Archives April 2006

O’Melveny acquires Freshfields former China head

LA-based O’Melveny & Myers has bagged the former head of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s China practise.

Michael Moser retired from Freshfields’ partnership to be replaced by New York-qualified M&A specialist Douglas Markel, as revealed by The Lawyer (27 February). He will now co-head O’Melveny’s Asia practise, alongside current head Howard Chao.

He will work from the firm’s Hong Kong and Beijing offices. Moser has practiced in Asia for 25 years. His experience includes advising on M&A, foreign direct investment, technology licensing, and corporate restructuring. He also has experience resolving disputes between Chinese and foreign businesses.

Moser joined Freshfields in December 1999, after being poached from Baker & McKenzie, where he headed the firm’s China practice.

Moser is a member of the panel of the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC), and vice-chairman of the Governing Council of the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre.

He was made vice chairman of the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre (HKIAC) in 2004, and was the first foreign national to be appointed an arbitrator in mainland China.

http://www.thelawyer.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=119025&d=122&h=24&f=46

UBS appoints Henry Cai as China investment banking chairman

03.31.2006, 05:15 AM

BEIJING (AFX) – UBS said it has appointed Henry Cai to the new position of chairman of investment banking for China, effective today.

The Swiss-based bank said in a statement that Cai, formerly with BNP Paribas, would work with its mainland banker Zhang Wendong and others in leading its China business.

Cai, who has 12 years experience in the listing of Chinese firms, lead managed more than 2.5 bln usd of underwriting projects in his previous job with BNP Paribas, the statement said.

http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2006/03/31/afx2636335.html

Wethington Named Chairman of AIG Companies in China

March 7, 2006

American International Group Inc. (AIG) reported that Olin Wethington, former special envoy on China, U.S. Department of the Treasury, has joined AIG as chairman of AIG Companies in China, a new position.

In this capacity, Wethington will oversee expansion of AIG’s businesses in China. Wethington will report to AIG Senior Vice Chairman Edmund S.W. Tse, and will work closely with Tse and with AIG President and Chief Executive Officer Martin Sullivan.

Wethington has extensive experience in government and the private sector involving China. He has served in a variety of senior positions in the U.S. Treasury Department, including special envoy on China in 2005; counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury; and assistant secretary for International Affairs.

Commenting on Wethington’s appointment, Sullivan said, “We are delighted that Olin Wethington will be joining AIG in such a senior position. Olin’s many accomplishments include negotiating on behalf of the U.S. government a number of financial market agreements with other countries. China is a very important market for AIG, dating from the earliest days of the company. AIG re-entered the Chinese insurance market in 1992, the first foreign company to do so, and we now have extensive life and non-life insurance operations in the major Chinese cities. Going forward, we expect to grow these businesses, as well as continue to develop our financial services and asset management operations. I expect Olin Wethington to be a key leader of our expansion efforts in China.”

http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/international/2006/03/07/66243.htm

Taiwan Greater China Fund Appoints Vice Chairman

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Feb. 27, 2006–The Taiwan Greater China Fund (NYSE:TFC), a diversified closed-end investment company registered in the United States, today announced that its Board of Trustees has appointed Frederick C. Copeland, Jr. as Vice Chairman. Mr. Copeland has been a Trustee of the Fund since May 2004.

From 1995 to 2001, Mr. Copeland served as President, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Operating Officer of Aetna International, where he was responsible for all of Aetna’s insurance and financial services activities outside the United States and was a member of Aetna’s CEO Management Committee. He left Aetna following the company’s acquisition by ING at the end of 2000.

Prior to joining Aetna, Mr. Copeland headed the Connecticut operations of Fleet Bank for two years. Mr. Copeland began his banking career at Citibank in 1967 and spent 25 years there, during which period he held various executive positions that included acting as President and Chief Executive Officer of Citibank Canada from 1987 to 1993. He served as Citibank’s Taiwan Country Head from 1983 to 1987, at which time Citibank’s assets in Taiwan exceeded those of any other foreign bank.

Mr. Copeland has also been the Vice Chairman of Far East National Bank (FENB) since 2005. Based in Los Angeles, California, FENB was founded in 1974 as the first federally chartered Asian American bank in the United States, and became a wholly owned subsidiary of Taiwan’s Bank SinoPac in 1997.

The Taiwan Greater China Fund is listed and publicly traded in the United States. The Fund is organized for investment in securities of Taiwan issuers by non-Taiwan investors and follows an investment strategy of primarily investing in Taiwan listed companies that derive or expect to derive a significant portion of their revenues from operations in or exports to mainland China.

http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20060227005553&newsLang=en

China Netcom CEO Plans To Leave And Work For Venture Fund

February 28, 2006
Rumors are swirling that Edward Tian, CEO of China Netcom (CN), plans to leave the company to head a new venture fund.

Local media report that Tian will lead a Chinese broadband services fund that could be financed by Rupert Murdoch and Hong Kong’s PCCW.

