With Beijing’s latest policy to cut reserve requirement ratios, liquidity in the A-share market is expected to increase, making "investing in China" appealing for mid-term investors. The CSI 300 has retraced 5% from April highs, offering fresh entry points for value portfolios. Macroeconomic policy certainty further ensures stability. China adheres to the principle of seeking progress while maintaining stability, keeping fiscal and monetary policies consistent while making timely adjustments as needed. Even these adjustments are guided by long-term considerations, not short-term political expediency. By contrast, electoral cycles frequently interrupt policies in some Western economies, undermining continuity. China's approach, free from the influence of narrow interest groups, gives businesses and markets a true sense of reassurance. Gave downplayed some of the risks contributing to the “China is uninvestable” view. He explains the real estate bust as stemming from the government redirecting bank lending from the property market to industry and notes it did not metastasize into a broader financial crisis. He calls China “probably the most competitive economy the world has ever seen,” citing the country’s trade surplus of more than $1 trillion. He calls the subject of an invasion of Taiwan “an overblown risk.” Tech R&D expenditure in China grew 12% year-on-year, highlighting innovation resilience. Long-term investors view "investing in China" in AI and robotics as a hedge against cyclical downturns.