After a few weeks of intense activity,finally the most recent CDN. Goldman’s O’Neill: Should One Sell in May and Go Away?. O’Neill remains bullish, but notes that China faces a challenge in keeping inflation under control. “ If I simply look at reliable indicators that have served me well in the past, I find myself slightly worrying that China runs some risk of slowing things too much. I am sure my concerns will turn out to be temporary.”On The Next Chinese Craze: "Money Lending", Or Has The PBoC Lost Control Of Money?...PBoC has China not seen any decline in its inflationary pressures over the past 6 months. Finally, courtesy of Sean Corrigan who first identified the so called reverse Cash-n-carry trade in China over two years ago, we have our answer on the "next Chinese investment craze" - money lending. May 2, 2011China’s Social Network RenRen is no FacebookFor starters, Goldman Sachs estimates Facebook is worth $50 billion worldwide. RenRen, which is hoping to beat Facebook and become the world’s first social network to list on a stock exchange, is hoping to raise a half a billion in the offer. 3:42 PMCOT REPORTS – HEDGE FUNDS DOWNSIZE COPPER HOLDINGS...noted how China’s steps to tighten liquidity had begun to weigh on its equities markets – and most notably the energy and materials sectors. The question is whether the recent stalling in the copper price is reflective of this same effect: Seems like a reasonable argument. May 2, 2011China vs. India, the Population Numbers. India released early numbers from its new census late last month, while China released its provisional numbers Thursday. Here’s a comparison of some key numbers from the world’s two most populous nations: SIZE China: 1,339,724,852 India: 1...May 2, 2011The jury is out on investment in ChinaFund managers are developing different approaches to the investing in China debatefrom Financial Times - FTfm - May 1, 2011Eight Days A Week$26.74bn in revenue, £0.69 an hour - is Apple exploiting Chinese workers ?China is different. As a friend recently commented to me, there should be three categories of economies: developed, developing and China. China may struggle, but it will struggle in a uniquely Chinese way, and inevitably pose deep questions about the future of capitalism. from macrobusiness.com.au - Apr 30, 2011 The whole summary of interesting articles can be found here.