2 small companies
quietly changing
the way the world works


A little Asian water-technology company that takes filthy, toxic, "brown", water and turns it into abundant, pure drinking water. Their business is exploding in China, where the government reports that it has 400 major cities that lack adequate drinking water. This is a company whose revenues were only $53 million last year. But their plants are so successful that they’ve booked almost $870 million in orders for the next three years.

A second tiny company is disposing of mountains of rotting garbage — by turning it into clean, useable electricity. China produces about 350 million tons of garbage that’s not being treated, but left to rot in the open. That’s a mountain of trash comparable to Mount Everest. This tiny company has new technology that gets rid of this garbage and turns it into electricity — helping to quench China’s insatiable appetite for energy.


Brian Tycangco, Editor
Financial Gateway to Asia

"Click here and you’ll see hard proof that investing in hot, little Asian companies like these can make you wheelbarrows full of money." — Brian
Dear Investor:

I’m bursting with excitement about two small, innovative Asian companies with cutting-edge technologies that are growing explosively by improving the lives of millions of people. And they’re doing it in the fastest-growing economies in the world.

Communist China and Socialist India, as well as other countries in Asia, are exploding with capitalist fervor. These countries have all the passion of the newly-converted and their economies are growing at a pace not seen in America since the early 1900s.

Investing in their stock markets is like going back a hundred years in time — to when America was bursting with capitalist fervor — and finding little, unknown companies that grew into today’s Ford and General Electric. Those companies changed the way the world worked and made millionaires of many of their early shareholders.

Today, in countries like China, India and Singapore, there’s a whole new crop of little-known, small companies quietly changing the way the world works again. These companies are going to make millionaires out of those investors that get in early and ride their coat-tails to the top.

One of them is a hot little company turning toxic, "brown" water into pure drinking water. Another has pioneering technology to turn mountains of rotting garbage into electricity.


Are these companies going to become the Fords and General Electrics of the 21st Century? I don’t really know for sure, but I think they have a genuine shot at the brass ring. Let me tell you more about them, and you decide for yourself.


Reco #1: Little Asian water-technology company
takes filthy, toxic, "brown", water and turns it
into abundant, pure drinking water

Their business is exploding in China, where the government reports 400 major cities lack adequate drinking water. Two-thirds of their rivers and lakes are now heavily polluted.

This company has developed water purification plants that take this filthy, toxic, "brown" water and turns it into pure, sweet drinking water at an economical price. These plants also have the ability to handle the occasional toxic chemical spills from factories along the rivers.

This is a company whose revenues were only $82 million last year. But their plants are so successful that they’ve booked almost $870 million in orders for the next three years.

They’re similarly successful in Singapore, where the company got its start. Its first project was a water treatment system for Singapore’s bird zoo. The success of that tiny system got them a foot in the door — and they got a contract to build a plant to clean-up the huge industrial waste being dumped into the ocean.

Singapore is a small island country depending on its sometimes hostile neighbor, Malaysia, for its drinking water. When Singapore’s Prime Minister saw how well this company’s technology cleaned up industrial waste, he asked them if they could build a desalination plant to supply drinking water.

They did, and this one plant now supplies 10% of Singapore’s daily water supply. Now the government is negotiating to have them build up to 9 more of these plants, so Singapore can be independent of Malaysia for its water.

This company can desalinate water for approximately half of what the typical desalination plant charges.

With cost benefits like this, they recently nailed down a major contract for a desalination plant in one Mideast country, and are in the middle of negotiations to supply several more plants to Saudi Arabia.

This company was started by a woman who was once a penniless orphan. But she had a brilliant mind and a burning desire to make a difference in the business world. She worked her way through tough, expensive engineering schools to become a chemist specializing in water purification.

After three years working for another company, she sold her car and apartment and started her company with $12,000. Now she’s on her way to becoming one of Asia’s richest tycoons, and you can ride her skirt-tails by buying shares in her company for just $1.48 each.


Reco #2: Tiny company disposing of mountains of
rotting garbage — by turning it into clean, useable electricity

China is urbanizing at a rate never seen before in history. Every year, 9 million Chinese are leaving their farms and rice paddies for the city life, and every two weeks China is building a city the size of New Orleans just to house them.

Today, only half of the more than 700 million tons of solid waste coming from Chinese cities is properly treated. The rest of the trash — about 350 million tons of it, which is enough to build a mountain comparable to Mount Everest — is left to rot in the open.

The stench engulfs the countryside. Each mountain of rotting garbage is a breeding ground for rats, mosquitos, and other disease carriers.

This tiny company has developed new technology that enables them to burn all the crap as fuel for power plants. Not only do they get rid of this horrible waste, but they get desperately needed electricity out the other end.

Their typical power plant removes about 500,000 tons of waste from the environment each year and provides electricity for a good-sized town for a year. It’s an interesting operation: the residue is used to make bricks and fertilizer. Nothing is wasted.

Best of all, this company makes money three ways. They make money for collecting the garbage. They make money selling electricity. And they make money from the bricks and fertilizer that are the by-products.

