久久亚洲国产成人影院-久久亚洲国产的中文-久久亚洲国产高清-久久亚洲国产精品-亚洲图片偷拍自拍-亚洲图色视频

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Business / View

Investors breathe easier, but pain awaits

By ED ZHANG (China Daily) Updated: 2014-08-11 14:33

The Chinese market is more optimistic these days than in the past few months. The capital market can now heave a sigh of relief as government policies and monetary weapons are apparently working toward achieving the annual targets, such as a 7.5 percent GDP growth.

Therefore, there is less doubt and unease among investors compared with earlier months. The possibility of a general local debt crisis breaking out, which investors feared, looks distant.

As more public infrastructure projects are undertaken and one city after another lifts the three-year restrictions on housing purchases, economic statistics are likely to remain strong through the remainder of the year.

With all these developments, some securities dealers forecast earlier this month that the Shanghai Composite Index could soon rise to 2,400 points or even higher from its present 2,200 level (it was below 2,000 not long ago).

If the lifting of restrictions can generate more sales in the housing market, and if the reactivated housing market can boost retail business (in the form of sales of materials for interior decoration, for example), investors may find Chinese stocks more attractive in the second half of the year.

However, one cannot afford to be overly optimistic.

Although real estate developers can do more business now than before, it remains to be seen how many people will be willing to spend on new housing units. Except for a few large cities, and just a few areas in other cities, investment in property doesn't seem to generate the expected returns.

Despite the lifting of restrictions, the development of the urban residential-unit market (as opposed to government-subsidized units for low-income families) just cannot serve as the main engine of future economic growth.

There is even less chance of the government allowing the urban housing market to function like a speculative market-similar to a stock market, for example. The government holds plenty of policy weapons to prevent it from becoming so, and it will use them whenever it feels it is necessary.

Apart from the housing market, investors have to avoid another kind of company-one whose productivity is tapering off at a time when other companies are making progress.

The recent blast at a factory in Kunshan, an industrial town near Shanghai-which experts say is likely to have been an aluminum dust explosion in which more than 70 lives were lost-shows the risk facing many industrial facilities built in the 1990s, when China had just begun to open up.

After the disaster, a report from Suzhou (the city of which Kunshan is a part) said 135 aluminum processing factories, similar to the one where the explosion occurred, had been ordered to shut down for safety reasons.

This indicates that many of them were built during the same period following the same standards-or a lack of them.

A whole generation of low-tech manufacturing companies will require new investment even if they are running profitably and may not be typical sweatshops. But letting such 20- to 30-year-old facilities continue to run around the clock can be a hazard, for human lives as well as production.

It is thus important for industrial parks that used to attract companies by offering tax holidays and lax rules to change their style of administration.

So we can see why China says it is in transition. It can still manage to maintain healthy economic growth thanks to the size of its economy and its government's political and monetary means to keep pace with the market.

But despite the growth and the means at the government's disposal, the country still lacks worthy companies to attract more investors-in the industrial as well as the services sectors.

And although the stock market may see certain short rallies, based primarily on small positive changes, it doesn't have the fundamentals to sustain a powerful northward journey.

The author is editor-at-large of China Daily.

Investors breathe easier, but pain awaits Investors breathe easier, but pain awaits
Investors hesitate before stock link
Top 10 underwriters in China

...
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产一区二区精品在线观看 | 亚洲精品xxx | 亚洲国产天堂在线网址 | 国产91页 | 成人影院人人免费 | 亚洲成a人片在线观看中文 亚洲成a人片在线观看中文!!! | 精品一区二区三区在线成人 | 99在线在线视频免费视频观看 | 国产盗摄精品一区二区三区 | 国产手机精品一区二区 | 久久91亚洲精品久久91综合 | 毛片搜索| 国产精品在线观看 | 免费成年人在线观看视频 | 日韩中文字幕精品 | 久久综合狠狠综合狠狠 | 中国女警察一级毛片视频 | 久久在线视频 | 三级伦理网站 | 精品国产一二三区在线影院 | 国产精品爱久久久久久久9999 | 中文字幕一区在线播放 | 美女被躁免费视频软件 | 92手机看片福利永久国产 | 91久久国产口精品久久久久 | 免费一级a毛片在线播放 | 成人免费视频在线 | 最新国产中文字幕 | a级毛片免费播放 | 国产一级片观看 | 久久精品免费播放 | 欧美一级毛片日韩一级 | 亚洲美女网址 | 亚洲精品 欧美 | 亚洲午夜久久 | 九九视频高清视频免费观看 | 成人午夜在线观看 | 国产精品欧美一区二区在线看 | 中文字幕二区三区 | 欧美一级做一级爱a做片性 欧美一欧美一级毛片 | 欧美精品网站 |