Motley Fool: If you like FANG stocks, you should love Chinese BAT stocks in correction mode

My latest Motley Fool Canada blog was published Tuesday. It takes a look at the Chinese equivalents of America’s FANG (or FAANG) technology stocks. The FANGs have been surging ever higher this year although most came down Monday with Netflix as the latter’s subscriber growth disappointed somewhat. You can find the full MotleyFool blog by clicking on the highlighted (and self-explanatory) headline: If you like FANG stocks near their highs, you should love BAT stocks while China’s in a bear market.

Credited to Mad Money broadcaster Jim Cramer and RealMoney.com analyst Bob Lang early in 2013. FANG famously stands for Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google although some have added Apple to make it FAANG.

BAT stands for Baidu, Alibaba and Ten Cent. The influential weekly British newspaper, The Economist, recently had an interesting article comparing the BATs to the FANGs. (See FAANGs v BATs in the July 7, 2018 edition). The magazine described a titanic battle between these American and Chinese tech giants, which it said have a combined stock market capitalization of more than US$4 trillion.

Since the Motley Fool demands that writers disclose all their holdings mentioned in articles, I don’t mind stating here that I’ve long owned the FANGs as well as Apple, if only because my Millennial daughter twigged me to some of the names. I also bought Ali Baba on its IPO in 2014 but only bought into Baidu and Ten Cent this summer, in part as I researched this article (or was it the other way round?). As a rough analogy, I think of Ten Cent as China’s equivalent of Facebook, with a gaming kicker. Baidu is more or less a Google-like Chinese search play and Ali Baba has been characterized as being a type of Chinese hybrid of Amazon, Facebook and Google.

I would have to characterize these investments as speculations, so as the old saying goes, don’t invest more than you’re prepared to lose.

 

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