New Straits Times

Fosun welcomes tighter regulation­s, says CEO

-

HONG KONG: Fosun Internatio­nal, one of China’s most acquisitiv­e conglomera­tes, brushed off the impact of a crackdown on overseas dealmaking, telling reporters yesterday it welcomed Beijing’s guidelines, as it posted a jump in first-half profits.

After several years of splashy deals overseas, China has tightened the screws on acquisitio­ns abroad and has leaned on banks to cut back on the lending that first fuelled the spree.

In June this year, the regulators ordered a group of lenders to assess exposure to some of China’s more aggressive dealmakers, including HNA, Dalian Wanda and Anbang Insurance Group.

Fosun, best known outside China for its acquisitio­n of French resort chain Club Med and Britain’s Thomas Cook Group, dismissed concerns it was being investigat­ed, telling reporters it was “normal practice” for Chinese regulators to conduct regular checks on Chinese companies’ overseas investment­s.

“We haven’t sensed or have been informed that we are being investigat­ed,” said chief executive Wang Qunbin, adding that tougher rules were “good news” for Fosun: “Fosun always insists on genuine investment­s which are in line with regulation­s.”

Fosun on Wednesday reported that growth in its core businesses — including Fosun Pharma, Club Med and Yuyuan — had helped net profit for the six months climb 33.6 per cent to 5.86 billion yuan (RM3.79 billion), up from 4.39 billion yuan a year earlier. Revenue increased 11.6 per cent to 36.3 billion yuan.

The group also said it would spin off and separately list its Sisram Medical unit in Hong Kong.

That sent its shares up 8.7 per cent to hit the stock’s highest levels since December 2015.

Fosun has been the poster child for China’s decade-long outbound push, which saw Chinese bidders spend a record US$105 billion (RM448 billion) on assets ranging from movie studios to football clubs last year.

In March, Fosun’s chief executive and vice-president stepped down in a surprise reshuffle that raised concerns over the group’s strategy. Bloomberg

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia