Strategies & Market Trends | Greater China Junior Stocks


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To: Julius Wong who started this subject11/2/2003 8:06:01 AM
From: Julius Wong   of 1989
 
Stocks 30% below 52-week high

  Symbol    % Of high
------ ----------
UTSI 69.60
MXICY 68.46
PACT 66.71
NTES 64.68

ATS 63.66
CHINA 63.55
XING 62.11
ASIA 60.43

NWD 59.44
CHRB 55.41
ICAB 54.84
DFCT 20.34

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (379)11/3/2003 3:25:28 PM
From: Condor   of 1989
 
Julius...In addition to V.CPTs "first to market" and expansion plans in China, I believe the following article clearly demonstrates why ITT, Apollo and DeVry recognize an opportunity and have therefore hitched up with CPT as a rising star. CPT appears to be consolidating its recent gains here and I "suspect" another leg up is forthcoming quite soon. Caution........ I now have a large position so I am biased. :o)

EIU Business China October 13, 2003 Monday China

The Economist Intelligence Unit Ltd.
All Rights Reserved
EIU Business China

October 13, 2003 Monday

LENGTH: 1051 words

HEADLINE: China: Business 101

Two new laws offer private investors greater access and incentives to tap
into domestic demand for educational services

As home to 23% of the world's students, China will never have trouble
attracting investors to its education sector. It just needs to let them in.
The Chinese government has done this to some extent, allowing private
investors to provide education where it could not. The country now has over
60,000 private educational institutions, ranging from minban (people-run)
schools in rural areas to elite professional schools in China's richest
cities. Foreign participation, for the most part, has focused on such
services as English training and executive education.

Two recently enacted laws pave the way for expanded private and foreign
investment in China's schools, however. With the Private Education Promotion
Law, enacted on September 1st, the central government now officially allows
private schools to earn a surplus (though the educational services sector
retains its non-profit designation). A second law, the Regulations for
Chinese-Foreign Co-operation in Running Schools, also enacted on September
1st, sets clearer guidelines for the establishment of joint-venture schools
and encourages foreign investment in a wider range of services.

Under the new rules, foreign investment will remain prohibited in compulsory
education -- primary and junior-middle school -- and schooling in
security-related or politically sensitive areas such as the military, the
police, politics or religion. But the regulations aim to encourage foreign
participation in higher and vocational education, where demand is strong.
State-sponsored universities, for example, now serve only a fraction (10%)
of the country's secondary school graduates.

Taking roll

China's education market is promising not only for its large number of
potential consumers, but also for the importance attached to education in
the country. In a recent survey conducted by the National Bureau of
Statistics (NBS), 33.5% of respondents said that they were willing to put
their children's education on the top of their list of household spending.
The NBS estimates that total potential consumption power by Chinese
households for education and cultural activities now amounts to Rmb300bn
(US$36.2bn) -- a figure expected to double by 2005.

Foreign investment has entered some Chinese classrooms through joint-venture
schools, but only on a small scale. According to official figures, just 657
foreign-invested schools and institutions had been approved as of November
2002. Instead, overseas investors have focused on training and part-time
schooling services often offered through commercial enterprises (which are
more easily registered than schools). These enterprises are not allowed to
offer mainstream full-time schooling to Chinese students, however. Nor are
they allowed to confer diplomas recognised by the Ministry of Education.

A number of significant private and foreign-invested education projects have
been announced in China over the last few months, testifying to interest in
the market. These include the following:

Besides signalling investor interest, recent investment decisions can also
be seen as votes of confidence in the new laws outlining regulations for
private and foreign investment in Chinese schools. Many foreign educational
institutions have been turned off by the uncertainty of the industry's
regulations in the past. Schools are not the same as a corporate entity,
says Walker Wallace of law firm O'Melveny & Myers in Shanghai. With schools,
you don't have the comfort of that well-defined rulebook. Though investing
in schools in China still requires government approvals, the new laws
improve the regulatory environment.

