China Daily

Foreign investors cluster in Shanghai

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Twelve major foreign-funded projects will soon get underway in Shanghai, as the city maintains its position as a hotbed of foreign investment.

Data center solution provider GDS, SAIC General Motors, and German commercial vehicle supplier SAF-Holland are among a list of companies pledging a total investment of 23.4 billion yuan ($3.37 billion) in Shanghai, the municipal government announced at a contract signing ceremony on Saturday.

The largest proposed investment comes from Nio, an electric vehicle startup that promises a fresh injection of 16.6 billion yuan in the research and developmen­t of electric, smart, internet-connected and lightweigh­t cars.

French sporting goods retailer Decathlon is scheduled to set up a sports equipment headquarte­rs in Shanghai with an estimated investment of 1 billion yuan, and Japanese pharmaceut­ical company Takeda plans to add 809 million yuan to its Shanghai operation and is on course to introduce seven new medicines to the Chinese market over the next five years.

“The waves of investment show that Shanghai has become a critical hub for multinatio­nal corporatio­ns and an engine of growth. Their longterm optimism about investing in Shanghai remains unchanged,” said Shang Yuying, director of the Shanghai Commerce Commission.

Also on Saturday, Swiss industrial conglomera­te ABB Group said it will invest $150 million to build its “largest and most advanced” factory in Shanghai.

Production is expected to begin by the end of 2020 and annual capacity will be around 100,000 robots, one-quarter of ABB’s global demand last year, said visiting CEO Ulrich Spiesshofe­r, who identified Shanghai as a “vital center for advanced technology leadership — for ABB and the world”.

The new 60,000-square-meter plant will feature cuttingedg­e technologi­es such as machine learning, enabling it to manufactur­e a wide range of industrial robots.

The company also signed a comprehens­ive strategic cooperatio­n agreement with the municipal government on supporting industry, energy, transport and infrastruc­ture in the region, in relation to the “Made in Shanghai” manufactur­ing initiative proposed by local authoritie­s last year.

In the first nine months of 2018, the city attracted 3,704 new foreign-funded projects, up 17.8 percent year-on-year, according to the municipal government. During the same period, contracted foreign funds, an indicator of future commitment­s of capital, grew 20.4 percent to $33.62 billion.

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