China Daily (Hong Kong)

Regulation will draw a clear line on areas to be encouraged, forbidden

- By ZHONG NAN and REN XIAOJIN

China plans to introduce its first regulation on making outbound direct investment­s later this year to clarify and define the range of overseas investment­s, as well as listing prohibited areas and other essential factors, according to a report by Beijing-based newspaper the Economic Informatio­n Daily on Tuesday.

The Ministry of Commerce and the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic watchdogs, are leading the work to draft the regulation, the newspaper that is affiliated with Xinhua News Agency quoted an insider as saying.

The new rule will map out an overall structure governing outbound investment­s from the State level, combining and making further clarificat­ion of current rules in areas such as review procedures, tax policies and allowed amount for capital flows. It will also draw a clear line on the areas to be encouraged and forbidden, according to the report.

The Commerce Ministry and the NDRC declined to confirm the report on Tuesday

He Jingtong, a business professor at Nankai University in Tianjin, said: “The rule will hold back some domestic companies making overseas acquisitio­ns under heavy debt. The authoritie­s will elevate the review requiremen­ts to ensure that the deals are authentic.”

China’s outbound direct investment­s have rocketed faster than the growth pace of foreign direct investment.

China’s non-financial ODI soared 44.1 percent year-onyear to $170 billion in 2016, data from the Ministry of Commerce showed.

Zhou Liujun, director-general of the department of outward investment and economic cooperatio­n at the ministry, said earlier in March: “The government will encourage ODI activities that can assist the developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative and resolve the issue of overcapaci­ty in global markets, as well as supervisin­g and preventing irrational investment­s.”

Despite rapid ODI growth in 2016, Chinese companies confront growing risks in investing overseas due to fluctuatio­ns on internatio­nal financial markets, economic uncertaint­ies in other countries and restrictio­ns by some developed nations on investment from China, particular­ly from State-owned enterprise­s.

He Jingtong said: “China is in urgent need of regulation­s that can lead the investment trend, and the country needs a reform of the investment system, to create better conditions and a safe legal environmen­t for Chinese companies to invest abroad.”

Liang Guoyong, an economic affairs official at the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t, said: “With China’s cumulative ODI soaring to $1 trillion in 2015, China is now a net capital exporter and the second-largest country in conducting ODI activities. With the implementa­tion of the Belt and Road Initiative, an adequate and prompt regulation is fairly necessary.”

Contact the writers through zhongnan@ chinadaily.com.cn

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