School rules

The most significant recent legal development is that private schools will
now be allowed to record an official surplus, at least in principle. Under
previous legislation on private education, private schools, as non-profit
entities, were not permitted to distribute any revenue among investors. If a
school closed down, sponsors could take back funds equal to their original
investments, but any extra belonged to the state, according to Jason Yu, an
associate at O'Melveny & Myers in Shanghai.

The new legislation permits schools to make a reasonable return on their
investments, but does not specify how much or how it might be used. It is
expected that the Ministry of Education's forthcoming implementing measures
for the law will cap the rate of return at around 10%. The major
breakthrough is that the law would allow the schools to earn some money
without being labelled as making profits, says Cheung Kwok Wah, acting
director of the Wah Ching Centre of Research on Education in China at the
University of Hong Kong.

Though tuition at foreign-invested schools will continue to be set by a
government pricing policy, schools will have some leeway to charge their
students service-related fees. According to Frank Rocco of Hong Kong-based
law firm Frank Rocco & Associates, the kind and amount of fees that schools
will be allowed to impose (since all must be approved) will, as now, depend
on an investors' government relations.

The regulations are also important in that they give joint-venture schools a
legal person property right and set approval procedures and approving
authorities for different levels of foreign-invested education, bringing
more clarity to how an overseas investor can establish a school.

Moreover, by setting private and public education on an equal plane (again,
in principle), the laws suggest that private schools might be eligible for
the tax exemptions, diploma conferral rights and other permissions awarded
to government-funded schools that have sometimes been denied their private
counterparts in the past, according to Mr Cheung.

The regulations leave some questions unanswered and raise still others. Yet
investors appear confident. O'Melveny & Myers, for example, has recorded an
increase in inquiries for education investments since the announcement of
the new regulations, despite the uncertainty of how they will be
implemented. The law is evolving, Mr Wallace explains, but you can't just
stop doing business.



cheers

C

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To: Julius Wong who started this subject11/3/2003 9:42:03 PM
From: Condor   of 1989
 
oooohhhh! v.pmz today.
I don't hold it.....sniff. :o(

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To: Condor who wrote (390)11/3/2003 9:48:06 PM
From: Julius Wong   of 1989
 
Today's good movers

  IVN.TO    +19.3%
PMZ.V +16.7%

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To: Julius Wong who started this subject11/3/2003 10:09:40 PM
From: Julius Wong   of 1989
 
From Precious and Base Metal Investing thread

copper mines
Message 19458604

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To: Julius Wong who started this subject11/4/2003 5:53:24 PM
From: Condor   of 1989
 
asia.businessweek.com 

BusinessWeek Online
Educating China's "Little Emperors"
Tuesday November 4, 8:24 am ET
By Frederik Balfour in Shanghai

The first thing five-year-old Shi Youxun does when he gets home from kindergarten every afternoon is switch on the computer. But he doesn't just sit there playing games. Instead, he chooses from dozens of programs that teach him about science, drill him on spelling, or test his math skills. And when Youxun isn't navigating with the mouse, he's busy memorizing Chinese poetry or practicing his English. "We started him on the alphabet when he was one or two years old," boasts his grandfather, Shi Guojun, a retired Shanghai aviation worker with whom the boy lives during the week so his parents can work. "We want him to pick up two or three foreign languages, and then in the future we can let him focus on music and art."

Shi Youxun is a typical product of China's new urban middle class. With four grandparents and two parents to care for him -- Youxun is an only child -- he is a member of what is known as a "one-mouth, six-pocket" family, a result of China's one-child policy initiated 24 years ago.
The first group of single children, especially the boys, became known as "little emperors" for the attention and luxuries that were showered on them. In China's increasingly competitive society, parents these days are more concerned with their child's success in later life and are desperate to give Junior an early edge. "Today's moms and dads are looking for ways to get their kids ahead," says Christopher Mumford, chief operating officer of Beijing-based BabyCare Ltd., which sells nutritional products aimed at infants and pregnant women. "They are
looking to supplement a kid's education starting from Day Zero."

