2008.03.11

Sharesleuth.com Takes Apart China Fire and Security Group

Financial investigative blog Sharesleuth.com takes apart China Fire and Security Group (NASD:CFSG) and its opaque journey from shell company through reverse merger to Nasdaq-listed firm.  The expose is quite long, but if want a peak into the seamy of side of this category of US-listed Chinese stocks, or if you happen to own one, it is a great, and disturbing read. The article details plenty of yellow and red flags for both investors and the US SEC.

CFSG had a great run, going from $3.25 per share on the day of its reverse merger in October 2006 to a peak of $18.10 on November 1, 2007. The stock closed Monday at just under $9. Several major US banks have positive ratings on the stock.

Sharesleuth.com is funded by billionaire Mark Cuban, and the expose discloses that Cuban has a short position in CFSG. It does not say when he took that position. He appears to take short positions in every company that Slaresleuth.com writes about, so you might consider Sharesleuth.com his personal research service that he has decided to share with the general public. Some have accused him of an inherent conflict of interest in funding Sharesleuth.com; you can read his thoughts here. I personally think he is doing investors a real service.

2008.03.09

Dirty Solar In China?

The Washington Post published an article today that looks at the environmental fallout of the production of polysilicon, the key input for the production of photovoltaic solar panels. The article focuses on the Luoyang Zhonggui High-Technology Co. (洛阳中硅高科技有限公司) in Henan province.

There is an obvious profit motive for taking shortcuts:

"With the price of polysilicon soaring from $20 per kilogram to $300 per kilogram in the past five years, Chinese companies are eager to fill the gap.

In China, polysilicon plants are the new dot-coms. Flush with venture capital and with generous grants and low-interest loans from a central government touting its efforts to seek clean energy alternatives, more than 20 Chinese companies are starting polysilicon manufacturing plants. The combined capacity of these new factories is estimated at 80,000 to 100,000 tons -- more than double the 40,000 tons produced in the entire world today...

if environmental protection technology is used, the cost to produce one ton is approximately $84,500. But Chinese companies are making it at $21,000 to $56,000a ton."

But the waste generated in the production--silicon tetrachloride-- is toxic:

"In sharp contrast to the gleaming white buildings in Zhonggui's new gated complex in Gaolong, the situation in the villages surrounding it is bleak.

About nine months ago, residents of Li's village, which begins about 50 yards from the plant, noticed that their crops were wilting under a dusting of white powder. Sometimes, there was a hazy cloud up to three feet high near the dumping site; one person tending crops there fainted, several villagers said. Small rocks began to accumulate in kettles used for boiling faucet water.

Each night, villagers said, the factory's chimneys released a loud whoosh of acrid air that stung their eyes and made it hard to breath. "It's poison air. Sometimes it gets so bad you can't sit outside. You have to close all the doors and windows," said Qiao Shi Peng, 28, a truck driver who said he worries about his 1-year-old son's health.

The villagers said most obvious evidence of the pollution is the dumping, up to 10 times a day, of the liquid waste into what was formerly a grassy field. Eventually, the whole area turned white, like snow."

The article specifically mentions Suntech Power (NYSE:STP) as one of the customers of Luoyang Zhonggui. This expose could be very bad news for Suntech, not because the Chinese government will shut down the supplier, but because a very material amount of Suntech's business is derived from sales of solar panels in Germany and Spain. Both Germany and Spain provide generous government subsidies for alternative energy, and both countries have very large environmental, or "green" movements. Suntech also has a small but growing US business, primarily in California, and residents of San Francisco might be interested to know that Suntech is the supplier of 3,000 solar modules at the San Francisco International Airport.  

I think those groups will begin to demand that government subsidies only be spent with companies that can prove a safe and environmentally clean supply chain. Good luck then to Suntech and to all the other Chinese polysilicon and photovoltaic panel manufacturers, most of whom also have a heavy reliance on European subsidies, and are hoping for US subsidies in the next iteration of a US energy bill. Several are public in the US, including but not limited to LDK Solar (NYSE:LDK), Solarfun (NASD:SOLF), Trina Solar (NYSE:TSL), JA Solar (NASD:JASO) and Yingli (NYSE:YGE). All of these companies live and die by overseas markets--solar power is a tiny fraction of the overall energy plans of the Chinese government. All of them may have perfectly clean and safe manufacturing processes and supply chains, but now they may be forced to prove it, possibly raising costs for them as their margins are already being pressured. 

Don't get me wrong, the development of alternative energy is vital. But people should be making decisions based on an awareness of all the costs involved.

2008.03.03

Chinese Artist Cao Fei (曹斐) Launches Project Based in Second Life: RMB City

Per the excellent Chinese art blog RedBox Review, Cao Fei (曹斐) has a show at Lombard-Fried Projects called RMB City.

