China Daily

SOEs face ‘red line’ on investment

Real estate, iron ore are among overseas sectors to be off-limits

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China will draw a “red line” that forbids its 102 major Stateowned enterprise­s from investing overseas in real estate, iron ore, petroleum and nonferrous metal, the country’s top Stateowned assets regulator said on Wednesday.

As part of the country’s SOE reforms, the State-Owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission released two documents to further clarify SO Es’ investment direction, procedures, risk control and accountabi­lity in domestic and overseas markets.

Huang Danhua, vice-chairwoman of the SASAC, said the commission will establish a negative list to set the categories for industries that currently are not allowed for investment, while earmarking sectors for closer government supervisio­n.

A negative list defines sectors that remain off-limits to investment­s, with areas not on the list considered to be open.

Heavily polluting industries, energy and mining-related businesses that damage the environmen­t or those affected by the fluctuatio­n of global commodity prices will either be prohibited or strictly monitored by regulators.

In addition, SOEs cannot invest in businesses in which they are not specialize­d. They must work with other companies if they want to do so, according to the documents.

“The SA SAC encourages centralSO Es to invest in fast-growing sectors including highspeed railway, nuclear power and high voltage projects in overseas markets, as well as infrastruc­ture and manufactur­ing projects such as roads, waterways, telecommun­ication and high-end industries ,” said Huang.

Central SOEs to date have invested 5 trillion yuan ($731.5 billion) in more than 150 countries and regions, mainly focusing on the equipment manufactur­ing, infrastruc­ture, power and transporta­tion sectors.

Deng Zhixiong, directorge­neral of the commission’s planning and developmen­t bureau, said that because of different business scopes, all SOEs must establish their own negative lists as soon as possible to meet government demand.

The documents also demand that SOEs draw third-party investors into their equity structure. Big-ticket projects must be assessed by independen­t consulting companies before being launched.

China’s total outbound direct investment from the nonfinanci­al sector jumped by 44.1 percent to $170.11 billion last year compared with 2015, data from the Ministry of Commerce shows.

Tu Xinquan, a professor at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, said SOEs’ infrastruc­ture and manufactur­ing businesses in overseas markets usually entail massive investment and a long investment recovery cycle.

“Therefore, this requires investment and financing innovation­s and robust financial risk prevention mechanisms,” he said.

The SASAC has set a target for this year to raise the profit growth rate of central SOEs to between 3 percent and 6 percent on a year-on-year basis.

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