KIDDIE CASH

That's creating opportunities for companies peddling everything from health supplements to interactive English-language teaching software aimed at kids. Although no one knows exactly how big this market is, foreign companies are keen to sell to a potential customer base that grows by 22 million newborns every year. True, the majority of those babies are in the impoverished countryside, but what the cities lack in fecundity they more than make up for in purchasing power. "Some parents are spending $10,000 per year for kindergarten," marvels Dulce
Lim, head of Asia-Pacific publishing at The Walt Disney Co. (NYSE:DIS - News) in Hong Kong. "The market has really evolved."

Disney started out in China in 1994 with Mandarin versions of Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck comic books. A year later, it introduced children's books. Today, with more than 10 million comics and 2.7 million books sold, it's moving full speed into educational products. Magic English, a $225 Disney package that includes workbooks, flash cards, and 26 videodisks, has been "phenomenally successful" since it was introduced two years ago, Lim says. This summer, Disney launched interactive educational CD-ROMs featuring the likes of Winnie the Pooh and 101 Dalmations' Cruella DeVille. In April, Disney plans to start selling Baby Einstein, a series of videos that bombard infants and toddlers with images and classical music that supposedly make them more receptive to learning later on. Next year, Lim says, Disney China will license its characters to Emeryville [Calif.]-based LeapFrog Enterprises Inc. (NYSE:LF - News) for use in interactive talking books that spell a word aloud when a child highlights it with a stylus.

Disney isn't the only company looking to combine education with computer technology in China. This year, Hong Kong-based VTech Holdings Ltd. started selling 16 electronic-learning products -- including the Bright Buddies laptop for teaching preschoolers music, English, and math, and the Girl Fun PC, a purse-shaped notebook computer. Time Warner Inc. (NYSE:TWX - News) is testing the waters in Shanghai with an interactive language course called English Time. The 200-lesson, 40-CD set takes as long as four years for a child to complete. After
successful debuts in Taiwan and Hong Kong, Time Warner is expecting strong sales on the mainland -- despite the $3,300 price tag.
"Surprisingly, in Shanghai people will pay that kind of money," says Trevor E. Lunn, Time Life International's managing director for Asia. "People underestimate the purchasing power of the Chinese."

Others are taking a more grass-roots approach. BabyCare sells its vitamins and supplements to young mothers who attend direct-sales sessions. Key to the company's message is the role of prenatal and infant nutrition in a child's ability to learn. "I wasn't healthy during my pregnancy and was lacking parenting information," says 24-year-old Wei Yen. She learned the importance of nutrition the hard way: Her son, now two years old, suffered from a series of illnesses until Wei enrolled in a three-day BabyCare course. There she learned, among other
things, that putting sugar in her baby's formula -- something her mother insisted she do -- was nutritional folly. Now her son is healthy enough to attend day care, and Wei makes about $400 per month peddling BabyCare products. The selling efforts of Wei and 5,000 others like her are paying off for BabyCare. The company, whose investors include the Templeton Private Equity fund, expects sales to hit $10 million this year and $20 mi! llion in 2004.

One potentially lucrative set of products that has been slow to take off is educational toys -- even though many of those that American kids play with are made in China's Pearl River Delta. Chinese parents don't regard toys as anything, it seems, more than a means to amuse kids. Lane Nemeth, founder of Discovery Toys in Livermore, Calif., is challenging that notion. So her company is selling items such as three-dimensional puzzles and plastic measuring cups that teach toddlers simple math through volumes. "There's a push in China toward math and science," says Nemeth. Meanwhile, mighty Mattel Inc. (NYSE:MAT - News), which has been selling its Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels cars in China since 1999, still hasn't introduced its Fisher-Price line of preschool toys on the mainland. In China, it's still "Day One, Page One," says Executive Vice-President Bryan G. Stockton.

CREATIVITY 101

The marketing opportunities haven't been lost on Hong Kong publisher Tom. Last year the company launched a mainland version of Mom Baby Magazine, which provides tips on pregnancy and child care from doctors and teachers. "Parents only have one child, and they are very concerned, so this field is really growing," says Lisa Wu, chairman of Nong Nong Intermedia Group, the Tom subsidiary that publishes the magazine. With a circulation of 50,000, it isn't yet profitable, though it has attracted a blue-chip roster of advertisers including Disney,
Johnson& Johnson (NYSE:JNJ - News), and Nestle.

