eLong Inc. (LONG)
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LONG Forum Topics
- All Comments on LONG
- General Discussion on LONG
- Stocks Covered by The China Stock Blog [view article]
- Overview of the Chinese Internet Market [view article]
- China ADRs: Mixed July [view article]
- China ADRs: Severe Loss in June [view article]
- Beijing Olympics Investing: Think Travel Stocks [view article]
- Ctrip.com Is Going Places [view article]
- Three Labor Day Stock Specials: Comverse, Mellanox Technologies and Orckit Communications [view article]
- China Stocks: April Was Kind [view article]
- UTVG.OB Makes Impressive Gains Online [view article]
- It's More than Just Baidu: 51 Other Ways to Invest in China [view article]
- Stocks To Capture China’s Baby Boomers [view article]
- China Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
Recent LONG Articles
- Overview of the Chinese Internet Market
- China ADRs: Mixed July
- China ADRs: Severe Loss in June
- China ADRs: Mixed May
- China Stocks: April Was Kind
- Beijing Olympics Investing: Think Travel Stocks
- UTVG.OB Makes Impressive Gains Online
- China Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom
- Orbitz Earnings Preview: Non Fee-Based Revenue Key
- Online Travel: Farecast Now Offers International Flight Price Predictions
- Full List of Articles »
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China Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
windinmyface- can say that about americans to well except americans do get back in the game faster ReplyChina Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
Been/about to get burned, CliffA42? ReplyEditors
General Discussion on LONG
Is this a buy or a sell? ReplyChina Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
Keep in mind that a bottom doesn't necessarily imply immediate strong increases. A bottom can be long and flat, and bumpy. ReplyChina Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
How can anyone trust the information they receive? I mean the same folks who walked away with gazillions in the market and pushed for deregulation as Robert Rubin and the repeal of the Glass-stegel act are now calling for oversight. They are as bad as the so called public servants enriching themselves and currently running for President. I say put your money in your mattress! The enormous deficits, the funding of Social Security and Medicare, the no new taxes mantra and the failed war in Iraq are yet to configure in the perfect storm and fully weighed in the financial arithmetic. Unless you are Bernie Lewis and still have a few billion left after losing that much in Bear Stearns don't walk into the foxes den clucking.Stay away. Remember the lessons of Great Gatsby! ReplyChina Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
Do you know what "DaFei(大非) or XiaoFei(小非) is and how that is going to affect A-share market price? Do more home work! ReplyChina Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
I just got back from China about a month ago, and there was a huge housing problem there, just as there is here now. Taxi drivers were complaining about the price of gas, didn't stop people from spending, spending, spending. This is probably the bottom. The market over there is too hot right now. Reply2
China Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
The Chinese stock may be bottomed out, but when the Chinese people get the slightest scare, as when stock starts to drop, instead of waiting for a rebound, they panic, and sell off fast, and it will take a while for them to regain some trust. JADG is an interesting stock. It has some good reading material. ReplyChina Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
I think that enough is enough,really. This is the bottom. Only problem is that there is no enough volume to support. Stop speculating, start investing.Reply
China Stocks: Still No Sign of a Bottom [view article]
So. . .? This is a rare dumb column for this site. Look at the technicals! A lot of these have definitely found a plateau, and some have started to turn. How far they will go is another question, but. . .please! ReplyScheidt
Ctrip.com Is Going Places [view article]
Thanks for the firsthand view. From what I am reading, the company has made it fairly easy to book the travel and I have not heard any reports of trouble actually at the airlines. But getting in there and seeing for yourself is priceless. Hopefully you can see what issues will come up before they are uncovered by the analysts here.Good luck with your position. Reply
Ctrip.com Is Going Places [view article]
I was on an extended tour of China in October 2005 (to visit locations made famous by Zheng He, who led 7 international voyages beginning in 1405, decades before Columbus did to N America), and had a chance to visit several interior airports in China such as Kunming and Xiamen. With a position in Ctrip, I paid special attention to its activities. I noticed that it had booths at various airports, soliciting new members. Few stopped by -- no different from various frequent-flying airlines soliciting for members in the US airports. I have no idea how residents in China sign on to Ctrip's on-line services. My experiences with US-based on-line trip arrangers in USA (4 times in recent months) suggest that doing so is not easy. Paying for tickets is one problem, checking in with e-tickets is another. ReplyScheidt
Ctrip.com Is Going Places [view article]
That probably explains why they want to grow the packaged tours side of the business. I have not heard that detail on CTrip's revenue coming primarily from business travelers. What is your source on this information?Thanks for the comment! Reply
Ctrip.com Is Going Places [view article]
You do realize that business connections are still the driving force to CTrip sales, yes? Most of their air ticket sales are to business travelers, not vacationing families; not even close. The other travel sites are actually easier for consumers; it is the business account which keeps CTrip on top. ReplyBest, Worst Performing Chinese ADRs YTD [view article]
I think we should constantly track the List of Chinese ADRs with current and forward P/EHere is the List
www.diggsamachar.com/c... Reply