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How You Can Profit From China's Water Cleanup
By Tom Dyson
August 12, 2008

Singapore is an island at the southern tip of Malaysia. It separated from Malaysia in 1965. Singapore has no rivers or lakes. After the separation, the city was growing fast and needed water. So Singapore signed two water treaties with Malaysia... and started importing its water through three large pipes.

One of those water treaties expires in 2011. And the second treaty expires in 2061. Singapore wants to extend these treaties to ensure its water security beyond 2061, but Malaysia wants to raise the price of water by a factor of 20.

The water dispute has been a problem since Singapore's independence. In order to maintain this independence, Singapore looked for other sources of water. It built the world's largest and most efficient seawater desalination plant. It developed techniques for reusing wastewater multiple times... And it turned three quarters of its land into rain catchment areas.

As a byproduct of this drive for self-sufficiency, Singapore formed the world's most advanced water management industry...

China is the most polluted country in the world. Seventy percent of China's rivers and lakes are polluted, and half of its cities have contaminated groundwater. In yesterday's column, I explained how China has changed its approach to pollution.

The Chinese have recognized environmental damage is costing China roughly 10% of the country's gross domestic product... or more than $200 billion a year. They've pledged to spend up to $125 billion investing in a massive cleanup... This includes the construction of over 10,000 wastewater treatment plants.

The Singapore water industry is my favorite way to profit from China's drive to clean up its water. Singapore's water companies all derive the bulk of their revenues and profits from China.

Take Hyflux for example.

Hyflux is the biggest name in the Singapore water industry. It makes water treatment systems that turn sewage and seawater into drinking water. Hyflux has built Asia's largest desalination plant. It has won billions of dollars worth of contracts to build wastewater treatment systems in China, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. And it makes consumer products like home water filters.

Hyflux derives 81% of its revenues from China.

Hyflux Water Trust (HWT) is another interesting China water play...

Hyflux builds wastewater treatment systems. But it doesn't want to operate them once they're built. They tie up capital and stop it from expanding its construction business. Hyflux prefers to move them off its balance sheet.

So last year, Hyflux spun off 13 of its Chinese wastewater treatment plants into a separate investment vehicle named Hyflux Water Trust. Wastewater treatment plants are high-yield investments. They're very safe and they generate steady cash flows. HWT pays an 8% dividend yield.

Hyflux and Hyflux Water Trust are excellent businesses in a growing sector. But there are half a dozen other Singapore water companies you should know about, too. Most of them are fairly cheap. Asian stock markets have fallen this year and taken the stock prices of these water companies with them.

These water companies are all listed on the Singapore stock exchange... but they do the majority of their business in China:

Company
Market Cap
(US$ millions)
Price-to-Earnings
Price-to-Book
Epure International
$735
21x
3.12x
Bio-Treat
$245
4x
0.58x
Sinomem
$267
5x
1.35x
Asia Water Technology
$51
5x
0.65x
Hyflux
$1,439
38x
5.88x
Hyflux Water Trust
$193
43x
n/a
Dayen Environment
$30
no profits
1.24x
Asia Environment Holdings
$191
9x
1.29x

In sum, Singapore is a world leader in the water business... and its water companies do most of their business in China. These companies will benefit from China's massive efforts to clean up its water.

Related Articles

The Water Crisis Looming Over Beijing

The Sinkhole Syndrome

Around 700 stocks list on the Singapore exchange. It's as transparent and well regulated as any market in the world. I recommend you take a look at the Singapore water industry... and use this list to begin your research.

Good investing,

Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

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THE STUNNING, RELENTLESS COLLAPSE OF CHINA SOUTHERN

The latest from the "kick 'em while they're down file"...

China Southern Airlines, our long-time Market Notes whipping boy, has collapsed again. Shares have plunged 22% in the past week to reach a new low.

The strategy of a smart speculator is simple: Keep an eye on the great boom/bust areas of the stock market. Wait for extremes in investor optimism/pessimism... Wait for everyone to get on the same side of the boat. Then bet against the crowd and wait for the inevitable huge move.

Our short boom/bust list contains biotech, mining, oil, and Chinese stocks. These areas have awesome stories and attract huge amounts of investor interest. Their booms and busts offer the best opportunities.

As you can see from today's chart, the bust we warned you about in November is spectacular. China Southern is down 80% from its bubble high. Everyone loved Chinese shares 10 months ago. Everyone hates them now. Our buying interest is growing by the day!

China Southern Airlines Co. Ltd.

Soaring inflation and slowing growth have hit the outlook for emerging sovereign credit ratings, and investors are bracing for a series of downgrades which could dent confidence in emerging markets.

Improving local finances and domestic growth helped trigger a string of sovereign upgrades in emerging markets in recent years, with Brazil assigned the coveted investment grade by two of the three major ratings agencies in the past few months.

But from here on, ratings agencies say, the outlook is likely to be more gloomy.

Ken Orchard, senior analyst for sovereign risk at Moody's, said inflation had been a direct factor behind the ratings agency's decision last month to cut its outlook to negative for Egypt and Vietnam.

Reuters

China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index fell 5.2 percent Monday following the release of economic data showing wholesale price inflation jumped to its highest level in 12 years in July.

The Shanghai index closed at 2,470.07 on Monday, down 135.65 points. That was its lowest close in more than a year and a half.

Airlines, textile exporters and refiners led the decline. Two of three major publicly traded airlines dropped by the daily maximum 10 percent.

– AP

President Bush has become the first sitting U.S. president to attend the Olympics in a foreign country.

He said he's been looking forward to it ever since he learned that in China people are not allowed to make fun of political leaders.
– Jimmy Kimmel

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