Start Here

Mike Stathis Warned About Chinese SPACs and Chinese Stock Market Collapse Years in Advance

Mike Stathis recommended Chinese stocks several years before the 2008 financial crisis, enabling investors to capture astounding gains.

He also advised investors to get out of Chinese stocks (via H shares through the ETF, FXI) in early 2008, only to recommend reentering by late 2008, which would end up being the bottom. 

Mike was bullish on Chinese stocks (FXI) for several years ever since he nailed the bottom in the Chinese stock market in November 2008. 

But by 2015, he began to issue some warnings.

The first of these warnings are in the video below.   

Years before investors realized the dangers of U.S.-listed Chinese shell companies, Mike warned about these SPACs.

He pointed to the lack of transparency and accountability seen in these companies, and reminded investors that these stocks were risky.

He discusses these risks in the video below.

Mike also points out that he believed the Chinese stock market was entering a bubble and that this bubble would either pop quickly or last for a long time.

Not long after the video was released the Chinese stock market entered a bubble, which popped by March 2015. 

Finally, in this 2015 video Mike discussed that he believed the Chinese stock market would face a colossal blow up several years down the road.   

Over the next several years after this video was released, Mike would go on to publish accurate research forecasting the Chinese economy and stock market (using FXI), enabling investors navigate the ups and downs of the Chinese stock market.   

By 2018, Mike became very bearish on the Chinese stock market. 

And by 2021, he predicted a collapse of the Chinese stock market.

In May 2022, Mike delivered what might be the world's single most comprehensive and insightful research presentation on the short-, intermediate-, and long-term fate of the Chinese economy and stock market called the China Report

The China Report is a 5-hour webinar presentation containing over 250 slides detailing the past, present and future of China's economic growth and possible fate of its capital markets. 

Among other things, the China Report predicted and detailed the real estate crisis seen today in China.  

But there's so much more to the China Report.

 

 


Restrictions Against Reproduction: No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner and the Publisher.

These articles and commentaries cannot be reposted or used in any publications for which there is any revenue generated directly or indirectly. These articles cannot be used to enhance the viewer appeal of any website, including any ad revenue on the website, other than those sites for which specific written permission has been granted. Any such violations are unlawful and violators will be prosecuted in accordance with these laws.

Article 19 of the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.

This publication (written, audio and video) represents the commentary and/or criticisms from Mike Stathis or other individuals affiliated with Mike Stathis or AVA Investment Analytics (referred to hereafter as the “author”). Therefore, the commentary and/or criticisms only serve as an opinion and therefore should not be taken to be factual representations, regardless of what might be stated in these commentaries/criticisms. There is always a possibility that the author has made one or more unintentional errors, misspoke, misinterpreted information, and/or excluded information which might have altered the commentary and/or criticisms. Hence, you are advised to conduct your own independent investigations so that you can form your own conclusions. We encourage the public to contact us if we have made any errors in statements or assumptions. We also encourage the public to contact us if we have left out relevant information which might alter our conclusions. We cannot promise a response, but we will consider all valid information.


0:00
0:00