China Daily

Osram deal to get green light soon

Countries related to sale already OK’d transactio­n

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China will give the green light soon to a Chinese consortium’s acquisitio­n of an LED lighting unit of Osram Licht AG, after the German company gained approval from the anti-monopoly authoritie­s in all other related countries, experts said on Monday.

The comments came after the Committee of Foreign Investment in the United States, a multiagenc­y panel chaired by the Treasury Department, approved the 400-million-euro ($425.6 million) purchase of the German group’s LED lighting unit, also known as LEDVANCE, by Chinese buyers last week.

Because LEDVANCE has assets and manufactur­ing facilities in a number of countries, the deal has been approved by anti-monopoly authoritie­s in the US, Macedonia, Mexico, Turkey, Germany, Poland and Russia.

Li Gang, vice-president of the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n in Beijing, said the robust growth of China’s outbound direct investment would not change because current economic developmen­t requires that domestic companies use resources in global markets.

The Munich-based manufactur­er of lighting products and semiconduc­tors said the deal is still awaiting approval from China’s State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange, the final government authority to approve the purchase.

“As China is upgrading its manufactur­ing ability to more advanced and internet-connected products, this deal certainly will be cleared by government branches soon to encourage domestic companies to invest in high-end, smart and green manufactur­ing abroad,” said He Jingtong, a professor of internatio­nal trade at Nankai University in Tianjin.

The Chinese consortium was formed by Sanan Optoelectr­onics Co Ltd, IDG Capital Partners and Yiwu State Owned Assets Operation Center. The consortium’s bid was cleared by Germany in January.

He said even through the mood for trade protection­ism has grown fast since the United Kingdom’s decision to leave the European Union, the German and the US government­s were aware that controllin­g risks and cooperatin­g with China would benefit all sides.

 ?? REUTERS ?? An employee checks halogen inserts for low energy consumptio­n light bulbs at an Osram factory in Molsheim, France.
REUTERS An employee checks halogen inserts for low energy consumptio­n light bulbs at an Osram factory in Molsheim, France.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong