ISHARES CHINA LARGE-CAP ETF

NYSE ARCA: FXI
$23.65
-$0.02 (-0.1%)
Closing price April 17, 2024
The iShares China Large-Cap ETF, managed by BlackRock Fund Advisors, is a fund that focuses on investing in large Chinese companies across various sectors. It aims to mirror the performance of the FTSE China 50 Index, utilizing a representative sampling strategy. This ETF offers investors exposure to growth and value stocks in China's significant public equity markets, providing a diversified portfolio within one of the world's largest economies. Established in 2004, it is a convenient way for investors to tap into Chinese large-cap stocks.
China is doing what it can to stop the bloodletting, but reviews of the Shanghai chart and the Nasdaq tech bubble charts might make some investors fear a much deeper market correction in China.
There is a big lesson here for Global X FTSE Greece 20 ETF investors during the looming Greek default and likely exit from the euro.
There are more reasons for the Chinese markets to go down than go up, and that means the same for its stock markets.
Early Tuesday, China stocks have been taking a beating as the market seems to be correcting.
Source: ThinkstockEmerging markets have not been performing the way they have in many past bull markets. Most investor interest and direction from Wall Street strategists decided earlier this year...
Source: ThinkstockHow long should a winning streak really last in the stock market? A casual market observer might think the market has a 50-50 chance of being up or down on any given day, so what...
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down more than 140 points after a dismal ISM manufacturing report on Monday. It is now down more than 1,000 points from its high.
Source: ThinkstockChinese New Year is starting, and the good news — and hard to believe news — is that this could help to fend off the waves of emerging market madness we have been seeing of...
Source: ThinkstockWhen Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan said to avoid emerging markets in 2014, many investors and market participants thought that the firms were merely sticking to a 2013 trend for...
The U.S. markets were closed on Monday, January 20, in observance of Martin Luther King Day. Europe and Asia, however, were not closed.
Source: ThinkstockIf you think that the United States is down, the move was even worse in China. Barron’s took its shot at a coming credit crisis in China over the weekend, but what stood out is...
Source: ThinkstockIf China is truly the world’s growth engine, there is about to be less growth and less reason to be optimistic about the global recovery. HSBC has trimmed its gross domestic...
Source: ThinkstockChinese New Year is almost upon us. The new year is the Year of the Snake. Other nations with stock markets that celebrate Chinese New Year with multiday holidays include Macau,...
Source: ThinkstockByron Wien announced his predictions for 10 big surprises for 2013 this week to kick off the new year. Wien is now vice chairman at Blackstone Advisory Partners, and this was his...
Source: ThinkstockChina may be the world’s growth engine and the world’s manufacturer, but some still consider it the short-sell of a lifetime. There is also very rarely any middle ground on the...