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Monday, May 04, 2009 

10 Best Chinese Microcaps
By Glen Bradford

Hi, I’m Glen Bradford. I was only trading my college tuition. As of today I am also trading my roommate’s college tuition. I wrote for TheStreet.com last fall and undertook equivalently 25 Credit Hours of MBA courses at Purdue University. I’m currently in the top 1% of Motley Fool CAPS players. For those of you that want to join me and make something out of nothing, I’m going to introduce you to the most ridiculously undervalued Chinese Companies on the face of the planet.

The requirements for these companies:

1. High Growth.
2. Profitable.
3. Selling less than Book Value.
4. Cheap based on Earnings (incl. Positive Cash Flow From Operations).

I’ll start with the top and work down. The Target value is a calculation composed of 3 parts: 1/3 Book Value + 1/3 P/E of 8 + 1/3 P/E of Growth. I have adjusted some of these numbers to remove 1-time expenditures, the potential of share dilution, intangible equity, etc. To be honest, all of these stocks should trade much higher than their target. This just helps me price companies in the midst of a crisis.



1. China Finance (CHFI) was sold down 50% on record breaking volume Monday while I was backing up the truck of bullishness. China Finance is responsible for helping small to medium Chinese enterprises go public in the United States. What makes this case unusual is China Finance’s assets are highly liquid --- they could sell them in the market at the current price. Monday, their largest position Jade Art was unchanged, 2nd largest position Gulf Resources was up 8.3%, 3rd largest China Organic Agriculture (also covered in this article) was up 6.9% on higher volume. It’s not surprising that a company responsible for taking podunk Chinese companies public struggled through 2008. My estimates on this stock put it in 100-bagger territory from its 52-week low of $0.04. China Finance also helped two other of my picks --- China 3C Group (CHCG) and Oriental Paper (OPAI). At $0.10, China Finance is selling at less than it’s highly liquid securities, especially after you take into account their price appreciations since December 31, 2008.

2. Gold Horse International (GHII) ran 44.44% Monday on above average volume. An Investor Village page was put up this weekend and had over 300 visitors in the first 24 hours. Not bad for a Chinese Wind Power play that’s profitable and has a P/E under 1 and is selling at 26% of Book Value. Their forecast for 2009 is 30% growth. That was before they announced they are headed to NYC to raise capital for even more growth!

3. Asia Cork (AKRK) manufactures “green” building materials in China. I took the liberty of visiting several local flooring places here at Purdue and confirmed that Cork Flooring is in high demand and is durable. Asia Cork is thinly traded at $3.57M, but at a P/E of 1 when it grew last year by 30% and is adding to production capacity leading into 2009.

4. Oriental Paper (OPAI), as mentioned earlier under China Finance, is growing 30% a year by manufacturing and distributing paper and paper products in China. Cramer recently indicated that things are looking good in the world of Corrugated Paper. This makes Oriental Paper is look even better.

5. China Organic Agriculture (CNOA) bought the Bellisimo Vineyard in California for about $14M and is trading at $23M. Compare this to their revenues in 2008 at $112M. Granted, they paid to much for Bellismo if you are looking at present discounted cash flows. When you look at the value of a California Wine label in China where China Organic distributes the stuff, you begin to see the big picture profit potential.

6. Lotus Pharmaceuticals (LTUS) just ditched their part time CFO Adam Wasserman (who still works for Gold Horse). Management forecasts growth between 30% to 40% and has so much in the pipeline and in progress for a $14.1M company that it’s ridiculous.

7, 8. Qiao Xing Universal Telephone (XING) is trading at $65M. Qiao Xing Mobile Communication (QXM) is trading at $140M. Seeing as how I already like QXM, and how XING owns 70%+ of QXM, shouldn’t XING be valued at least at $100M?
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9. China Energy Corp (CHGY) is enormously undervalued when you take into account the various reasons they have been unable to produce at maximum capacity, for example --- the expansion of capacity by 60%, the Olympic Games, and most recently the increase in safety standards. They produce and process raw coal for heating and power generation in Inner Mongolia. My earnings estimates are adjusted to reflect what I’d consider to be normal operating conditions.

10. China Agri-Business (CHBU) is probably one that I shouldn’t tell you about. I keep buying it at around $0.21 and selling at $0.40 (on a daily basis). Remember, that secret cash loop that only exists in video games that you wished existed in real life? This is it. Right now the entire company is priced at $2.59M. Their latest reported cash balance is $8.3M and their liabilities are $561M. Yes --- they are selling at less than half of net cash (cash – total liabilities). But, now that you know I can say bye-bye to my infinite money loop.

I’m the kind of guy that questions everything and is willing to take a stand until empirically proven otherwise. So far, my allocation decisions empirically prove that I know what I’m doing --- so much for that efficient market hypothesis.