To me, this is an incredible technology that’s made to order for the third-world countries that are industrializing. It’s a huge market and the company with this technology currently has won contracts to build 3 new organic waste-to-electricity plants in two of China’s fastest-growing provinces: Sichuan and Guangdong.

But that’s just scratching the surface of the market. Beijing is determined to reduce the country’s dependence on dirty fossil fuel for energy. They’re planning to spend a whopping $180 billion on projects like these over the next 15 years — and this company perfectly fits the bill. These people are changing the way the world treats its garbage. Instead of piling it up in stinking landfills, the future is going to be turning that waste into clean electricity.

Right now their market cap is only $68 million — so there’s huge growth ahead for them. And that’s just from China. After China, there’s India, another market that’s just as big. And after that, there’s Europe and America, which are also drowning in garbage.
To me, this company looks like General Electric must have looked to shrewd investors shortly after Edison invented the incandescent light bulb. If you bought one share of GE back then at $100, and held it, today you would now have 4,608 shares worth $32 apiece — or $147,000. And that doesn’t count the dividends. This company is a similar opportunity, only the shares are just 11¢ each.


I’m constantly on the look out for small companies like
these with the potential to change the way the world works

I’m Brian Tycangco, editor of the Financial Gateway to Asia. When it comes to Asian stocks like these, I have an edge over most Wall Street investment advisors because I was born in Asia, and I’ve lived here all my life. I see these tiny breakthrough companies just as they start to blossom.

And when I see one that really turns me on, I fire off an e-mail to the company’s CEO, arrange an interview, and inspect their products personally. When you find one of these great little companies, their shares can multiply your money many times over. For instance …
I recommended a little Chinese computer manufacturer that was going toe-to-toe with Dell, IBM, and Hewlett-Packard. A small technology company taking on giant competitors may not seem like it has the odds loaded in its favor. But because I’m out in Asia — I saw that they had good computers, a significant price advantage, and much better service. No armchair analyst in New York could’ve possibly known that.
Zi Corp was a similar story. These guys came up with a tech product so good that I knew it had to make money: a hardware/software package that allows computers and cell phones to use Korean, Japanese, and Chinese characters.

What a huge benefit! Suddenly, the huge populations of these three countries no longer had to learn the English alphabet to use the keyboard. Talk about stacking the odds in your favor! Subscribers following my recommendations walked away with up to $3,430 for each $1,000 invested, in just four months.
Ditto for a company called GRIC, which was an early bird in Asian wireless Internet. I didn’t think they were going to change the way the world worked — but I knew they were catching the rising tide of the Internet in Asia. So I recommended them. Again, subscribers following my recommendations more than tripled their money, this time in six months. And that’s not all.
I’m sure you’ve never heard of Fong’s Industries, a Chinese company that makes non-polluting textile dyeing machines, of all things. So when Beijing told its 45,000 textile factories to "Stop the pollution; either upgrade your equipment or shut down," I told my subscribers to buy shares in Fong’s.

How could my readers miss? They didn’t. They walked away with profits of up to 493%.
There’s a reason why Asia is the home to many small companies like these with cutting edge technology. Asia, more than any other part of the world, emphasizes math and science in its high schools. Universities in India and China graduate 700,000 scientists and engineers every year.

Moreover, thousands of Asian scientists have begun returning home every year after absorbing innovation know-how in the US and Europe. These highly skilled Asian technologists are bringing about a significant wave of innovation across Asia.
This last Christmas, the 3 top-selling electronic presents
in America were all made in Asia

Your laptop computer probably comes from Taiwan and has a memory chip from South Korea. Every day, you unwittingly encounter computer software written in India.

And this last Christmas, the 3 top-selling electronic presents in America were all made in Asia.
The Apple iPod is the hottest-selling portable music player since the Walkman. It was designed in California. But 80% of its components came from Taiwan, and they’re all being assembled in China
Sony’s Portable PlayStation — where kids can play today’s newest digital video games with eye-popping 3-D graphics and stereo sound — has its hardware made in Japan and is assembled in Taiwan
And the American Xbox, by Microsoft — PlayStation’s biggest competitor — is actually made in a factory in Osaka, Japan
Even in medicine, long a preserve of America and Europe, Asians are beginning to crowd the top. For example, two new centers for hi-tech medicine are Singapore and Bangkok.

I recently spent two weeks in Bangkok for research. I visited two of the finest hospitals in the world. Wealthy people are flying from all over the world — Saudi Arabia, America, Europe (especially Germany), China, and Russia — to these hospitals.

60 Minutes recently did a feature story on one of them, raving about the quality of medicine, compassionate care, and low cost. They called this Bangkok hospital "The #1 international hospital in the world."

For investment purposes, I liked the shares of the other hospital better. I recommended its shares a few years ago. Subscribers walked away with up to 163% profits in 8 months.

Indeed, any time you have little companies rising to the forefront of a technological revolution, there’s big money to be made in their stock.

