https://www.shortman.com.au/stock?q=A2M
Shorters continue to cover, providing short term price support.
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https://www.shortman.com.au/stock?q=A2M
Shorters continue to cover, providing short term price support.
Chinese Diary companies SP's rally after government announcement that it should remove all birth control to encourage people to have more children. See it here.
Interesting - which part of my post did you not understand?
I guess looking at the Chinese population pyramid is not that hard and most people even might know that women between 20 and 40 are most likely to be able to bear offspring ... Oops - I hope this is not too shocking news for you, isn't it :scared::
Add to that that many of the even still available princesses in child bearing age don't really want to go through the process anymore - and certainly not more often than once.
Just connect the dots and (depending on your desires) your amusement levels might drop :p - or alternatively - just keep your head stuck in the sand ... though - laughing while the head is stuck in the sand might be an unpleasant experience as well ...
Attachment 12439
UBS report 6/04 if anyone missed it.
The demographics may well suggest that the birthrate in China will inevitably fall. But does that mean that the premium end of the IF market will shrink?
I imagine that only a tiny proportion of the Chinese population are currently in that market, but that proportion will increase - ie the rising standard of living in a very very large population will swamp any drop in the birthrate.
As I see it, ATM's future success will come from it's continuing ability to sell all the A2milk we can produce at a healthy premium.
Disc: - halved my holding just under $12 a while back for reasons totally unrelated to my view of ATM's long term prospects.
Chinese cuisine is great and healthy ... unhealthy fatty snacks are not really part of it. Means Cadbury will have endless future opportunities to keep failing their delusional targets :).
But hey, given their success in fattening up NZ and Australia (hand in hand with Coca Cola, McDonalds and KFC), it must work with China as well, mustn't it?
That has to do with how wealthy they are. Generally affluent areas of China like shanghai consume chocolate more often, but the average Chinese individual only eats a tiny amount of chocolate per year. Apparently 100 grams
Ps Over half of adults in China, or more than half a billion people, are now overweight, an official report has found. The figures have risen significantly since 2002, when 29% of adults were overweight. The country's rapid economic growth in recent decades has led to major changes to lifestyle, diet and exercise habits.