Posts tagged ‘chinese investment’

03/11/2014

Asset-Hungry Chinese Companies to Spend $120 Billion in Overseas Purchases This Year – Businessweek

Chinese money has been going overseas for years now, snapping up real estate, technology companies, and more than anything, oil and gas resources. But this year will be a turning point: For the first time, Chinese overseas investment will surpass foreign direct investment into China.

Chinese investment is poised to exceed $120 billion in 2014, up from $108 billion last year, predicts the Beijing-based Center for China & Globalization in a report released Wednesday. Foreign investment into China totaled $87.36 billion in the first nine months. It is expected to reach $120 billion this year.

“China’s sustainable growth and its ability to compete on the world stage hinge upon the speed at which it can foster its own powerful international companies,” said Long Yongtu, the chairman of the center, the China Daily reported today. “’Going out’ will provide a platform for Chinese companies to grow through participation in the global economy.”

via Asset-Hungry Chinese Companies to Spend $120 Billion in Overseas Purchases This Year – Businessweek.

09/01/2014

* Chinese Investment in U.S. Doubles to $14 Billion in 2013 – Businessweek

Chinese companies are on a North American buying spree, investing $14 billion in the U.S. last year, a record high, says a new report by New York’s Rhodium Group.

Chinese investment in the United States doubled in 2013, driven by large-scale acquisitions in food, energy and real estate,” write analysts Thilo Hanemann and Cassie Gao in “Chinese FDI in the U.S.: 2013 Recap and 2014 Outlook,” released on Jan. 7.

“We expect Chinese interest in U.S. assets to remain strong in 2014 because of aggressive economic reforms in China, a more liberal policy environment for Chinese outbound investors, and a positive outlook for the U.S. economy.”

Whereas state-owned companies have dominated in total deal value in the past, that is no longer true. In 2013, more than 70 percent of investment came from private enterprises, responsible for more than 80 percent of a total of 87 deals (of which 44 were acquisitions and another 38 were greenfield projects).

Where is the money going? Unconventional oil and gas was a top draw, with $3.2 billion invested in deals that include CNOOC’s (CEO) purchase of Calgary, Alberta-based Nexen Energy’s U.S. operations, Sinopec’s (SHI) joint venture with Chesapeake Energy (CHK) of Oklahoma City, and a Sinochem International (600500:CH) stake in West Texas’s Wolfcamp Shale. Commercial real estate was also a big draw, with 18 investments in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, and Detroit totaling $1.8 billion. And the single biggest deal: Shuanghui’s (000895:CH) $7.1 billion takeover of pork processor Smithfield.

Chinese companies are also becoming big employers of Americans, says Rhodium, providing more than 70,000 full-time jobs as of the end of last year. That’s an eightfold increase since 2007. Huawei Technologies (002502:CH) and Lenovo (992:HK) are big employers, but just one company—Smithfield—accounted for 37,000 of the total workers at Chinese companies.

A separate report released in early December by private equity fund A Capital found that Chinese investors put $24.7 billion into mergers and acquisitions in all of North America in the just first three-quarters of last year.

via Chinese Investment in U.S. Doubles to $14 Billion in 2013 – Businessweek.

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17/07/2012

* Chinese Businesses Get Advice on U.S. Investment

WSJ: “Looking to ease the way for Chinese investment in the U.S., the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is advising Chinese businesses not to count on “personal relationships” with government officials as a key to success.

The advice came in a report prepared by the U.S. Chamber for an investment forum Tuesday in Beijing. The event, co-hosted by the China Center for International Economic Exchanges, a Chinese government think tank, was expected to draw about 400 business executives and government officials, current and past.

A subsidiary of Aviation Industry Group of China last year bought Cirrus Industries, a Minnesota maker of propeller aircraft.

The U.S. Chamber said it was acting on its own initiative, though the U.S. government, seeking to lift economic growth, also has been trying to encourage Chinese investment. Chinese business leaders regularly say they are interested in investing in the U.S. but fear political opposition.

“We’re trying to showcase Chinese investment in the U.S.,” said Myron Brilliant, a senior vice president at the U.S. Chamber. “In a lot of areas there aren’t a lot of hurdles to investment.”

The 38-page report is based on interviews with Chinese business officials who have invested in the U.S. Some of its suggestions are obvious: “win-win cooperation can create great opportunities,” said advice attributed to Cirrus Industries Inc., a Duluth, Minn., propeller-aircraft maker purchased last year by a subsidiary of Aviation Industry Group of China.

But other advice reflects important differences between how business is done in the U.S. and in China. “Unlike in China, personal relations with officials play a very small part in the enforcement of laws and regulation,” said the report’s introduction.

Another tidbit for would-be Chinese investors: “The U.S. media [are] completely independent of the government, so even if some local officials welcome your investment, others might voice opposition in the media. Do not be discouraged by this.”

Chinese direct investment in the U.S. last year totaled $4.5 billion, according to New York market research firm Rhodium Group, a tiny portion of the foreign-direct investment in the U.S. The Commerce Department, which uses a different methodology from Rhodium, said FDI in the U.S. reached $227 billion in 2011.

via Chinese Businesses Get Advice on U.S. Investment – WSJ.com.

03/02/2012

* McKinsey: What’s in store for China in 2012?

McKinsey has made the following prediction: Despite food price inflation and a stagnant housing market, China should maintain a rapid rate of growth. In detail:

1. Government policies will spur consumption and investment.

2. Dominant models will emerge for reforming rural land ownership.

3. Real estate will stagnate.

4. The fundamentals will cause further inflation in food prices.

5. Chinese investment in green tech will spike upward.

6. Accounting scandals will continue.

7. Private-equity and venture capital funds may go ‘walkabout.’

8. Chinese acquirers will be bolder.

9. The automobile segment will be slow.

10. Hospital reform will accelerate.

For full report: https://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Economic_Studies/Productivity_Performance/Whats_in_store_for_China_in_2012_2925

For a summary of the key events affecting China in 2011 go to http://chindiapedia.org/China2011roundup.aspx

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