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Monday, 08/31/2009 2:08:06 PM

Monday, August 31, 2009 2:08:06 PM

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China has set the tone for our Monday market forecast.

Chinese traders dumped shares early this morning after a popular magazine rumored that the booming Chinese loan market is cooling off. Caijing magazine guessed that the Chinese loaned about $29 billion in August, a 43% crash from July. While that number isn’t official, traders around the red nation raced for the exits. The Shanghai Composite closed down 6.7%, its worst day in over a year. 16% of the stocks on the Shanghai Composite fell 10%, the daily limit down.

Thus, as we charted above, Chinese stocks are in a textbook bear market. In fact, down 23% since its 2009 peak earlier this month, the Shanghai Composite will be the worst performing major national index in the world for the month of August.

But still up around 50% for the year, is this the time to pile back into China -- the great hope of the global market rebound? With the Shanghai Composite still priced 29 times earnings, it’s hard to be too enthusiastic. According to Bloomberg, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index is going for 19 times earnings.

If you’re debating buying this dip, you should check this out: Earlier this year, Addison Wiggin penned a report that spelled out a “triple timebomb” that would derail the global rebound… one of which was a faux boom in Chinese stocks.


China’s sell-off has hit just about every asset class today, especially commodities. You know the drill by now: Commodity traders of the world have pinned hopes on China’s rise, and every time they falter, oil and copper hit the bid. Light, sweet crude is down over 3% as we write, to $69 a barrel. Copper shed about 3% as well.

Bigplay777

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