly "uninvestable."

While they may look cheap and be near a sentiment low, there are many risks hidden under the surface.

Knowing that, I wouldn't touch Chinese stocks with a 10-foot pole.

Stay safe out there,

Robert

Want more content like this?

YES
NO
 

Robert Ross

Robert Ross' unique style of clear and direct stock research has helped him build a massive following in the investment research industry. He started his career at investment research company Mauldin Economics, where he quickly rose through the ranks to become the youngest chief analyst in the industry. Today, over a million investors turn to Robert every month for his take on investing, economics and personal finance. He now shares his unique insights in Manward Financial Digest and Manward Letter.

 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Most important medical advance in 100 years

Artificial Intelligence is being harnessed to create breakthrough drugs no one has ever seen before. ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ...