Global Times

Tighter regulation­s curb M&As

Increased caution in US, EU also a factor: experts

- By Shen Weiduo

The drop in outbound mergers and acquisitio­ns (M&As) by Chinese firms in 2017 was due partly to tightened regulation­s in China but also to an unfriendly attitude from overseas toward Chinese investors, and Chinese firms are likely to become more rational in 2018, experts told the Global Times on Sunday.

Outbound M&A transactio­ns by Chinese companies decreased in terms of total value by 35 percent yearon-year to $141.92 billion in 2017, domestic news website 21jingji.com reported on Saturday, citing the latest data compiled by Reuters.

“The overall decrease in outbound M&A deals was mainly due to tightened foreign exchange controls in China, in addition to restrictio­ns in certain industries such as real estate, the sports industry, and media and entertainm­ent,” Li Junjie, deputy director of the Internatio­nal M&A Research Institute of the Renmin University of China and a law partner with Beijing Zhonglun Law Firm, told the Global Times on Sunday.

The result was that China’s overseas M&A investment value in the media and entertainm­ent industry slumped from $20.41 billion in 2016 to $3.41 billion in 2017.

The data also indicated a change of destinatio­n for overseas M&A deals, with transactio­ns in the US and Europe falling, while deals in the AsiaPacifi­c region increased, especially in countries along the route of the Belt and Road (B&R) initiative.

“The increasing­ly cautious attitude among firms in the US and European countries toward M&A activities by Chinese companies is an important reason for the decreasing deals in those regions,” said Dong Dengxin, director of the Finance and Securities Institute at Wuhan University of Science and Technology.

Dong also said China has been tightening its policy on overseas activities by domestic firms, especially with regard to illegal capital flows into the US and Europe, while preferenti­al government policies in countries along the route of the B&R have driven up M&A activities there.

At the end of 2017, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission announced a policy aimed at curbing risks from overseas M&A activities by Chinese firms. The policy will become effective from March 1 in 2018.

In recent years, some Chinese companies conducted M&A activities overseas for the purpose of illegally transferri­ng assets overseas or for money laundering, Dong noted.

“It is hard to predict the future, but what I can say is that the abnormal increase of domestic companies’ M&A activities in foreign countries has come to an end. Firms will be more reasonable when considerin­g overseas deals in 2018, under the guidance of the government’s policy,” Dong said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China