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Foreign investment data distorted, say analysts

China sees strong FDI but ‘its from’ Hong Kong

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“The increase of FDI over the past few years includes a rising presence of Chinese entities based in offshore funding centres.” Raymond Yeung

SHANGHAI: China’s government data shows foreign investment into the economy grew by almost a fifth this year, a feat highlighte­d by officials as evidence global companies are resisting calls from the United States and European politician­s to decouple from the country.

A look below the headline figure of 17.3% expansion in the first seven months of the year shows a less flattering picture.

Much of the investment into China actually comes from Hong Kong and is likely because mainland companies based there are routing funds through the city in a circular journey that’s called “round-tripping.”

The data also shows that three-quarters of the new investment into China has gone into services industries, rather than the crucial manufactur­ing sector, which the government is promoting to transition the economy towards higher-value production.

The figures help to explain why inbound investment has continued to set new records each year despite an increasing number of foreign firms considerin­g curtailing their presence in China as the economy struggles and tensions with other nations rise.

US companies surveyed by the Us-china Business Council recently said they planned to slow new investment next year, largely because of China’s strict virus controls.

“The era of strong foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows seen in the 1990s and the early 2000s is gone,” Raymond Yeung, chief economist for Greater China, Australia and New Zealand Banking Group, wrote in a recent note.

“The increase of FDI over the past few years includes a rising presence of Chinese entities based in offshore funding centres, making the expression ‘foreign’ investment somewhat of a misnomer.”

To be sure, some foreign companies are still putting new money into China, although the size and speed of that expansion is not as big as some of Beijing’s officials suggest.

Hong Kong was the source of a record 76% of all “actually utilised” FDI last year, according to a Bloomberg analysis of government data, and if that ratio holds for this year then 607 billion yuan (Rm395bil) of the 798 billion yuan (Rm517bil) of investment so far this year is from Hong Kong.

Researcher­s at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and Nankai University estimate that almost 37% of China’s inbound FDI is “round-tripped.”

Flora Zhu, director for corporate ratings at Fitch Ratings in Beijing, said Chinese hightech service firms have a relatively high share of round-tripped investment since many are listed offshore.

“Most of their funds raised offshore are repatriate­d to China and counted as FDI,” with some of that circular movement to take advantage of preferenti­al treatment for foreign funding, she said.

There is no detailed breakdown available yet for the origin of investment flows this year, but in 2021 new investment from everywhere but Hong Kong grew 8% to Us$42bil (Rm189bil), after dropping in 2019 and 2020.

Inflows from Taiwan, Canada, Australia and the Cayman Islands shrank last year.

A similar pattern can be seen in completed cross-border mergers and acquisitio­ns. So far this year, there has been almost Us$24bil (Rm108bil) in completed deals from Hong Kong, 35% of the total amount of deals into the mainland.

The vast majority of the deals from Hong Kong were by mainland companies listed in the city.

For instance, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent Holdings Ltd were part of a consortium that invested Us$5.2bil (Rm23bil) in Ruili Integrated Circuit Co, the biggest inbound deal so far this year.

The plateauing of growth in new funds in recent years and the caution expressed by foreign companies about boosting investment into China due to the zero-covid lockdowns and geopolitic­al tensions may be raising concern at senior local levels.

Vice-premier Hu Chunhua recently called for the government to work harder to both shore up existing foreign investment and attract new money.

Where the money is going is also of concern.

Services industries have received the vast majority of inflows, rather than the manufactur­ing and high-tech sectors that are the focus of government efforts to boost investment.

However, while new foreign funds for manufactur­ing were well down from the peak in 2011, that dynamic may have started to shift last year and into this year, according to Fitch’s Zhu.

FDI into manufactur­ing has grown faster than total FDI since February 2022, she said. She pointed to a 50% jump in manufactur­ing investment into the industrial powerhouse Jiangsu province in the first six months of this year and a rise in money going to Sichuan, which is a centre for electric vehicles.

However, other provinces haven’t been so fortunate this year, with investment into Shanghai only starting to recover in June after the two-month lockdown was lifted, and flows to Guangdong in the first seven months still below the same time last year. — Bloomberg

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