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How to Buy China; Want to play the rise of a new superpower but don't know how? Here's the key: oil.(Cover Story)

Newsweek International

| March 15, 2004 | Faber, Marc | COPYRIGHT 2004 Newsweek, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reuse, distribution or alteration without express written permission of Newsweek is prohibited. For permission: www.newsweek.com. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Byline: Marc Faber, Faber is a Hong Kong-based investment adviser and publisher of the monthly Gloom Boom and Doom report.

The industrialization of China is progressing at breakneck speed, creating a voracious new consumer economy that makes America look small by comparison. China's steel production is already larger than those of the United States and Japan combined, but the country must still import steel to cover its growing needs. Its demand for cement is five times that of the U.S. cement industry. China is already the world's largest cellular-phone market, with 200 million subscribers, and the largest consumer of tobacco, with 330 million smokers. Now China's emergence as a consuming nation is creating a kind of mania in investment markets--a sense that you can't go wrong if you "buy what China buys."

The problem: this doesn't mean much at a time when China is buying everything. Investors need to discriminate. China is relatively resource-poor, and therefore its need for commodities will only increase as industrial production continues to expand and as net capital formation remains strong. Conversely, China has an unlimited supply of labor, as more than 700 million Chinese still live in the countryside and are only gradually moving to the cities to join the industrial economy. Moreover, flush with foreign- exchange reserves and foreign portfolio and direct investments, it can fund any capacity expansion for manufactured goods.

As a result, there is cutthroat competition for consumer goods such as TVs, appliances, motorcycles, cars and cellular phones. In 1999 China's cell-phone makers had 3 percent of the domestic market; now 36 domestic manufacturers hold more than 50 percent of the glutted market, and prices are collapsing. Thanks to instant communication and efficient transportation, new capacity now comes on stream in no time. Moreover, if a foreign company launches a sophisticated and profitable new product in China, numerous local rivals will copy it almost instantly and flood the market, thus depressing prices and margins.

The commodities markets are very different. Global prices were in a bear market from 1980 to 2001, when they started rallying on demand from China. Mines producing everything from nickel to copper are now running near capacity. Since it takes at least seven years to bring new reserves online, cycles of rising commodity prices tend to last 15 to 30 years. Energy is particularly sensitive to rising standards of living. The industrialization of North America lifted annual per capita consumption of oil from one barrel to close to 30 barrels. By comparison, China's per capita consumption of oil is a tad north of one ...

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