Category Investing in China

German Continental AG to scale up investment in China

German Continental AG said Thursday it plans to scale up investment in China and introduce environmentally friendly technology to improve competitiveness.

Continental, the biggest auto parts supplier in Europe, said that 10 percent to 12 percent of its current earnings comes from Asian markets, where its sales are expected to double by 2015.

Continental has recently invested 55.5 million euros (88.2 million U.S. dollars) in Changshu in China’s southeastern province of Jiangsu to build a hydraulic brake factory..

The company said it will make Changshu its production center of the hydraulic brake system in East Asia.

Continental, a world-leading manufacturer of tires and brake systems, has become one of the top five international auto parts suppliers after acquiring Siemens VDO.

Growing consumer market attracts foreign investment

FOREIGN direct investment in China rose 37.94 percent in May from a year earlier to US$7.76 billion, the Ministry of Commerce said yesterday.

The growth decreased from the peak in January when FDI posted a 110-percent hike and compared with an increase of 54.97 percent in the first five months.

New foreign-funded firms fell 10.94 percent in May to 2,425, while the data through May dropped 20.95 percent from the previous year to 11,915.

“China is very cautious about the inflow of hot money, or speculative money, when the yuan has accelerated in appreciation. The slower pace of FDI and the cut in new foreign-funded firms indicated such concerns but also demonstrated investors’ focus on bigger and more capital-intensive projects,” said Li Maoyu, an analyst with Changjiang Securities Co.

The Chinese currency has appreciated about 5.3 percent so far this year against the dollar. The pace was much faster than the combined growth of 7 percent for the entire year of 2007.

But what can’t be denied is that China’s rapidly expanding consumer market also made the country an attractive destination for investment.

Robert Brown, chairman of Watson Wyatt Global Investment Committee, said China was fit for stable investment in the long term because of the dynamics and the established infrastructure here. Watson Wyatt provides investment consulting services to clients, including many institutional investors.

Meanwhile, the slower pace of FDI growth can help ease government concern over excess liquidity and lead to a less harsh macroeconomic control after consumer prices also eased in May, analysts said. The central bank ordered lenders to set aside more money as reserves last Saturday to curb liquidity and inflation.

The Consumer Price Index, the main gauge of inflation, eased to 7.7 percent in May from April’s 8.5 percent, the National Bureau of Statistics said yesterday.

Investment from United States companies increased 25.09 percent in May from a year earlier while spending from European Union countries gained 35.2 percent.

Last year, China’s FDI grew 13.6 percent to US$74.8 billion.

In the first five months this year, the figure jumped by 54.97 percent to US$42.8 billion.

SKF adds to investment in Dalian

SKF, the world’s leading bearing supplier, announced on Friday a new investment of 580 million yuan ($83 million) to the second phase of its Dalian factory in Northeast China’s Liaoning province.

With a 25,000 sq m facility added its current 80,000 sq m factory, completion of the second phase project in 2009 is expected to double manufacturing capacity.

The new factory is to support continued business growth in China and other parts of Asia, especially in the areas of renewable energy, metalworking, mining, construction and industrial transmission industries, according to Tom Johnstone, president and CEO of Sweden-based SKF group.

As a leading global supplier in the areas of bearings, seals, mechatronics, services and lubrication systems, SKF is represented in more than 130 countries and has 15,000 distributors worldwide.

The Dalian factory mainly manufactures large and medium size bearings. It was planned to go through three phases as it was launched in March 2005.

“Reviewing the past three years since the company’s establishment, the company’s business develops fast, stable and healthy,” said Sunny Chan, general manager of SKF (Dalian) Bearings and Precision Technologies Co Ltd.

The investment in the first phase of the Dalian factory was $20 million.

Johnstone said the group decided to accelerate the second step of the Dalian project because of “the strong demand of customers” and “strong performance of the facilities in Dalian”.

Earlier this year, SKF Dalian won the SKF group’s Excellence Award as well as the 2007 Dalian Preferred Employer Award.

Toyota plans 1.5 bln yuan expansion at Tianjin plant

BEIJING, May 15 — Toyota plans to invest 1.5 billion yuan to boost production capacity at a facility in northern China by 50 percent to 150,000 vehicles a year. The expansion at the plant in Tianjin Municipality is due to be completed by the end of 2009.

The move would boost annual capacity of FAW Toyota, its venture with China’s FAW Group, to 470,000 units, and Toyota’s overall capacity in China to roughly 690,000 units.

Microsoft to build $280mln R&D center in Beijing

Software giant Microsoft yesterday said it will invest 280 million U.S. dollars to build a research and development center in Beijing and significantly expand its research team in the country.

The new R&D campus, set to accommodate 5,000 employees, will become Microsoft’s largest research center outside the United States when it is completed in 2010, said Zhang Yaqin, the company’s China chairman.

