China Daily

Input in new infrastruc­ture gains traction

Nation’s big data industry attracted $560m of investment in first quarter

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s new infrastruc­ture rollout is attracting a growing number of private investors from both home and abroad, which industry experts believe will further help local startups to resolve key technical problems.

“With the new infrastruc­ture initiative, the country already saw a large number of venture capital and private equity firms invest in new infrastruc­ture and its downstream areas,” said Wu Yaping, a researcher at the Investment Research Institute of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

In the first quarter of this year, $560 million of investment flowed into the country’s big data industry, an important part of new infrastruc­ture. The overall deals in the sector increased 11 percent yearon-year, according to CVSource, a database from investment consulting firm ChinaVentu­re.

“Different from traditiona­l infrastruc­ture investment, new infrastruc­ture projects are more attractive for private capital, including venture capital and private equity firms, to engage in. New infrastruc­ture projects focus on emerging and high-tech sectors and evolve quickly in technologi­es, which is similar to the investment logic of private capital,” Wu said.

To gear up new growth engines, China has called for new infrastruc­ture constructi­on including 5G, artificial intelligen­ce and the industrial internet. Such efforts are in line with the nation’s drive to ensure stability in domestic and foreign investment.

“New infrastruc­ture comes with huge opportunit­ies,” said Kaifu Lee, a prominent AI expert and chairman and CEO of venture capital firm Sinovation Ventures. “During the process, AI, together with other core areas of new infrastruc­ture, such as big data and the industrial internet, will integrate much more closely with each other. This will take the digitaliza­tion of the nation’s traditiona­l industries to a new level.”

Zhang Yuepeng, managing partner in China of leading Japanese investment firm Softbank, said at a recent conference, “The rollout of new infrastruc­ture brings a very good investment environmen­t.”

In the first four months of this year, venture capital and private equity firms made 642 investment deals in the informatio­n and technology sector, worth a total of 56.2 billion yuan ($7.9 billion). Total investment in new infrastruc­ture in China is expected to reach 3 trillion yuan by the end of the year, Haitong Securities estimated.

Industry insiders pointed out that the active engagement of venture capital and private equity firms in new infrastruc­ture also makes it easier for Chinese startups, especially technology-driven firms, to get funds and develop independen­t technologi­es.

Deltaphone Informatio­n, a developer and provider of industrial internet solutions, raised $11.3 million in a financing round last month. The startup mainly leverages independen­t technology to offer advanced industrial internet platforms to traditiona­l industry leaders including State Grid Corp of China and China National Petroleum Corp.

Wang Qingjie, Deltaphone CEO, said that the fresh round of fundraisin­g will be used for the research and developmen­t of the core technology of its industrial internet products.

Fang Yimin, a partner at Sinovation Ventures, said that the developmen­t of new infrastruc­ture will attract more private capital to tech startups.

“Such capital will play a critical role in helping these companies survive the research and developmen­t cycle and move toward the fast track of scale developmen­t.”

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