Global Times

Warning against ‘ irrational overseas investment’

Regulators will continue to facilitate overseas investment: expert

- By Chu Daye

Experts said that China’s cross- border capital movement must be in accordance with its national strategy, after State broadcaste­r China Central Television ( CCTV) named retail giant Suning Commerce Group in a program discussing domestic companies making risky overseas acquisitio­ns, sending the company’s shares down nearly 6 percent on Wednesday.

The CCTV program, aired on Tuesday night, broadly discussed what government officials call “irrational” overseas investment by a number of domestic companies, following a stern statement by the nation’s top economic planning agency on Chinese overseas investment in real estate, hotels, cinemas, entertainm­ent and profession­al sports teams on the same day.

In the CCTV program, Chinese retail giant Suning’s acquisitio­n of a majority stake in Inter Milan in 2016 for 270 million euros ($ 311 million) was mentioned. Markets reacted by sending the shares of Suning’s listed arm Suning Commerce Group Co down by as much as 6 percent in morning trading on Wednesday.

Suning’s shares closed the day at the Shenzhen bourse at 10.63 yuan ($ 1.60) per share, down 2.74 percent.

“If the companies strike these deals with their own capital, whatever they do is absolutely justified,” Yin Zhongli, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, was quoted as saying in the CCTV report.

“The fact is that many of these com- panies have high liability ratios, and borrowed from banks and financial institutio­ns. If their investment proved to be a bad one, it will greatly increase levels of nonperform­ing loans for domestic banks. In this sense, it can be said that these firms gained a public relations harvest or made a fortune at the expense of increased domestic financial risks,” Yin said.

There can also be hidden intentions such as money laundering and moving assets overseas, Yin said.

Addressing the market’s concerns, Sun Weimin, vice president of Suning Corp, said in a statement e- mailed to the Global Times on Wednesday that the company absolutely supports the government’s industrial policy concerning overseas investment.

Sun said that the Inter Milan deal is aimed at learning from internatio­nal experience and improving the level of domestic soccer, and also borrows the brand influence of the team to expand Suning’s overseas retail channels and bring made- in- China products abroad.

Suning is not alone in purchases in the sectors mentioned by the NDRC official.

Chinese conglomera­te Dalian Wanda Group, which led an overseas buying spree including hotels and cinema chains, has reportedly faced loan suspension­s, according to a Reuters report on Monday.

No policy shift

Dong Dengxin, director of the Finance and Securities Institute at Wuhan University of Science and Technology, said China’s current management model of capital accounting means that companies like Suning have no other way but to “absolutely support the government’s industrial policy concerning overseas investment.”

“Amid the explosive growth in overseas investment in 2015 and 2016, some investment­s have nothing to do with improving China’s national strengths and its level of technologi­cal sophistica­tion. These deals are just a waste of precious national resources and foreign capital exchange reserves,” Dong told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Following an 18- percent annual increase in China’s outbound direct investment ( ODI) in 2015 and another year- on- year jump of 44.1 percent in 2016, China’s ODI in nonfinanci­al sectors fell 45.8 percent year- on- year to $ 48.19 billion in the first six months of this year, data released by the Ministry of Commerce showed on July 13, amid tightened control by regulators.

“The Chinese government will stay its course on encouragin­g domestic firms to participat­e in global competitio­n, mixing with the global industrial chain and value chain. Competent, qualified domestic companies conducting real, compliant overseas deals will be still supported. Its policy in simplifyin­g administra­tive procedures and improving its services in the supervisio­n of overseas investment will also remain unchanged,” said Yan Shiqiang, an associate research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n under the Ministry of Commerce.

“Cross- border capital movement must go hand in hand with China’s national strategy on developmen­t,” Dong said. “For instance, such a movement should support the Belt and Road initiative, which is a national strategy.”

“As the money is financed by domestic sources, profit- seeking should not be the ultimate goal in overseas deals,” Dong said.

“What we will see in the future is that the regulators will combine efforts on improving medium- and long- term mechanisms with short- term circumspec­t adjustment. They will continue to push facilitati­on of outbound investment but also guard against risks from global adventures,” Yan told the Global Times Wednesday.

Cross- border investment is also under utmost scrutiny in the US and Canada, and China should learn from the two countries to enhance its supervisio­n, as it relates to national security, Dong said.

“Regulators will continue to push facilitati­on of outbound investment but also guard against risks from global adventures.” Yan Shiqiang Associate research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? The scene of a press conference announcing that Suning bought a majority stake in Inter Milan in June 2016
Photo: IC The scene of a press conference announcing that Suning bought a majority stake in Inter Milan in June 2016

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