China

China Articles

ThinkstockGM (NYSE: GM) will spend $5 billon on expansion efforts to sell more cars in developing nations. The premise for this investment may be faulty. People in places like Brazil and India may...
Whatever the Chinese government set in the way of keeping stocks higher ran out of steam as major markets there fell as much as 8%. The run up in stocks over the last year has large been destroyed....
The contracting China purchasing managers' index published this week surprised analysts as the the number came in even worse than expected.
Following its spin-off from Yahoo, Aabaco will be an independent, publicly traded, non-diversified closed-end fund and will not be treated as a regulated investment company under the U.S. tax code.
24/7 Wall St. has a thought here that should seriously be considered, and it comes with an up-front admission that the odds of success would seem to be very low.
Google without China and Russia is Google without two of the world's most important world markets.
Apple ran into some rough patches this week, both from a strategic and stock market standpoint. Let’s take a look at why.
Short interest in Apple rose by more than 3 million shares in the most recent period, making Apple the 10th most shorted stock on the Nasdaq.
Has the drop in China's stock market found a bottom yet? Some investors think so, while other investors think something far worse could be coming down the pipe.
With Shanghai posting a massive rally, there are many big stocks on the move that trade in the United States that are really Chinese outfits.
Many large multinational companies, including Ford and General Motors, battle market saturation. They pin their hopes on emerging economies for expansion plans.
E-Commerce China Dangdang may be the next "go private" transaction in China, wherein management buys the company on the cheap.
China is doing what it can to stop the bloodletting, but reviews of the Shanghai chart and the Nasdaq tech bubble charts might make some investors fear a much deeper market correction in China.
The Chinese stock market is in shambles. A value investor may want to take a hard look at the region’s American-listed companies.
Whatever the Chinese government thought it was doing to put a foundation under stock prices has not worked.