Can The China Real Estate ETF Survive Bubble Fears?

By: ETFdb
Over the past decade, China has become an incredible economic force, surging from an investment afterthought to one of the key nations for trade in the world today. The country is currently the world’s second biggest economy from a GDP perspective and exports more products, in dollar terms, than any other nation on earth. Yet, with incredible growth comes difficult choices as well; inflation in the country has begun to settle at uncomfortable levels with recent readings putting the year-over-year change above 6%. This high rate of price increases, coupled with China’s relatively lax response to the situation, is starting to creep into a number of other sectors and may be resulting in unintended consequences for the economy that could be far more severe than many analysts could have initially predicted. The nexus of this problem stems from the Chinese government and their intense fear of clamping down too heavily on the rate of increases for [...] Click here to read the original article on ETFdb.com. Related Posts: ETF Research Report Now Available: China ETFs In Focus May ETFdb Category Kings: Best Performing ETFs Among Developed Market ETFs, Singapore And Hong Kong Crush The Competition Three Real Estate ETFs To Watch If The IMF Is Right Definitive Guide To China ETFs
Over the past decade, China has become an incredible economic force, surging from an investment afterthought to one of the key nations for trade in the world today.  The country is currently the world’s second biggest economy from a GDP perspective and exports more products, in dollar terms, than any other nation on earth. Yet, with incredible growth comes difficult choices as well; inflation in the country has begun to settle at uncomfortable levels with recent readings putting the year-over-year change above 6%. This high rate of price increases, coupled with China’s relatively lax response to the situation, is starting to creep into a number of other sectors and may be resulting in unintended consequences for the economy that could be far more severe than many analysts could have initially predicted.  The nexus of this problem stems from the Chinese government and their intense fear of clamping down too heavily on the rate of increases for [...]

Click here to read the original article on ETFdb.com.

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