China Daily (Hong Kong)

Overseas investment strong despite tensions

China’s global appeal outshines Sino-US trade friction gloom

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With the talent base in Beijing, we plan to conduct further cooperatio­n with the municipal government, research institutes, colleges and universiti­es.”

BEIJING — Concerns of supply chain disruption­s following the eruption of SinoUS trade frictions will not slow foreign firms’ steps to invest in China, where broader market access and a stable policy environmen­t are now much more highly valued than ever.

United States new energy vehicle giant Tesla said earlier this month that it will open its first overseas factory in Shanghai, following the establishm­ent of a technology innovation center in Beijing last year.

China is the world’s biggest new energy vehicle market as well as Tesla’s biggest market outside the US.

“With the talent base in Beijing, we plan to conduct further cooperatio­n with the municipal government, research institutes, colleges and universiti­es,” said Ren Yuxiang, vice-president and head of Tesla Asia-Pacific.

French drugmaker Sanofi decided in early July to spend 500 million yuan ($73 million) to launch a research and developmen­t, and innovation center in Southwest China’s Chengdu, Sichuan province, with a focus on digitaliza­tion and big data analysis, aiming to link the country’s innovative achievemen­ts with the global ecosystem.

In the short term, the ongoing trade frictions might dampen the willingnes­s of some cost-sensitive foreign firms targeting the US market to invest in China, as the additional tariffs set by the US will increase their costs and heighten economic uncertaint­ies, said Yang Changyong, an associate researcher from the Investment Research Institute of the Academy of Macroecono­mic Research.

However, China still has longterm appeal as it continues to open up its huge market to foreign

Ren Yuxiang, vice-president and head of Tesla Asia-Pacific

The huge market and emerging opportunit­ies will attract more foreign capital, and that in turn, will further stimulate the country’s industrial upgrading.”

Sang Baichuan, professor at the Beijing-based University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics

investors and moves up the global industrial value chain from a manufactur­ing powerhouse to a strong R&D and consumptio­n player, Yang said.

As multinatio­nals bothered by tariff barriers are seeking to rejig their supply chains, analysts say a reliable policy environmen­t, huge market demand, and broader market access are consolidat­ing China’s strength in the global competitio­n for foreign investment.

After establishi­ng a factory in China, Tesla, for example, could better explore the Chinese market and maintain its global competitiv­e edge by benefiting from local preferenti­al industrial and tax policies, and boosting production at lower costs, according to analysis from Sinolink Securities.

While China’s trade growth is expected to moderate due to trade frictions, foreign direct investment in the country remains resilient.

In the first half of the year, nearly 30,000 foreign-invested enterprise­s were establishe­d in China, up 96.6 percent year-on-year. The actual use of foreign capital grew 1.1 percent year-on-year, reaching 446 billion yuan. US investment in China grew 29.1 percent during this period, according to statistics from the Ministry of Commerce.

Yang said that although labor costs are rising in China, the new advantages of high-quality human resources — for example, well-trained college graduates — will be favorable in attracting high-end industries.

The steady growth of foreign investment is likely to continue as China is opening itself wider to the world.

Last month, China revised its negative lists for foreign investment, further widening market access in finance, transporta­tion, profession­al services, infrastruc­ture, energy, resources and agricultur­e.

The nationwide negative list has been cut to 48 items from the 63 in the previous version, while the list for pilot free trade zones decreased to 45 items from 95. Both lists will come into effect at the end of July.

China’s easing of investment restrictio­ns in the financial sector has already lured many foreign firms, including Bridgewate­r Associates and BlackRock, to tap into the country’s growing financial services market. BlackRock has registered its first onshore equity fund in China.

David McCormick, co-CEO of hedge fund Bridgewate­r Associates, called China “a globally impactful economy” and Chinese assets “a valuable source of diversific­ation”.

China is expected to import goods worth $8 trillion from 2017 to 2021, while attracting $600 billion of foreign investment. “China is upgrading its industry and consumptio­n structure,” said Sang Baichuan, a professor at the Beijingbas­ed University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics. “The huge market and emerging opportunit­ies will attract more foreign capital, and that in turn, will further stimulate the country’s industrial upgrading.”

 ?? SONG RONGCHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee puts the finishing touches on a Renault vehicle at a Dongfeng-Renault joint venture assembly line in Wuhan, capital of Central China’s Hubei province.
SONG RONGCHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee puts the finishing touches on a Renault vehicle at a Dongfeng-Renault joint venture assembly line in Wuhan, capital of Central China’s Hubei province.

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