“Through investments such as this, we are building on our capabilities as one of Microsoft’s key global R&D centers,” said Zhang.

He said the company will hire 1,000 new research employees in China in the next fiscal year, which starts in July.

Microsoft currently has 3,000 research staff in the country, with 1,500 full-time employees and another 1,500 working on a project basis, Dow Jones has reported. The company has said it will double the number of its full-time research employees in China to 3,000 in the next three years.

Last year, Microsoft invested about 280 million dollars in its R&D activities in the country, said Zhang Hongjiang, chief technology officer of Microsoft’s China R&D Group. The company also recruited 1,000 new employees to its China R&D Group last year, making it Microsoft’s largest research team outside the US.

About 80 percent of the company’s 3,000 research staff in the country develop products for worldwide users and only 20 percent of them work specifically for demand from emerging markets such as China, Zhang said.

“But I expect this percentage to grow in the future,” he said.

Microsoft started its first R&D center in China as early as 1995. The company now has research facilities in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.

These investments are said to have helped Microsoft win support from the Chinese government and boosted sales in the Chinese market.

PC shipments in China reached 36.84 million units last year, research firm IDC has said. It predicted the number to grow at an average rate of 17.2 percent until 2011, when shipments will hit 64.94 million units.

The country also has the world’s largest number of Internet and mobile phone users, offering what is believed to be huge opportunities for IT companies.

Microsoft does not disclose its revenue from the Chinese market. But Fortune Magazine estimated in a story last year that the software giant’s revenue from China would exceed 700 million dollars last year, about 1.5 percent of Microsoft’s global sales.

Samsung starts spending spree

SAMSUNG Group has announced its largest ever investment plan, saying it will increase hiring just a week after the conglomerate’s long-serving chief announced his resignation.

Samsung said yesterday that it will boost investment 24 percent to 27.8 trillion won (US$27.9 billion) in 2008 in everything from semiconductor production to shipbuilding.

The investment will account for about 30 percent of the combined total of the 600 largest South Korean corporations this year, it said.

Exports by Samsung Group companies account for up to one-fifth of South Korea’s exports, according to some estimates. Key investments under the plan include 8 trillion won for semiconductors, 5.3 trillion won for flat panel displays and 1 trillion won for shipbuilding.

Samsung Electronics, South Korea’s biggest company, said on Friday that its first-quarter net profit rose 37 percent on strength in displays and mobile phones. It is the world’s second-biggest handset manufacturer after Finland’s Nokia Corp.

Samsung Heavy Industries Co, meanwhile, is the world’s second-largest shipbuilder after South Korea’s Hyundai Heavy Industries Co.

Samsung also said that group companies plan to hire 20,500 employees this year, an increase of 28 percent from last year.

Separately, Lee Kun-hee, who led the conglomerate for two decades, officially resigned yesterday from his position on the board of directors of Samsung Electronics, the company said.

Lee announced last week he was stepping down following his indictment on tax evasion and other charges.

Shares in Samsung Electronics rose 3.8 percent Monday to close at 716,000 won.

Use of foreign investment in west China increases

The increase of actual use of foreign investment in China’s western regions exceeded the nation’s average by 128 percentage points in the first two months this year, said an official of the ministry of commerce on Sunday.

During the first two months, the western regions’ actual use of foreign investment was 1.393 billion U.S. dollars, more than double over the same period of 2007. A total of 254 foreign companies were approved to invest in the region, said Ji Xiaofeng,a ministry official in charge of foreign investment management at the ongoing 12th Investment & Trade Forum for Cooperation between East and West China.

Ji attributed the increase to the nation’s encouraging policy for foreign investment to the middle and western regions. She said the ministry was advocating a transfer of foreign investment from the eastern regions to the western areas and encouraging local governments to use the investment in an innovative way.

She said the ministry would continue improving regulations on foreign acquisition and merger and establish an anti-dumping investigation mechanism. Foreign investors would be welcome to participate in reforms of state-owned companies.

According to statistics available, a quarter of the nation’s tax revenue came from foreign invested companies at present. By the end of Feb., the number of foreign invested companies accumulated to 637,000 nationwide and the amount of the actual use of foreign investment reached 781.1 billion U.S. dollars.

During the first two months, 4,372 foreign investors came to China and the actual use of foreign investment rose 75 percent to 18.1 billion U.S. dollars.

Dongfang issue for wind power

DONGFANG Electric Corp says it proposes to sell up to 65 million new shares in China to raise funds to invest in energy-related infrastructure projects.

China’s third-biggest maker of power-generation equipment said it intends to use the funds make total investments of up to 3.96 billion yuan (US$565 million) on wind power projects in Hangzhou, eastern China, and Tianjin in northern China, and a nuclear power renovation project in Sichuan Province.

