Friday, July 15, 2011

Best China Investment - Taiwan


Chinese stocks are hot. Taiwanese stocks are not. That's about to change.

Taiwan will hold its presidential election on March 22nd. Barring an extraordinary electoral surprise, Ying-jeou Ma, the candidate from the pro-business and less China-averse KMT will win the election. (Currently Ying-jeou Ma is leading with 63% in Taiwan's political futures market.)

The relationship between China and Taiwan is best seen as a broken marriage. China wants to reconcile the rift on its own terms, and threatens consequences if that should not happen. Taiwan, on the other hand, suffers from multiple personality disorder. One part of it wants an outright divorce. The other wants to stay separated with the option of eventual reconciliation.

For the last eight years, Taiwan has been ruled by a president who favored outright divorce. His government has been responsible for hampering economic interactions between China and Taiwan. As the result, Taiwan's economy languished exactly when China was making a great leap forward. Taiwanese stock market is basically where it was eight years ago. But many emerging economies have seen their stock markets double or even triple during that time. It's likely we'll see a catch-up rally once the dust settles after the election.

Even a surprise win by DPP candidate Frank Hsieh wouldn't be that bad for Taiwanese stocks. He's seen as a pragmatist within his party. Rhetorically, he would still want the divorce. Economically however, he wouldn't mind sleeping with China.

Inclusion, if you want a small piece of China in your retirement investment portfolio, you can still have it cheap with a Taiwan ETF (EWT) or some Taiwan ADRs.




About the author:

Michael Zhuang is president of MZ Capital, a registered investment advisor offering retirement planning and investment management services through Fidelity Investments. His disciplined value investing approach has beaten the market every year since its inception. Michael writes an investment newsletter called The Investment Scientist. More of his investment articles [http://www.investmentscientist.com] can be found in his blog.



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