Hungry Dragon could go black
World Of Finance by Vijaya Sai.M It seems that nothing can stop the relentless rise of China's export machine. Whether that counts as good news depends on where you live and what you're invested in.Commodity investors were among those cheering yesterday as Beijing surprised world markets with the news that its exports had jumped nearly 18% in December from a year earlier.The reason for the cheering was that Chinese imports jumped even more than exports. They were up nearly 56% as the Asian nation imported record or near-record amounts of iron ore and crude oil. China's growing appetite for commodities is bullish for companies that produce raw materials ranging from soybeans to copper. It's also likely to provide a boost to currencies such as the loonie and the Australian dollar that represent commodity-producing economies. But China's swelling exports are distorting world trade in ways that could have nasty consequences, includin...