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Editor's note: As inflation rates rise, money has less value when it sits quietly in your bank account. In the face of a volatile stock market and tightening property market, people rushed to pour their money in 10 new investment arenas in 2010. But extra caution is recommended with these new markets.
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1. Hot money enters wine market
2. Huanglong jade creates fast wealth
3. Diamonds become an investor's best friend
5. Chinese home buyers heading overseas
7. Chinese art prices hit record high
8. Investors eager for slice of wedding cake
9. Gold's bull run to continue
10. TCM, a new investment channel
1. Hot money enters wine market
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Bottles of 1990 Chateau Margaux on show at a recent auction in Hong Kong. An increasing number of Chinese business people have become wine collectors for investment purposes as well as pleasure. [Photo / China Daily] |
Chinese billionaires are discovering a new source of big returns - the wine market. The yield from some famous French vintages during the first half of this year has exceeded 30 percent, far above other alternatives. After the Chinese government tightened property policies, many investors followed their taste buds and money into the profitable wine industry.[Full story]
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Wine-collecting tips for investors
2. Huanglong jade creates fast wealth
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Huanglong jade's prices have jumped rapidly in the past five years as its popularity with collectors grew. [Photo / China Daily] |
Many farmers in Longling have become rich by marketing Huanglong jade. The local government has been marketing the resource since 2004. Research shows there are more than 600 private companies involved in the jade business, with 40,000 to 60,000 employees. [Full story]
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3. Diamonds become an investor's best friend
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Beijingers are seeing diamonds as a good investment besides stock and property markets. [Photo / China Daily] |
In total, around $3 billion worth of diamonds were sold in China last year. Sales of diamonds suitable for investment - usually those with a weight of more than one carat - are expected to increase by 40 percent this year. [Full story]
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4. Apples offer juicy profits
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Farmers pack apples into boxes in Luochuan county of Yan'an, Shaanxi province, Oct 18, 2010. [Photo / Xinhua] |
Although many of the voices in the marketplace and in the media are laying the blame on opportunist speculators, experts say their involvement is only one of the factors driving up apple prices. Cold weather, droughts and floods have hit growers, reducing output and causing supply shortages. [Full story]
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Apple prices surge pleases Chinese growers, angers consumers
Apple season harvests two billion yuan
5. Chinese home buyers heading overseas
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People exercise at the Millennium Water condominium complex in Vancouver. Buyers from the Chinese mainland represent between 40 and 50 percent of the current market for pre-sale projects in the city. [Photo/ Agencies] |
Related readings:
Realty firm eyes Chinese demand
Chinese take advantage of slump in US home prices
Foreign properties attract eyes of wealthy Beijingers
6. Clean power 'needs boost'
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US billionaire Warren Buffett stands with Wang Chuanfu, founder of Chinese auto maker BYD, at the company's news conference in Shenzhen on Monday. [Photo / Agencies] |
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7. Chinese art prices hit record high
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Hong Kong-based connoisseur Alice Cheng holds the Qing Dynasty vase that she bought at a Sotheby's auction in Hong Kong October 7, 2010. [Photo / Agencies] |
Great art continues to inspire buyers and generate high prices, demonstrating a sustained commitment to art as an investment. As more Chinese people accumulate wealth, they are transferring their capital from property and stock markets to art works. The market for Chinese works of art has been on the rise due to a great deal of active participation from private collectors, both from major cities such as Beijing and Shanghai and now second-tier cities. [Full story]
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8. Investors eager for slice of wedding cake
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A girl tries on a wedding gown at the Beijing Wedding Expo. [Photo / China Daily] |
This level of expenditure, which is growing by 20 percent a year, has spawned a whole new industry with an estimated 20,000 companies providing specialized wedding services from cakes and diamond rings to dedicated wedding planning companies. [Full story]
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9. Gold's bull run to continue
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A sales assistant puts back a gold Buddha-shaped pendant after showing to a customer at Caibai Ornaments store in Beijing December 2, 2010. [Photo / Agencies] |
Gold miners and gold-related stocks are expected to benefit from the price surge as investors continue to buy the metal to guard against volatile financial markets. [Full story]
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Gold, jewelery popular in China
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Investors see gold as inflation hedge
Experts say no end in sight for gold's bull run
10. TCM, a new investment channel
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A worker prepares prescriptions at Beijing's Capital Medical University Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital April 6, 2010. The hospital distributes around 20,000 doses of their herbal medicine daily, which amounts to more than five tons of ingredients. [Photo / Agencies] |
Related readings:
China tightens quality control over TCM
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TCM continues to find favor with Chinese
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