Houston Chronicle Sunday

Texas makes a pitch to China

- By Lydia DePillis

CHUCKRusse­ll hasn’t done too badly attracting investment for his firm, Orbital Traction, which makes a device that makes diesel engines more efficient. But he hasn’t done as well as he’d like at his factory on the Sam Houston Tollway, finding it tough to convince U.S. venture capitalist­s to look for promising companies beyond their hubs in San Francisco, Boston and New York.

That’s why Russell, Orbital’s chief operating officer, found himself pitching his firm last week to hundreds of Chinese businesspe­ople and government officials in Houston, looking for an infusion of cash to help his company commercial­ize its technology for larger trucking fleets. Russell said his company, which employs seven, could hire more engineers and machinists to ramp up production and tap into vast transporta­tion markets in China and the United States — if he could raise another

$20 million.

“They’re so focused on biotech, the digital revolution and health care,” Russell said of U.S. venture firms. “Broadening the net to China seems like the right thing to be doing.”

Russell was among the 200 entreprene­urs trying to connect with Chinese investors at the inaugural U.S.-China Innovation and Investment Summit, a conference organized by local investors, economic developmen­t groups and public agencies with the goal of increasing the flow of funding to local technology firms. Of the $13.7 billion in venture capital invested in U.S. firms in the first quarter of 2016, only $592 million went to Texas companies, according to Thomson Reuters.

China is viewed as a potentiall­y rich source of venture capital after a decadelong boom that created billions of dollars in wealth, and a recent economic slowdown that is roiling the Chinese markets and driving Chinese investors to seek safer havens for their money. China, for example, became the largest foreign buyer of U.S. real estate in 2015, with its investors holding $350 billion in properties, according to a recent report by the nonprofit Asia Society and Rosen Consulting Group, a California firm.

“A lot of the wealth that has been developed there is looking for opportunit­ies for investment,” says Bernard Harris, CEO of Vesalius Ventures, a Houstonbas­ed investment firm that focuses on early to midstage medical technology companies. “What we’re trying to do is let investors know that there is a number of tech companies right here in the Gulf area that they need to be looking at.”

Faster pace

Chinese companies, state-owned entities and wealthy individual­s began investing in Texas about a decade ago. But the pace of investment has accelerate­d in recent years, and the focus of those investment­s has shifted. Between 2010 and 2015, Chinese investors poured nearly $12 billion into Texas enterprise­s, including projects such as the $1.1 billion Tianjin Pipe Co. manufactur­ing facility in Gregory, according to a 2015 report from the office of Gov. Greg Abbott.

At the same time, Chinese investors have moved beyond their focus on real estate and establishe­d firms to consider emerging companies in a variety of innovation sectors. Last week, for example, the Chinese wind turbine maker Goldwind bought the 160-megawatt Rattlesnak­e Wind Project, a wind farm about 125 miles northwest of Austin that is still under developmen­t. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

“In the past, Chinese companies preferred more tangible companies, like hotels,” says James Chen, the state’s internatio­nal business developmen­t director. “But as more and more Chinese students studied here and went back to China, investors learned that the more important business opportunit­ies lie in other sectors, like high tech.”

Houston visit

During the Houston summit, Chinese visitors were shuttled to technology incubators like the Houston Technology Center, home to several dozen young tech firms, and TMCx, the Texas Medical Center’s home for medical startups. Conference coordinato­rs also facilitate­d dozens of meetings between early stage companies and potentiall­y interested investors

Katrina Alvarado is the co-founder of a Houston-based startup called Trucker District, which makes communicat­ions systems for trucking companies. She and her husband have bootstrapp­ed the company so far but are seeking outside investors to help them get off the ground. After pitching the concept, she didn’t lock down any funding commitment­s.

But she figured the stack of business cards she gathered might bear fruit down the road.

“We are hopeful that the discussion­s moving forward will be really good,” Alvarado said.

At the summit, Chinese businessme­n and officials said they were drawn to Texas by its burgeoning population, strong technology and manufactur­ing sectors and unqualifie­d openness to investment. Texas ranks fourth among states in the number of deals involving tech startups that were funded by Chinese investors in recent years.

Of the 380 reported since 2010, 281 were in California, and 11 in Texas, according to the New York City-based research firm, CBInsights. New York had 31 and Massachuse­tts 15.

“We’re looking into fast-growing and profitable opportunit­ies,” said Zhijun Yang, who as former managing director of Shuanghui Internatio­nal led the multibilli­on-dollar acquisitio­n of the pork producer Smithfield Foods. He is now chairman of the Greenland Fund, a private investment fund.

In the short term, Chinese funding deals might get more difficult. Although Chinese Communist Party officials attended the summit and expressed hope it would lead to increased collaborat­ion and investment, Thilo Hanemann, economist at a New York research firm Rhodium Group, said he has heard that the Chinese government is getting nervous about the amount of capital flowing out of the country.

“We’re seeing a bit of a schizophre­nic attitude in recent months,” Hanemann says. “They support outbound investment­s, but there’s a more cautious stance.”

In a more restrictiv­e environmen­t for Chinese investors, it may be easier for American startups to partner with Chinese businesses by starting some operations in China, so money doesn’t have to cross borders. Down the line, if capital becomes more mobile, Texas could be positionin­g itself to capture that investment.

“Our understand­ing of Houston is lacking compared to the East and West coast,” said Li Qiangmin, consul-general of the People’s Republic of China in Houston. “But this is important land. Texas citizens have really opened their arms.” lydia.depillis@chron.com twitter.com/@lydiadepil­lis

 ?? Marie D. De Jesus photos / Houston Chronicle ?? Orbital Traction test engineer Joe Bivona installs a fan drive, above and below. The company makes a device that makes diesel engines more efficient. Conference seeks more funding for local technology companies
Marie D. De Jesus photos / Houston Chronicle Orbital Traction test engineer Joe Bivona installs a fan drive, above and below. The company makes a device that makes diesel engines more efficient. Conference seeks more funding for local technology companies
 ??  ??
 ?? Marie D. De Jesus / Houston Chronicle ?? Joe Bivona works at Orbital Traction, a Houston company that has sought investment­s from Chinese businesspe­ople and government officials.
Marie D. De Jesus / Houston Chronicle Joe Bivona works at Orbital Traction, a Houston company that has sought investment­s from Chinese businesspe­ople and government officials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States