In the period between 2004 and 2007, the Chinese stock market index rose more than 450%. On the streets of Shanghai I witnessed lines of Chinese citizens waiting outside brokerages to deposit funds so they could trade on the big stock market boom. The hyperbole surrounding the Great Chinese Miracle approached that of Japan, Inc., nearly two decades ago.

This was it -- missing out on China would be the greatest mistake investors of our generation could make.

You know what happened next, don't you?
In the past eight months, the Shanghai Stock Index has declined by nearly 50%. Speculators from Shanghai, Beijing, and all over China have seen their brokerage accounts get smoked.

It's a bit of a fortunate accident for foreign investors that shares trading on Chinese exchanges are largely limited to Chinese investors. Still, the whiff of opportunity a year ago has suddenly turned into the stench of decay. For people who are fundamentally opposed to overpaying for great investments, you couldn't ask for a better situation: Companies based in the world's most important growth economy are suddenly trading at a fraction of their former prices.

Wait, isn't the Chinese dream dead?
No.

But the market collapsed! Someone must know something!
Will you let me finish?

OK.
Officially, the Chinese economy grew by 11.5% in 2007. Unofficial estimates are even higher. These are growth rates that the U.S. economy will never reach again. It can't -- it's simply too developed.

This is not a bad thing. But it does mean that investors who focus only on the United States are ignoring some of the best growth opportunities in the world, ones that can be bought right on the U.S. stock exchanges. Not taking advantage of the ability to invest in faster-growing markets like China is like traveling to Paris to eat at McDonald's (NYSE: MCD) -- you know, because you're familiar with it. (And as a longtime McDonald's shareholder, I'd personally applaud your decision.)

Last year I wrote an article stating that investors could not afford to miss opportunities investing internationally, and cited the economic growth rates of China, India, Brazil, and several other high-growth countries. Famed investing author William Bernstein sent me a thoughtful response, pointing out that there is very little correlation between stock market returns and economic rate of growth. Case in point -- China's growth engine continued churning along in the past eight months, while its stock market tanked.

But with apologies to Mr. Bernstein, who is as thoughtful an investor as you'll ever hope to encounter, even if stocks and economic growth don't perfectly correlate, doesn't it make sense that, over time, companies that create economic returns will reward shareholders? In fact, isn't the key to good investing to get these opportunities at advantageous prices?

But wait, China's risky!
Let me thus spell it out: The way China has transformed its economy over the past 20 years is without precedent. Its trade surplus with the rest of the world grows by about $1 billion per working day. It has two dozen cities bigger than Chicago, many of which are only just tasting the prosperity that Shanghai and Beijing have enjoyed for a decade. This is a market that has really only truly been investible for foreign shareholders since 2002. And now its shares are down 49% in a few months.

Do you hear that dinner bell?

When I took my Global Gains team to India and China last summer, we saw the cranes, the transforming skylines, the increasing signs of a growing consumer class. We also met with some of the country's great entrepreneurs from companies like Ctrip.com (Nasdaq: CTRP) and China Fire & Security (Nasdaq: CFSG). We sat in on English-language classes at New Oriental Education & Technology (NYSE: EDU), the most prominent private-education company in China.

We saw the boom -- but when we came back, we recommended not a single Chinese company to our subscribers for almost a year. In fact, I rated the iShares FTSE/Xinhua 25 China Index (NYSE: FXI) -- the proxy for the Chinese market -- underperform. It was grossly overvalued, for one, and also the components of this index are former state-owned companies -- largely the exact investments you want to avoid in China, with the exception of a precious few like PetroChina (NYSE: PTR).

Price = what you pay
So why didn't we come back and start firing off Chinese recommendations? (New Oriental -- run by a passionate, brilliant manager who has built the firm to embody all that is great and promising in China -- had already been a Global Gains recommendation.) Well, growth is one thing -- but I couldn't help but recognize that there were hundreds of millions of people who were trying to invest in the Chinese market at the exact same time. And so Chinese stocks were brutally expensive.

And now they're not. In fact, in Global Gains we've recently recommended some fabulous opportunities in China -- companies that address the spectacular rise in demand for goods and services in the country.

Now is the time to buy China. But you have to know how, because as I've said before -- while many fortunes will be made in China in the next 20 years, many will also be lost.

How well do you know China?
I've worked in China, and have better than a decade's experience as an investor in the country. I've traveled it from stem to stern, and am preparing to take a team of Global Gains analysts back to China -- as well as Vietnam, Singapore, and Indonesia -- to look for investible ideas.

As we've done in the past, we're opening up our dispatches from this research trip to anyone who wishes to sign up (be sure to do so on Fool.com later this month). But we're reserving our best investing ideas and our detailed notes on our existing recommended companies for Global Gains subscribers.

Take a free trial today to access our library of market-beating stock selections and ensure delivery of our best ideas from our upcoming trip.

Bill Mann owns shares in McDonald's, several Chinese companies not listed here and 34 Pez dispensers, including three featuring Elvis Presley (made in China). New Oriental Education and China Fire & Security are Global Gains recommendations. Ctrip.com is a Hidden Gems recommendation. This disclosure statement is getting really long, but we feel pretty good about it nonetheless. Want more? You're in luck -- the one and only Fool policy on disclosure is right here.