Disclosure: Glen and his investors own chfi, ghii, akrk, opai, cnoa, ltus, xing, chgy, qxm (through xing), chbu, chcg.

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Sunday, May 03, 2009 

When it Rains it Pours

All I have to say is... wow! To be honest, I'm never to sure about what's going to happen. But, if it looks stormy outside or your grandfather's knees start hurting (a signal of lower pressure, and for you non-geologists/weather familiar people that means that you're likely close to a storm front. See, high pressure zones run clear skies usually.). Where was I going with this? If you have an undervalued company... If you have a GlenBradford.com undervalued company and price action is starting to take effect, get ready. My companies these days are undervalued by around 700% on average.

No, as my roomate Mazen would put it --- I am not blowing smoke into your a$$hole. They teach us discounted cash flows in MBA school and then they tell us to forget about using them to make stock market investment decisions. The lense I like to look through is the following. Imagine I am a corporate officer of my own company GlenBradford. Now Imagine that I have several projects all with fairly predictable future cash streams attached to them. Wouldn't it make sense to put down the least amount of money possible to get the most back?

Anyway, Below is my radar and a couple stocks you should watch immediately: GHII, ACAS, CHFI, PUDC. They are catching interest.

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Saturday, February 14, 2009 

China’s Screaming Buys

The scene: In the past 6 months I’ve been squandering my college tuition money trying to make money by investing in undervalued companies in the midst of the largest financial crisis that we’ve seen in ages. At first, I was setting a fairly low bar to meet my criteria of acceptance. It worked! I was up 30% in the first month. In retrospect, that false positive clouded my judgment. But, I was writing for TheStreet.com and knocking back 100,000+ reads an article. What did I care?

Flash forward: So, I’m down roughly 50% from June 2008, and I’m actively jockeying for positions in companies that I simply can’t ignore. The potential upside on these companies will make your head spin. The downside from my perspective is minimal at best, especially when the company is set to make back its share price in earnings over the next 2 years, year, or half a year in a few cases.

First, I’m going to talk about the CFO that has two companies that I’ll be covering. Adam Wasserman is the CFO for both LTUS and GHII. He’s also involved with CWSI, GNPH, CAAH, and several US public entities. From my understanding, he left for China the 10th.

I thought about writing these ideas on a formal website. I'd rather not. I don't really want people to know about them. I'd rather have people that follow me and my family and friends get on before the plane takes off.

The Buy List:
GHII
NWD

The Wait List (Actually buys, but you can get them cheaper):
LTUS
ORS

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Monday, January 26, 2009 

Two Best Stocks I've Ever Seen

NWD, GHII

Do your own homework. I'll sit here and make 1000%.

Bye.

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Sunday, December 07, 2008 

China

Looks to me like the market bottomed.

PE was roughly 7. We've had lots of ridiculous stimulus.

I haven't looked at the russian market, but it will bottom when oil bottoms.

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Sunday, November 09, 2008 

China Stimulus Plan

China to launch $586B stimulus plan

My companies that should sky-rocket:

GHII
XIN
EJ

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Sunday, October 26, 2008 

1 Stock

Greg,

That’s hard. I hate picking just one. For the sake of using macroeconomics, China’s my favorite country and they aren’t hurting fundamentally as bad as we are. My favorite “ultra-high” risk play is GHII. It’s a penny stock that is trading at 11 cents and in my opinion is worth about $2 or more. Please give it a PE of at least 10.

If you like options, buy 2010 January Calls on CEDC.

Those are my two favorite ideas right now. CEDC is way too cheap, I sold my stock and bought the options @ $30. I could be an idiot, who knows… but at least I’m basing it on the fundamentals and probabilities.

Glen

From: tubertini
Sent: Sunday, October 26, 2008 10:30 PM
To: gbradfo
Subject: one stock

Glen,

I have a discretionary account in which I have set aside for risky but potentially lucrative investments. If you had to pick one stock that has been beaten down but has the most potential to sky rocket once the bank failures and poor economy is behind us what would it be? By the way, great articles on Stockpkr.

Greg Tubertini

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Wednesday, October 08, 2008 

GHII

GHII: Gold Horse International, Inc.

Talked to their CFO Adam Wasserman,

He just got back from Mongolia and was there to help them file their annual reports. The issue with GHII to him is the publicity: there is none. They’re going to get some though. But, they work really well with the community, built a jail, police station, building schools to lease back to the community, a few roads and other buildings and otherwise operate a hotel in the 2nd fastest growing city in China. Great balance sheet, PE of around 2 now. Should have a PE of at least 10 in normal market conditions.

I’m buying a lot of shares.

Glen

From: Hall, Douglas (MCOE)
Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2008 2:33 PM
To: Bradford, Glen Richard
Subject: Got text

What’s the scoop?

Doug Hall

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