The reluctance of parents to focus on a child's artistic side makes it hard for companies that try to go beyond the three R's. Hong Kong-based Kids' Gallery has opened a Beijing franchise offering after-school classes in arts and crafts. But only 30 of the 100 students enrolled come from mainland Chinese families -- mainly those whose parents have traveled or lived abroad. The other 70 students are children of expatriates. "Creativity for Asian kids is seriously underdeveloped. Education is all about memorizing, rote learning, and passing exams," says Joanna Hotung, founder of Kids' Gallery. Even that emphasis, however, should keep companies that help Chinese kids learn plenty busy in years to come.

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To: Condor who wrote (393)11/4/2003 5:56:27 PM
From: Condor   of 1989
 
Stock Investors Play The China Card
Relaxed government controls and a rush toward industrialization have spawned
an unprecedented economic boom in mainland China - and moneymaking manna for
investors.

The boom is a long time coming for the nation of 1.3 billion people. Wall
Street has banged the drum for China as a source of huge growth and
investment possibilities for what seems like forever.

But after several false starts, China seems to have arrived. Government has
started to stabilize, slowly but surely. Major corporations, while still
largely controlled by the state, have parlayed relaxed controls into new
growth.

The building of China's infrastructure has been the biggest boon. Stroll
through Shanghai, Beijing and other major cities, and necks strain from
gawking at cranes erecting skyscrapers. New roads and bridges are snaking in
every direction. Dot-coms are popping up all over as pent-up Web demand
mushrooms by the day.

The companies keyed into that building - the steel providers, petrochemical
firms, power companies and tech upstarts - are rising. Their growth has
spawned a new generation of industry and stock market leaders.

"We were recently in Beijing, Xian, Shanghai, and we were just amazed," said
Tim Halter, head of Halter Financial Group. "I was at an intersection in a
cab, so I just start counting; there were 14 high-rise cranes at one
intersection that I could count. It's unbelievable the growth going on and
people's optimism and understanding of what's happening to them. They're
living in a historic moment, and they're aware of it."

Two weeks ago, Halter's firm launched the U.S. China Index. The index is
comprised of 22 stocks, most based in mainland China and all doing the bulk
of their business on the mainland.

It includes several market leaders. China Yuchai, which owns the bulk of
Chinese diesel engine maker Guangxi Yuchai Machinery, has surged more than
sixfold year to date. Sohu.com, a leading Chinese Internet portal, has run
up more than fivefold.

For now, the index can be watched - but not bought - by keying in USXC on
Reuters and other wire services.

A spokesman for the American Stock Exchange, which trades exchange-traded
funds (ETFs) for the S&P and Nasdaq, said the Amex offers Hong Kong and
Taiwan index funds, but nothing that shadows China-based, U.S.-traded
American Depository Receipts (ADRs). With investors reluctant to tackle the
uncertain climate and arcane regulations of foreign exchanges, demand has
surged for Western means to capitalize on China's growth.

Some mutual fund firms have jumped on the bandwagon. U.S. Global Investors'
China Regent Opportunity Fund has vaulted 55% this year. The fund consists
entirely of China-based companies, most from industries often considered
old-economy laggards. Those include mining, metal and chemical stocks.

U.S. Global Investors Chief Investment Officer Frank Holmes sees multiple
trends at work in China. Already armed with the fourth largest GDP in the
world, the country has embarked on a series of policy and infrastructure
efforts to jump-start the largely forgotten rural parts of the country,
where 800 million Chinese live. China also has become the world's largest
direct recipient of foreign investment. Warren Buffett, known as a
risk-averse investor, surprised Wall Street when he plunked heavy dollars
into PetroChina, the country's national petroleum company.

Meanwhile, China has a voracious appetite for raw materials.

"They need oil, copper and steel to build all this," said Holmes. "Steel
prices especially have gone through the roof. All of our waste is their
product."

Demand for excess materials has fueled huge growth for firms like Schnitzer
Steel. Via joint ventures and its own operations, the Portland, Ore.-based
scrap steel firm has found its sweet spot, supplying scrap to China as fast
as it can.

