China Daily

SDIC in vanguard of reform

Firm promotes new industries and spins off traditiona­l assets

- By LI XIANG and ZHUANG QIANGE Contact the writers at lixiang@chinadaily.com.cn

State Developmen­t & Investment Corp, China’s largest State-owned investment holding company, said it will boost investment in innovative and emerging industries and overseas business to better serve the country’s economic transforma­tion and the Belt and Road Initiative.

SDIC, a leader in China’s effort to reform State-owned enterprise­s, is seeking to optimize its business structure by increasing exposure to new industries such as alternativ­e energy and highend manufactur­ing while divesting itself of nonperform­ing assets in traditiona­l industries with excess capacity, said Wang Huisheng, chairman of SDIC.

The company aims to increase the portion of its assets in strategic and emerging industries to 30 percent by 2020, from the current 20 percent. Last year, it spun off assets worth about 55 billion yuan in the shipping and coal industries, according to Wang.

That move reflected the ambitious reform to increase the competitiv­eness of the State-owned giants as China works to replace old growth drivers with new ones, with emphasis on innovation, technology and efficiency.

“As an SOE, our task is to carry out reform based on market principles and to support the national economic policies and industries that are strategica­lly important and matter to people’s lives,” Wang said.

The company will increase investment in projects such as seawater desalinati­on, biofuels, elderly care, quality control and management systems as well as energy efficiency and environmen­tal protection, the chairman said.

To support the country’s Made in China 2025 strategy, the company launched a 20 billion yuan ($3.09 billion) fund in collaborat­ion with key ministries to invest in the high-end manufactur­ing sector.

In addition, Wang said expanding overseas investment and operation is another focus of SDIC as it is looking to tap into opportunit­ies from the Belt and Road Initiative. The company already invested in a cement project in Indonesia and manufactur­ing facilities for automobile gas tanks in countries including India, Russia and the Czech Republic.

The company’s overseas assets stood at 31.8 billion yuan by the end of last year, accounting for 7 percent of its total assets, which points toward further growth potential of its internatio­nal business.

SDIC reported profit of 11.3 billion yuan for the first half of the year, up by 41 percent year-on-year.

“Along with good performanc­es of our business in the emerging industries and the financial service sector, we managed to get rid of some zombie enterprise­s to reduce our losses,” Wang said.

The company was ranked 174th with 87 billion yuan in revenue last year in the latest Top 500 Chinese Enterprise­s list, unveiled on Sunday by China Enterprise Confederat­ion and China Enterprise Directors Associatio­n.

Nine of the top 10 companies are SOEs with the State Grid grabbing the top spot with 2.09 trillion yuan in revenue. Oil giants Sinopec Group and China National Petroleum Corp were ranked second and third.

China’s top 500 enterprise­s reported total revenues of 64 trillion yuan in 2016, up by 7.64 percent year-on-year, reversing the declining trend in the previous two years, the list showed.

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