Heart of China's bull market beats strong

Asian nation is only in the middle of its super cycle with several stages to come My debate last week with Gordon Chang on China's future at the Vancouver Resource Investment Conference was a stimulating, intellectual exercise. A healthy market needs a compromise between the bid and ask, and a discussion between people who strongly disagree is a great way to promote critical thinking. Critical thinking is vital to our investment process as a means to ensure that we question assumptions. One way our portfolio management team practices a critical-thinking process is through a weekly S.W.O.T. (Strengths-Weaknesses-Opportunities-Threats) analysis of key factors influencing global markets. By hammering out the positives and negatives, we can paint an accurate picture of the realities we face. The S.W.O.T. model allows us to avoid pitfalls by weighing the evidence. Lack of critical thinking sometimes leads to bubbles, such as the one taking place in the parabolic rise in the number of articles foretelling China will experience a “hard landing.” Last fall, more than 1,000 articles questioned the possibility of a “China crash,” according to data from BCA Research. This is twice as high as the number in 2004, when fear articles reached 500. Gordon's bearish pronouncements only added to the extreme negativity groupthink surrounding China's economy. Continue reading this article here.
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