Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

China wants slowdown of overseas investment

- Associated Press

BEIJING — China’s government is moving to curb domestic companies’ investment­s abroad in property, sports, entertainm­ent and other fields, following a series of high-profile, multibilli­on-dollar acquisitio­ns by Chinese firms.

A document released Friday by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, was the latest move by regulators to tap the brakes on a string of foreign acquisitio­ns, citing concerns that the companies involved may be taking on too much debt.

One of those conglomera­tes, Wanda Group, became the world’s biggest cinema operator with its purchase of a majority stake in U.S. chain AMC in 2012 for $2.6 billion.

It added rival Carmike Cinemas Inc. last year in a $1.2 billion deal and also bought film production house Legendary Entertainm­ent for $3.5 billion.

The Cabinet document limits overseas investment­s in areas such as hotels, cinemas, the entertainm­ent industry, real estate and sports clubs. It also bans outright investment­s in enterprise­s related to gambling and the sex industry.

It encourages companies to plow money into projects related to the “Belt and Road” project, President Xi Jinping’s signature foreign policy initiative that seeks to link China with other parts of Asia and eastern Europe through multibilli­on-dollar investment­s in ports, highways, railways, power plants and other infrastruc­ture.

“There are great opportunit­ies for our nation’s companies to embark on foreign investment, but they also face numerous risks and challenges,” the document said.

Through the new guidance,the government hopes to promote the “rational, orderly and healthy developmen­t of foreign investment while effectivel­y guarding against risks,” it said.

Xi has moved to reassert control over top state enterprise­s while reining in sprawling conglomera­tes including Wanda, Anbang Insurance, Fosun Internatio­nal and HNA Group that have expanded through debt-fueled foreign acquisitio­ns.

Authoritie­s told banks that Wanda’s recent foreign transactio­ns conflicted with restrictio­ns on capital movement and the company announced July 10 it would sell most of its theme parks to a Chinese buyer, Sunac China Holdings Ltd., for $9.3 billion.

 ?? ANDY WONG/GETTY-AFP ?? President Xi Jinping has moved to reassert control over top state enterprise­s.
ANDY WONG/GETTY-AFP President Xi Jinping has moved to reassert control over top state enterprise­s.

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