Robert Hsu

Robert Hsu

Robert was born in Taiwan, speaks Mandarin fluently and reads and writes Chinese. But what really sets him apart from other investing experts is his rich history of investment success and his understanding of what’s happening across Asia today. While employed with Goldman Sachs, Robert learned a great deal about international markets, equities, interest rates, currencies and commodities markets. Since then Robert has started his own money management firm, Absolute Return Capital Advisors.

In order to stay on top of investment opportunities across Asia, Robert visits China regularly, as well as employs a boots-on-the-ground team of analysts in China to provide him with up-to-the-minute details on what is happening.

Robert’s advice is that now, more than ever, investors looking to build their wealth must look outside of the U.S. for real and sustainable growth. To attain superior absolute return in the new century, buy-and-hold U.S. stocks are just not going to deliver the profits that he thinks every investor should expect. And in looking to make the biggest returns, Robert’s found that the single best place to find great returns is China, where the economy continues to grow almost 10% a year.

Recent Articles

How to Profit in a Volatile Market

<p>The Fed's decision last Tuesday to cut both the Fed Funds Rate and the Discount Rate by only 0.25% disappointed many investors who expected a more aggressive cut of 0.5%. </p> <p>The rate cut announcement caused the market to sell off sharply. The Fed believes that inflation is still a threat, and as a result chose to be more conservative with rate cuts. Without a doubt, there's strong inflationary pressure in the U.S.—we found out last week that wholesale inflation increased by the largest amount in more than three decades. </p> <p>After last Tuesday's rate cut disappointment, the Fed revealed a plan to team up with other central banks around the world to supply a coordinated liquidity injection that will provide a $40 billion swap line to U.S. banks. Given the severity of the credit problems we're experiencing right now, I believe that a liquidity injection alone won't enable banks to make the money they need to get back on a growth track. I think the Fed's conservative stance has halted the chance of a further year-end rally. </p> <p>The market is looking murky at the moment, and in the next two weeks it could go either up or down.</p>

Who Will Be the Next Economic Superpower?

<p>Which country do you think will be the dominant economic superpower in the 21st century? </p> <p> I ask this question a lot in my global investing seminars. The most popular answer is usually China, followed by the U.S., and India sometimes gets a few votes.</p> <p> For much of the second half of the 20th century, the U.S. accounted for more than 40%—sometimes approaching 50%—of the world's total economic production. In other words, the U.S. economy was almost as big as the rest of the world combined. In the past five years, however, a 38% decline in the U.S. dollar and the superior growth of newly-emerging economies is changing the global distribution of economic power.</p> <p> China and its neighbors, like Russia, Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore and Malaysia, will probably evolve into a new Asian economic bloc. It's likely that this fast-growing region will become the new global epicenter of wealth creation in the 21st century. There will be many investment opportunities throughout the region that are shielded from the economic problems of the U.S. </p> <p>The stocks in our <em>China Strategy </em>portfolio fall into this category—many of them are already trading higher than they were before the November sell-off. Do you want to own companies that bounce back quickly?</p>

How to Get an Extra Holiday Bonus

<p>Black Friday has been around since 1970s, but it hit the mainstream in a big way in 2002 and since then it has given institutional and private investors alike an important temperature reading on the market and what can be expected for the fourth quarter. Recently, another gauge has been added for investors—it's called Cyber Monday, and, for those who may not be familiar with it, this day falls on the Monday following Thanksgiving. While shoppers hit brick-and-mortar stores on the Friday after the holiday searching for deals, they go online on Monday to scour websites for further markdowns.</p> <p> It was uncertain if shoppers would log on for "Cyber Monday," but they showed up in force and they opened their wallets to the tune of $733 million. Many analysts were closely watching retail sales from Black Friday and Cyber Monday to see what sort of mood consumers would be in this holiday season.</p> <p>I'd like to talk about what these numbers, as well as a few others, are pointing to for the end of 2007. I think you'll be surprised by my conclusions, but hopefully you'll get a better idea of how the markets will perform through the end of the year—</p>

How to Profit from the Falling Dollar

<p>I don't normally pay attention to commentary on U.S. economic trends from super models, but Gisele Bündchen made a statement recently that I couldn't agree with more.</p> <p> Gisele announced that she will no longer accept U.S. dollars as payment for her modeling services.  Most people would dismiss this remark as the latest celebrity attention-grabbing move, but this is actually similar to what I advise you to do as well. Now I doubt that your employer is willing to pay you in euros like Gisele, but you should be looking to invest in companies that have assets <em>not</em> valued in U.S. dollars.</p> <p> To put into perspective how far the dollar has fallen, you have to compare it to other currencies. In October, something happened that hasn't occurred since 1976. That was the year that one "loonie," or Canadian dollar, was equal to one U.S. dollar. Just like last time, Canadians are finding that goods are much cheaper to buy in the U.S. because their loonie can buy so much more than it used to. </p> <p> Since we're more focused on investments in China, let's see how the dollar stacks up there. The Chinese yuan has climbed more than 10% versus the U.S. dollar since the end of a fixed exchange rate in July 2005. This gives holders of companies with yuan-denominated assets an immediate 10% bonus because the value of their holdings didn't drop with the dollar. The <em>China Strategy</em> portfolio is loaded with companies that own yuan-denominated assets—</p>

China’s Next Great Growth Sector

On October 19, the 20th anniversary of the Black Monday market crash, poor third-quarter earnings and a gloomy economic outlook gave the major U.S. indexes their worst day in weeks. The NASDAQ, S&P 500 and Dow all plunged 2.6% during Friday's trading session. And the indexes have been see-sawing ever since, dipping, recovering and starting the cycle all over again—sometimes within the same day! All of this action is making watchful investors dizzy and anxious.