Right now, I’m bursting with excitement over the company that’s turning toxic, "brown" water into pure drinking water, and the other one getting rid of mountains of vermin-filled organic waste and powering whole towns with the electricity they generate. But because these companies are out in Asia and mostly unknown, their shares are selling at 11¢ and $1.50, respectively.

I can’t guarantee it, but I’m convinced that these companies have the potential to grow into giants like Ford or GE. If you agree, then sink a couple of thousand of dollars into each. It will buy you a wheelbarrow full of shares. And if either of them hits the big-time, you’ll be sitting pretty.
Subscribe to Financial Gateway to Asia, and
I’ll rush you my Special Reports on the small companies
quietly changing the way the world works

My Financial Gateway to Asia is published monthly, with frequent e-mail updates and Flash Alerts when opportunities need to be acted upon fast.

As soon as you sign up, I’ll rush you — free as a bonus — my two Special Reports:

— "Little company that turns filthy, toxic, ‘brown,’ water into abundant, pure drinking water"

— "Tiny company disposing of mountains of rotting organic waste and turning it into clean, useable electricity"


After that, each year you’ll get between 12 and 18 new recommendations of little-known companies dripping with the same juicy profit potential as the two companies you just read about.

My staff and I love little companies like these and love to talk about them. So if you have questions, write. Unfortunately, there are some questions that, because of SEC regulations, we are unable to answer. But outside of that —because we’re on the other side of the world — you’ll likely have an answer in your e-mail in-box before the market opens.

Each time I give a recommendation, I tell you why I think this company is headed for the big-time ... what price to get in at ... what the risks are ... and how high I expect the shares to go. All of my recommendations can be bought in the United States; many of them through your regular broker.

Daring introductory offer: 75% discount!
Save $380 — enough to buy 3,400 shares

A one-year subscription to Financial Gateway to Asia normally costs $480. But I told my Publisher I didn’t want money to be an obstacle for new subscribers ... I wanted to make it easy for them to get on board and test the waters. And he agreed to a daring introductory offer: 1 year for only $100.

You save $380 (75%), and you receive my two special reports on the small companies that are quietly changing the way the world works.

Look at it this way: One of these company’s shares are 11¢ each as I write. So the $380 savings is enough to buy your first 3,400 shares.

To subscribe, simply click on the "Subscribe Now" button below.


Best wishes,




Brian Tycangco, Editor
Financial Gateway to Asia
P.S. Another company that intrigues me, has a treatment that allows a diabetic’s body to produce its own natural insulin. In one test, a single 10-minute procedure has worked successfully for 9 years. 194 million people have diabetes, and would love a treatment that allows them to throw away their syringes and test strips.

This isn’t a company that’s going to change the way the world works, but it could change the world for almost 200 million people. And that’s a big market. Subscribe for 2 years, and I’ll send you my report on this company, too.

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Dear Brian:

Yes, it makes sense that investing in red-hot little companies in the fastest-growing economies of the world is a great way to pile up huge
profits. And your track record, average profits 57% losers included, proves it. Sign me up, and rush me your two Special Reports ...

-- “Little company that turns filthy, toxic, ‘brown,’ water into abundant, pure drinking water”

-- “Tiny company disposing of mountains of rotting organic waste and turning it into clean, useable electricity

 
1 year, just $100 . on your daring introductory offer. I save $380 from the regular $480 a year subscription rate. Please rush me — as two free bonuses — your Special Reports on the hot, little companies (a) turning toxic, "brown" water into pure drinking water, and (b) turning mountains of rotting garbage into electricity. I also get all your monthly issues, e-mail updates, and Flash Alerts.
 
 
 
 

Save even more with a 2-year subscription, only $182. I save $778 on your regular rates. I get your two reports on those little companies quietly changing the way the world works ... and as my third free bonus, you’ll send me your Special Report, "Little biotech company developing breakthrough cure for diabetes".

 
 
 



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Financial Gateway to Asia — Track Record Since January 1, 2004
Hard proof that investing in hot little companies in the world’s
fastest-growing economies can result in huge profits

75% winning trades. Total profits: $66,008
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This is my complete track record of every trade closedout since January 1, 2004. 76 trades. 19 losers, 57 winners. Average profits, losers included: a walloping 57% across the board! If you had made a modest $2,000 investment in these stocks and followed my recommendations, right now you’d be as much as $66,000 richer, less commissions. And as I write this, the average gain on open trades is even more: 93%.

The two companies I’m telling you about in this letter are just a sample of the kinds of recommendations you’ll be receiving when you
subscribe to my Financial Gateway to Asia. Can I guarantee that these recommendations -- and others like them -- will be profitable? Heck no.

But a winning track record of so many recommendations -- over more than two years -- shows that investing in hot little companies, in the fastest growing economies of the world, is paying off in big profits for my subscribers. And it could pay off in big profits for you, too.


Brian Tycangco
Editor, Financial Gateway to Asia
Financial Gateway to Asia is published worldwide by FGA, Inc., in Hong Kong
by Jaguar Investment Services, Ltd., and in Australia by Financial Publishing Pty, Ltd.

Sorry, not for sale in the United Kingdom

© Copyright 2006. All Rights Reserved.
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