Dongfang said it proposed to sell not more than 65 million new A shares, representing 7.96 percent of the total shares of the company currently in issue.

The sale will be subject to approval by shareholders and relevant Chinese authorities, Dongfang said in a statement to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

The company also said profit for 2007 fell 1.9 percent to 2.41 billion yuan, from 2.46 billion yuan in 2006. Earnings per share dropped to 2.723 yuan from 2.777 yuan the previous year, the Deyang, Sichuan-based company said.

The directors proposed a final cash dividend of 0.24 yuan per share for 2007, compared with 0.20 yuan a year earlier.

Doing Business in China: Regulatory change to have impact on U.S. shippers

Patrick Burnson, Executive Editor — Logistics Management, 3/19/2008

SAN FRANCISCO—As reported here yesterday, shippers are telling LM that sourcing manufactured goods from China will have a few new wrinkles in the coming months. According to Saji Daniel, president and CEO of Tradex International, it is now time for U.S. shippers to take a fresh at look trade issues now if they are to remain competitive in this marketplace.

“The Chinese government is taking deliberate steps to shift manufacturing to high-tech industries,” he said. “Last summer, the government reduced value-added tax (VAT) rebates on thousands of products. These rebates provide tax relief for exporters, but were removed for many commodity goods and products requiring high levels of energy to manufacture.”

Daniel also made note of a new labor law enacted January 1, which substantially increased production costs by requiring employers to pay insurance, overtime, and severance benefits to eligible employees.

“Our company has experienced direct increases in cost as a result of this new legislation, with labor costs estimated to have grown between 30-to-40 percent,” he said.

In the short-term, said Daniel, businesses in and around Beijing may also be seriously impacted by the 2008 Olympics. The government plans to reduce pollution prior to and during the games by shutting down factories surrounding the city, effectively stopping production for over a month.

Not that it will require a global sporting event to earn media scrutiny, he noted:

“The most publicized example is Mattel,” noted Daniel, “which recalled millions of toys last summer following the discovery of lead in many of its products produced in China. The recalls impacted not just toy manufacturers, but all importers, as questions regarding the safety of Chinese products drew international spotlight.

Daniel said that Mattel’s lack of oversight exemplifies the complexity of manufacturing overseas; issues like lead content, long ago dissolved in the United States, must still be considered in China.

“In a marketplace characterized by instant, global communication, one mistake can significantly damage the reputation of your brand both in the United States and worldwide,” he said.

By way of transport advice, Daniel suggests shippers stick with reliable ocean carriers with a proven record in the trade lane.

“Historically, Hanjin, Hyundai, Cosco, and CMA CGM have provided us with the best lead times and service,” he said. “The nature of our business does not require the use of air freight, as our chief concern is cost rather than delivery time. We maintain ample levels of safety stock domestically to satisfy any interruptions in the supply chain.”

Nor does Daniel recommend taking on too many of the intermediary functions of goods sourcing:

“We continue to find benefit from the use of freight forwarders, and utilize several different services to varying degrees. Freight forwarders reduce our staffing requirements by handling procurement, and our EDI capabilities enable us to monitor shipments by providing automatic updates from our forwarding partners,” he said.

In conclusion, Daniel observed that freight forwarders also provide his company with “peace of mind” by enabling them to delay its insurance liability for shipments until they arrive.

Agility names James Gagn as Greater China CEO

Agility, a logistics provider, has appointed James Gagne as CEO for Greater China.

Gagne’s appointment is part of a new regional management structure at Agility that will help to better manage its growing network of offices and to engage specialists for industry vertical sectors.

“We are delighted to have James on board as he brings 12 years of experience of working in China with a leading logistics services provider and he will be a key player as Agility continues to grow its business both organically and through strategic acquisition,” said Wolfgang Hollermann, CEO, Agility, Asia Pacific.

Agility is to strengthen its management team as a result of continuing high levels of growth in Asia Pacific and has set up five new regions and appointed leaders to manage these regions.

The five regions and their leaders are: North Asia (Japan, Korea, Philippines, and Guam), Olaf Tauschke; South East Asia (Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam), Mykell Lee; South Asia (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka), Mahesh Niruttan; Australasia (Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and South Pacific Islands), Mick Turnbull; Greater China (China, Hong Kong and Taiwan), James Gagne.

The Asia Pacific region is part of the Global Integrated Logistics (GIL) unit of Agility. The GIL unit has four regional CEOs – one for each geographical region. In Asia the CEO is Wolfgang Hollermann, in the Americas, Mike Bible, in Europe, Beat Simon, and in Middle East and Africa, Elias Monem.

The GIL unit is headquartered out of Baar, Switzerland and is managed by Essa Al-Saleh, president and CEO, Global Integrated Logistics.