As youve likely heard, a Chinese company will soon own
the Hummer brand. Heh, lets count the ways this transaction
epitomizes the new economic landscape:
Wed be delighted if the Hummer takes off over there
nothing
wrong with making something that China wants to buy. And if Americans
stop buying them, even better

would
you really miss these things?
Commodity futures transactions on Chinese exchanges are up 60%
from this time last year, reports the Chinese Futures Association.
Chinese traders and resource users traded 138 million lots in
May alone, worth $1.3 trillion. Thats a 60% spike in volume
from 2008 and an 85% leap in cost.
The Chinese national strategy, explains Byron King,
is to go around the world and secure energy and other natural
resources for the balance of the 21st century.
The Chinese are buying up oil and natural gas resources,
as you surely know. Theyre making deals with the Venezuelans
and Iranians for energy development. Theyre making deals
in Iraq for energy. Theyre financing the development of
Brazils deep offshore oil deposits.
And the Chinese are locking up other natural resources.
Theyre making deals from Australia to Brazil over coal and
iron ore resources. Theyre building copper mines from Congo
to Afghanistan. Theyve secured 97% (no typo, 97%) of the
worlds known deposits of rare earths. And the Chinese are
buying up entire forests in South America.
Meanwhile, China is the worlds largest gold-producing
nation. Yet Chinas net exports of gold are zero. China imports
far more gold than it exports. China keeps its gold at home. China
is building its own national gold reserve, and monetizing it by
buying and allocating much of its mine production of yellow metal
to the state bank. China trusts the U.S. dollar about as far as
Tim Geithner can throw the Great Wall.