The Borneo Post

Cheap eurozone takeaway fuels Chinese appetite

-

BEIJING: The inexorable decline of the single currency offers ambitious Chinese firms a bargain buffet of eurozone business, analysts say, with this weekend’s multibilli­on deal for Italian tyremaker Pirelli only the latest course in an acquisitio­n binge.

Less than a year ago the euro was worth nearly US$1.40 on internatio­nal markets.

Earlier this month it stood at less than US$1.05, down by a quarter as the European Central Bank embarks on a massive stimulus programme while the US Federal Reserve is widely expected to start raising interest rates.

By the standards of first-world forex markets it ranks as a collapse. It has recorded a similar performanc­e against China’s yuan currency, falling from almost 8.7 yuan in May to bottom at less than 6.6 yuan. The yuan trades in a tight range against the dollar.

As the unit weakens it makes eurozone acquisitio­ns cheaper for outside buyers and its biggest headline impact may come in terms of Chinese overseas investment, which surged past US$100 billion for the first time last year.

“For Chinese going into Europe it can’t get better than this,” said Joerg Wuttke, president of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China (EUCCC).

“Chinese companies are eager to go outside China as its own domestic economy is slowing down,” he told AFP, adding that profit mar-

For Chinese going into Europe it can’t get better than this.

Joerg Wuttke, EUCCC president

gins in the rest of the world are higher than in China, according to EUCCC member surveys.

“So I can only expect a major push from Chinese companies to buy into the European company landscape.”

The latest deal came with stateowned chemical giant ChemChina agreeing to buy out the largest shareholde­r in Pirelli, valuing the purveyor of Formula One accessorie­s and racy calendars at just over seven billion euros – now about 48 billion yuan, or 13 billion yuan less than in May.

The euro has flirted with parity against the dollar in recent weeks – for the first time since 2002 – and while the euro rose to US$1.0964 on Tuesday it remained within striking distance of more-than-dozenyear lows.

China’s overseas direct investment pushed sharply higher in February, the commerce ministry said, driven by oil giant China National Petroleum Corp putting nearly US$3 billion into a Dutch transactio­n.

“The continued slumps in the euro’s value against the dollar have led the price of eurozone assets to fall, creating an opportunit­y for Chinese companies to invest and carry out mergers and acquisitio­ns there,” said commerce ministry spokesman Shen Danyang.

Beijing has accrued the world’s biggest foreign exchange reserves and has been running record monthly trade surpluses, with the state-run China Daily newspaper saying in an editorial the country “is itching to invest overseas”.

Private companies are also taking a seat at the table, with billionair­e Wang Jianlin buying 20 per cent of Spanish league champions Atletico Madrid in January, the first mainland Chinese investment in a top European football club.

Conglomera­te Fosun declared victory in February in its long takeover battle for French holiday resorts group Club Med, having repeatedly raised its offer to 939 million euros.

Klaus E. Meyer, a professor at the China Europe Internatio­nal Business School in Shanghai, said Chinese investing abroad generally take a long-term view and are driven by acquiring technology or brands they can exploit domestical­ly. — AFP

 ??  ?? The inexorable decline of the euro offers ambitious Chinese firms a bargain buffet of eurozone business, analysts say, with this weekend’s multibilli­on deal for Italian tyremaker Pirelli only the latest course in an acquisitio­n binge. — Reuters photo
The inexorable decline of the euro offers ambitious Chinese firms a bargain buffet of eurozone business, analysts say, with this weekend’s multibilli­on deal for Italian tyremaker Pirelli only the latest course in an acquisitio­n binge. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia