National Post

Buying SPREE

CHINESE COMPANIES EXPECTED TO SPEND $ 1.5 TRILLION ACQUIRING FOREIGN ASSETS.

- Sarah Syed Bloomberg News

Chinese a c quirers will spend US$ 1.5 trillion buying companies and investing overseas in the next decade, 70- per- cent more than the previous 10 years, even as regulators at home and abroad block deals, Linklaters LLP said in a report Tuesday.

Government policies encouragin­g Chinese companies to invest in manufactur­ing capabiliti­es, particular­ly for advanced technology, and internatio­nal trade will help maintain deal flow, the law firm, which specialize­s in advising on mergers and acquisitio­ns, said in the report. Chinese buyers have spent about US$ 880 billion on assets in other countries in the last 10 years, according to the data.

The success of China’s bidders will depend on their ability to overcome foreign countries’ concerns about national security and interest, which contribute­d to the failure of as much as US$ 75 billion in announced outbound deals last year, Linklaters said in the report. China may also have to bow to internatio­nal pressure to liberalize its markets, it said.

“While the pace of outbound deals has declined in 2017, China’s long- term aspiration­s” mean that overseas “investment and acquisitio­ns from China will continue to be a significan­t force over the long term,” Linklaters said.

Regulators have generally blocked Chinese businesses’ bids for companies in industries seen as critical to their economies or national security, such as infrastruc­ture and technology. Aixtron SE, the German semiconduc­tor equipment- maker, saw its planned sale to a Chinesebac­ked company collapse in December after the U. S. government opposed the deal. Pushback from the same group, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U. S., led to the terminatio­n of Chinese firm GO Scale Capital’s US$ 2.8- billion bid for Royal Philips NV’s lighting unit, Lumileds.

A rebound in M& A will also rely on a softening of the Chinese state’s stance toward large, overseas deals, which some in the government see as a threat to the country’s growth. Its regulators are assessing the dangers that these prolific acquirers, and the debt they’ve run up, pose to China’s banking system and economy.

HNA Group Co., the Chinese aviation and shipping giant that’s behind some of the biggest overseas deals, is among acquisitiv­e companies under increased government scrutiny. Several major Chinese banks that have helped fund HNA’s deal spree have stopped issuing new loans to the company, people familiar with the matter said last month. HNA has said its financial position remains strong and it has untapped credit available from a wide range of Chinese lenders.

“Despite potentiall­y increased scrutiny by Chinese regulators and banks of some of the deals underlying these flows, we expect China to remain ‘ open for business’ with respect to genuine strategic overseas acquisitio­ns,” Linklaters said in the report. “If such investment­s are blocked in some jurisdicti­ons, this may redirect Chinese players’ interest toward other jurisdicti­ons.”

WE EXPECT CHINA TO REMAIN ‘OPEN FOR BUSINESS.’

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