"Scrap is an international commodity, with a strong correlation between
supply and demand," said Barry Rosen, Schnitzer's chief financial officer.
"There's a finite quantity of it - you can't just mine it. So when there's
an increasing demand for scrap, prices move, and China's the largest steel
producer in the world, by a factor of two."

Many risks remain. Most of China's companies are wholly or largely state
owned, notes Mark Mobius, president of Franklin Templeton's Templeton
Emerging Markets Fund and the Templeton Developing Markets Trust. So a shift
in China's economic policy makes everyone highly vulnerable.

At China's banks, most state-owned, 30%-40% of loans are non-performing.
China hopes the nation's huge savings tendencies can cover those loans. But
the government may end up bailing out banks.

"There's also the political risk," Mobius said. "Hard-liners could say,
'Hey, we don't like what's going on here' and decide to change things.
Fortunately, that possibility is becoming more and more remote. Too many
people are doing very well as a result of what's going on."

Also, financial reports in a developing nation like China may not be as
accurate, complete or timely as U.S.' companies. Some firms, like China
Yuchai, release results once a year.

Then there are the same old risks you'll find in any company. Internet
portal NetEase.com missed profit views last week and watched its once
highflying stock plunge to 36% off its high. The government had cracked down
on porn funneling through NetEase's portal.

Investor's Business Daily 11-03-03

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To: Julius Wong who started this subject11/4/2003 9:50:48 PM
From: Julius Wong   of 1989
 
Review of Greater China Stocks

Strong Buy
ACH, CEO, CHDX, CYD, HNP, JCC, NTE, NTES, PTR, SINA, SNP, SOHU, TSM, UTSI

Buy
ASTT, ASX, AUO, CBA, CTEL, DSWL, GAI, GSH, HIHO, JADE, PACT, PEAK, SAT, SDAY, SHI, SPIL, TOM, UMC, XING, YZC, ZNDT

Canadian Stocks
Based on StockHouse Sentiment Stockscore, the following stocks are rated Buy
CPT, IVN, SWG

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To: Condor who wrote (394)11/4/2003 10:49:49 PM
From: gg cox   of 1989
 
<<<U.S. Global Investors Chief Investment Officer Frank Holmes sees multiple
trends at work in China....>>>

I see U.S.Global Investors has 1.3 million CPT.v..I picked up this link off DMX thread.

lionshares.com 

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (395)11/5/2003 4:27:31 AM
From: Postman   of 1989
 
Hi Julius- PXI.V has 4 mineral licenses in Mongolia, as well as a 50/50 joint venture with Goldcorp in Red Lake, and a Mexican property-
--------
Here is an update on their financing of today-

------------------------
Planet Exploration increases financing to $6.02-million
2003-11-04 17:28 ET - News Release
Mr. Ranjeet Sundher reports

PLANET INCREASES BOUGHT DEAL FINANCING

Planet Exploration has agreed, subject to regulatory approval, to increase its bought-deal financing reported in Stockwatch on Nov. 4, 2003, of $5.04-million (3.6 million units) to $6.02-million (4.3 million units). All other terms and conditions of the bought-deal financing remain the same as previously announced.

The units will be sold at a price of $1.40 per unit. Each unit comprises one common share and one non-transferable common share purchase warrant. Each warrant will entitle the holder to purchase one common share at a price of $2 for 24 months from closing. If at any time after six months the trading price of the company's shares close at a price equal to, or higher than, $3 per share for a consecutive period of 20 trading days, the company will be entitled to force conversion of the warrants.

Haywood Securities will act as underwriter and will be entitled to receive a 6-per-cent cash commission and compensation options equal to 5 per cent of the number of units sold in the offering, entitling Haywood to subscribe for units at a price of $1.40 per unit exercisable for 24 months from closing. All of the securities will be subject to a four-month hold period in Canada following closing.

Net proceeds will be used to finance exploration on the company's assets, including the Sidace Lake gold project in Ontario, the company's Mongolian and Mexican mineral properties, and for general working capital purposes. The private placement is subject to acceptance for filing by the TSX Venture Exchange.

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