Per Redbox:
"RMB City has been created by Cao Fei’s avatar China Tracy as an experimental utopian world for the 3D online virtual community of Second Life. Institutions and investors have been invited to buy buildings in RMB City and program events and activities within them where other Second Life users can participate. Thousands of young people in Asia and around the world are embracing Second Life as a “parallel universe” on the Internet."

Good thing they are having an offline exhibit. Otherwise they may throw a show in the wasteland that is Second Life and no one would attend. But if you like it, the gallery will happily sell you digital prints...

Hype 2.0?

2008.02.23

Pulitzer Prize Winning Journalist Sheryl WuDunn Now A Goldman Sachs Private Banker

Sheryl Wudunn, who along with her husband Nicholas Kristof won a Pulitzer Prize while covering the 1989 Beijing protests for the New York Times, is now a Vice President in Private Weath Management at Goldman Sachs.

I doubt Goldman hired her to drum up business in China?

Bloomberg has a long piece on the private wealth management industry in which they mention the hiring of Ms. WuDunn.

"Among the new Goldman Sachs hires: Sheryl WuDunn, 48, who shared a 1990 Pulitzer Prize with her husband, Nicholas Kristof, for reporting on Beijing's Tiananmen Square protests for the New York Times. Before becoming a journalist, she was a loan officer at Bankers Trust Co. (now part of Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG) and got a Master of Business Administration from Harvard Business School in Boston. And she's worldly and intelligent, says Scaturro.           

``She's the perfect profile,'' he says."

2008.02.21

China Launches Pilot Program To Teach Peking Opera and Model Opera In Primary And Middle Schools

China's Ministry of Education announced a pilot program (English here) in ten provinces and cities, including Beijing, to teach Peking Opera to primary and middle school students. The curriculum includes scenes from both traditional operas and the "Model Operas" developed by Mao's wife Jiang Qing (江青) and "popularized" during the Cultural Revolution. Younger students will start by learning the scenes from the revolutionary operas and then progress to the more traditional ones.

The courses will "strengthen the students awareness of National Culture (民族文化)."

One of the scenes to be taught is "穷人孩子早当家" from the Model Opera "The Legend of the Red Lantern" (红灯记), viewable below courtesy of Tudou.

2008.02.20

China Increases Restrictions On Foreign Cartoons

Per SARFT, the current schedule ban on the broadcast of foreign cartoons/animated television programs and programs introducing foreign cartoons/animated television programs will be extended from 17:00-20:00 daily to 17:00-21:00 daily effective May 1, 2008. During those time slots only domestic programming may be broadcast. The restrictions apply to TV stations nationwide. No word on how they will handle programming on P2P services or video-sharing sites. (Do the TV regulators ever feel like they are trying to push a river upstream?)

Likely good news for local animation houses and their investors, especially ones that may be considering going public. Or companies using other media to engage Chinese kids. This Caijing article gives the likely impetus behind the move:

“China’s cartoon industry produced 101,900 minutes of animation in 2007, 23% more than the previous year.” Confirming this idea, a source from the broadcasting industry said that the ban was imposed because “the quantity of Chinese-made content has reached an amount to fill another hour of broadcasting.”

The Shanghai Daily details the new restrictions:

"CHINA'S broadcast watchdog has extended the ban on foreign cartoon TV programs for one extra hour starting from May to provide "a favorable environment" for the innovation of the domestic cartoon industry.

All foreign cartoons, including puppet shows, will be banned between 5pm and 9pm, the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television said in a notice on its Website yesterday. It extended a 2006 order that had banned cartoons from 5 pm to 8 pm.

Channels that mainly cater to children must broadcast domestic cartoons during that period, it added.

Cartoon programs co-produced by domestic and foreign companies will need the administration's approval to be shown during the affected hours.

The ratio for Chinese-made cartoons versus foreign cartoons should be no less than 7:3, the notice added.

The administration said all provincial-level broadcast watchdogs need to organize supervision teams to ensure the new regulation is followed.

It also required TV stations to allocate more money to their cartoon channels, especially satellite cartoon channels, so they could broadcast more domestic animated programs.

Last year, 101,900 minutes of cartoon programs were made in China, about 23 percent more than that of 2006, according to the notice.

The broadcast administration issued a notice on September 1, 2006, banning foreign cartoons between 5pm and 8pm after the airwaves were almost dominated by Japanese creations such as "Astro Boy" and "The Prince of Tennis," according to a previous Xinhua report.

The latest regulation follows an order last week by the General Administration of Press and Publications to ban broadcasts of horror videos."

A Look At China's Internet Filtering

Interesting article by James Fallows in the March isssue of The Atlantic Monthly. Worth reading if you want a decent overview of how the Chinese government frustrates access to certain content.

China may actually be behind the US in capturing all its citizens' Internet usage, but no doubt they agree that there is no need for warrants. Does the NSA use a catchy name like "Golden Shield" too?

2008.02.17

Updates

Have been too few and far between. Apologies, I am working on some ideas to revive this blog. In the meantime, you can follow some of me through my shared feedreader items or my twitter feed.

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