No specific departure date has been determined and officials at Netcom have not made any comment.

http://www.chinatechnews.com/index.php?action=show&type=news&id=3610

China Shenzhen Investment hires UBS analyst as COO

Last Update: 10:03 AM ET Mar 20, 2006

HONG KONG (MarketWatch) — Shenzhen Investment Ltd. (0604.HK) said it has appointed Joe Zhang, formerly a high-profile research analyst for Swiss bank UBS AG (UBS), as its chief operating officer.
Shenzhen Investment is a Hong Kong-listed company controlled by the municipal government of Shenzhen, Guangdong province, which borders Hong Kong. It has interests mainly in property and infrastructure.

China’s Reserves Top Japan’s as World’s Largest

March 31 (Bloomberg) — China overtook Japan as the world’s largest holder of foreign-currency reserves last month, the latest evidence of China’s rising influence as an international financial power.

The Chinese government’s currency assets excluding gold rose to $853.7 billion as of Feb. 28, surpassing Japan’s $831.6 billion, according to Bloomberg News calculations using government data. China’s reserves, which now account for 20.1 percent of the world’s total of $4.3 trillion, climbed a third during the past year. Japan’s reserves account for 19.5 percent of the total.

A record trade surplus and a flood of foreign investment has pushed China’s currency holdings higher, increasing pressure on the yuan to rise in value and prompting the government to encourage investment overseas and purchases of imports. The U.S., led by Treasury Secretary John Snow, is pressing China to let its currency move with market forces.

“One can think of the phrase `be careful what you wish for’ if China revalues,” said Robert Sinche, head of global currency strategy at Bank of America Corp. in New York. A strengthening of China’s currency could affect “import prices, inflation pressures in the U.S., and could make the Fed’s job more difficult,” Sinche said.

U.S. lawmakers are considering more than a dozen pieces of legislation that would place punitive tariffs on Chinese imports unless the yuan is allowed to strengthen. Lawmakers including Senator Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, say China’s undervalued currency hurts U.S. exports.

Yuan’s Gains

Since the yuan, a unit of the renminbi, was revalued by 2.1 percent against the dollar on July 21, it has only gained about 1 percent. The yuan rose to the highest today since July’s revaluation on speculation the market will have more influence on exchange rates after the foreign ministry yesterday said currency participants determine the value.

The yuan rose as high as 8.0173 against the dollar and was 8.0175 at the 3:30 p.m. close in Shanghai from 8.0264 yesterday, taking gains on the week to 0.16 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Canada’s central bank governor, David Dodge, said yesterday in Princeton, New Jersey, that China shouldn’t be allowed to “frustrate market forces” by blocking movements in exchange rates.

$1 Trillion

Both China’s government and central bank have said they will make the country’s exchange rate system more flexible, while ruling out another revaluation. China’s reserves may rise to $1 trillion by the end of this year, marking the first time any nation’s reserves have reached that level, according to Stephen Green and Tai Hui, China economists for Standard Chartered Plc China economists.

China’s trade surplus tripled to $102 billion last year, helping to drive economic growth of 9.9 percent, the fastest among the world’s major economies. Schumer and South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, after visiting China last week, postponed a vote on their China sanctions bill to give the country more time to change its currency system.

People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said in a speech March 20 that adjusting the yuan’s value won’t reduce the trade surplus. He said China will need two to three years to achieve balanced trade by increasing domestic consumption.

“The Chinese government has started expanding domestic market demand, lowered deposit rates, liberalized markets, allowed for exchange-rate fluctuations as part of our policy of improving the balance of international payments,” Zhou said. “The U.S. side must lower its fiscal deficit and boost savings.”

Direct Investment

China’s reserves of foreign currency, which economists say are between 70 percent and 80 percent in dollars, rose by an average $17 billion a month in 2004 and 2005. That was also fueled by about $120 billion of foreign direct investment and billions of dollars of capital inflows betting on a rising yuan.

“We have to be somewhat careful about a radical revaluation” of China’s currency, said Mickey Kantor, a former U.S. trade representative under President Bill Clinton and now a partner at the law firm of Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP. “It could lead to more non-performing loans, which could make the banking system weaker. This is something we do not want to do.”

Kantor said U.S. should still be “strong advocates” for a revaluation of China’s currency.

Treasury Holdings

China’s holdings of foreign currency assets are now so large the country is shifting more of the added reserves into euros and yen to reduce its exposure to dollar-denominated assets.

China has been investing its reserves in U.S. bonds and assets. China held $262.6 billion in U.S. government Treasury bonds at the end of January, making it the largest investor after Japan. China’s purchases of Treasuries have helped hold down market interest rates in the world’s largest economy.

On March 5, Zhou said China won’t reduce the size of its dollar holdings, though the central bank will “adjust” total reserves based on international market conditions.

In a separate report, the International Monetary Fund said today central banks cut their U.S. dollar reserves for the fifth straight year in 2005 and also pared their holdings of the euro and yen.

Central banks held 44.8 percent of their total foreign- exchange reserves in the U.S. currency at the end of the fourth quarter, compared with 46.8 percent in the same period of 2004, the Washington-based IMF said.

As recently as 2001 the world’s central banks held over half of their reserves in dollars. The new figures validate speculation among investors that central banks are reducing holdings of dollars in favor of other currencies.