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Why I'll Never Invest in China
By Tom Dyson
October 8, 2008

I pointed the beach cruiser down the road and started pedaling. Within five seconds, the little computer on the handlebar said I was going 20 miles per hour. The dust was making me squint, and my shirt was billowing in the wind. I wished I had sunglasses. This was the fastest bicycle I've ever ridden...

The Chinese love bicycles. They love electric bicycles even more. There must be 10 million electric bikes in Shanghai. "'Booming' is maybe too mild a word," said an electric bicycle industry spokesman. According to Tim Johnson, of Post Carbon Cities, "In many major [Chinese] cities, electric bicycles now make up 10 to 20 percent of all two-wheeled vehicles on the roads."

Electric bikes are silent, and they're as fast as mopeds. Watch out before you cross a street in Shanghai. I almost collided with one on my first night here. The rider was going 20 miles per hour in the dark, without lights… in total silence. I didn't see him coming and stepped into his path. He almost ran me over.

Mr. Ching makes the best electric bicycle in the world, the eZee. When you get on an eZee bike, you become stronger than the world's top cyclists. A couple of years ago, American cyclist Floyd Landis took a power meter on the Tour de France. He averaged 232 watts. The silent motor on Mr. Ching's eZee bike generates 350 watts of power... And that's without pedaling.

The eZee bike has won the world's most prestigious electric bike race – the Tour de Presteigne – for the last three years. It was the fastest electric bike in the grueling Jurassic Test in the Swiss Alps. In Holland, they've even started using Mr. Ching's bikes as ambulances.

Mr. Ching has a factory near Shanghai. I visited it last week. While I was there, I rode one of Mr. Ching's beach cruisers. Beach cruisers are designed for comfort, not speed. This one had huge "balloon" tires and a wide, bouncy saddle. Pedaling gently, I was able to cruise at 25 miles an hour on a flat road. A full battery charge lasts 40 miles. At current U.S. power prices, it costs about $0.10 to recharge the battery overnight.
 
You'd think Mr. Ching would have a roaring business selling his bikes in China. But he hasn't sold a single bike here. He only sells his bikes to foreigners. He refuses to supply the Chinese market.

"Many years ago, I swore I'd never do business in China again," explained Mr. Ching. He told me his first attempt at business in China – manufacturing PVC pipe for the construction industry – left him bankrupt when his customers refused to pay him what they owed.

Then there's the problem of forgery. Mr. Ching says if he sold bikes in China, they'd make forgeries of his bike and flood the market. Besides, Mr. Ching's electric bikes are 10 times as expensive as the common electric bikes people buy in China.

I take Mr. Ching's decision not to sell his bikes in China as a warning about China investments. First, doing business in the Chinese market is incredibly difficult. The Chinese are not wealthy. Forget Shanghai and Beijing... or what you saw on television during the Olympics. This is a carefully crafted illusion to make foreigners think China is rich. In the countryside, they live on a couple of dollars a day: 99% of China can't afford McDonald's, never mind Apple laptops. And they won't be able to for decades.

Second, Chinese entrepreneurs will copy business models and steal intellectual property. So it's impossible to keep ahead of the market. There's no respect for copyright or patents. Fake goods are everywhere in China... from TaylorMade r7 golf drivers to Rosetta Stone language courses.

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Finally, I don't trust the Chinese system to pay me what it owes. Every time I analyze Chinese stocks, I worry I'm playing in a casino where the house has a 15% edge.

Mr. Ching's business is exploding overseas, so it's not a problem. He's building a new, larger factory on a plot of land next door to his current operation and says sales will triple next year. As for me, I'm going to spend $2,000 for one of Mr. Ching's eZee bikes.

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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COPPER'S LINE IN THE SAND: IT'S ONLY A MATTER OF TIME

For the past few months, we've highlighted a slow-motion train wreck in the commodity markets: the collapse in the price of copper.

Copper is used in everything you see around you... the guts of your computer... the wiring in your car... the lines that run electricity to your house... the plumbing in your bathroom. Given its widespread use, copper's price is tied to the health of the global economy.

As we've mentioned several times in the past month, copper is taking a beating right now and has all but reached $2.40 per pound – a "line in the sand" for the global economy. A decline past this level tells us things are going from bad to worse.

We're optimists here at DailyWealth... We know many assets can soar during tough economic times. But this chart is a major call for investors to "hunker down" right now... keep plenty of cash and gold on hand... and make sure you don't own companies that depend on a healthy economy, because "healthy, it ain't."

Copper Futures - COMEX

The average vacancy at large U.S. malls in the third quarter rose to its highest level since 2001, and vacancy at strip malls hit a 14-year high, as strapped retailers failed to lease new space or broke leases.

The average U.S. mall vacancy rate rose 0.1 percentage points to 6.6 percent, its highest since the fourth quarter 2001, according to real estate research firm Reis Inc.

At strip malls, overbuilding, particularly at once-hot U.S. housing markets, helped propel the average vacancy up 30 percentage points from the prior quarter, to 8.4 percent, its highest level since 1994.

Of the top 30 metro areas, the markets where shopping centers were built in anticipation of continued housing growth topped the list of rising vacancy rates. Las Vegas; Sacramento, California; Tampa/St. Petersburg, Florida; and suburban Virginia saw the greatest vacancy increase at strip malls.

– Reuters

The travel industry has been hit hard by the economic slowdown, particularly in the last few weeks.

Airlines reported sharp declines in passenger traffic for September. Hotel occupancy rates are down, and corporate travel managers are demanding new concessions on previously negotiated deals.

Cancellations are starting to rise even at four- and five-star hotels, which previously seemed immune to the economy's travails.

Third-quarter profit fell 28 percent at Marriott International, which is considered an industry bellwether because of its big global presence and its wide range of hotel brands, from midlevel lodgings like Courtyard by Marriott to five-star luxury hotels like Ritz-Carlton.

– International Herald Tribune

If It Ain't the Next Depression, It's Time to Buy
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October 6, 2008

How AIG's Collapse Began a Global Run on the Banks
October 4, 2008

Don't Buy the Fear
October 3, 2008

The Single Best Income Strategy Ever Created Just Got Better
October 2, 2008

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