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China’s contracted FDI surges over 50% as investors confident
By Wang Yanlin | October 21, 2015, Wednesday

CONTRACTED foreign direct investment in China surged more than 50 percent in the first nine months of this year, indicating confidence among foreign investors even as the country’s economy slowed.

China’s contracted investments with top American companies were worth US$5.83 billion in the first three quarters. Several well-known firms including Ford Motor Co, Air Products and Chemicals Inc, Eli Lilly & Co, and Amazon have decided to raise their investment in China.

Meanwhile, contracted investments from South Korea jumped 66.5 percent in the January-September period and that from Germany surged 41.1 percent, Shen said, without giving more details.

The continued inflow of foreign investments into China has helped the country to retain the top ranking as the world’s most attractive spot for foreign investment made by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, Shen Danyang, a Ministry of Commerce spokesman, said yesterday.

A recent Financial Times report said that India attracted more foreign investments than China in the first half, but the source of the data was unclear. In response, Shen said the official data from the Indian government showed its foreign direct investment was US$19.4 billion in the first six months, compared with China’s US$68.4 billion.

China’s foreign direct investment, which has been put in place, added 9 percent from a year earlier to US$94.9 billion in the first nine months, with 18,980 new foreign-invested firms being established, according to the ministry data.

China’s eastern areas continued to lure a majority, which totaled US$80.5 billion, an increase of 10.1 percent from a year earlier. Foreign direct investment in central areas rose 0.3 percent, and in western areas added 2.2 percent.

In the first three quarters, foreign direct investment being channeled to the service sector jumped 19.2 percent to US$57.9 billion, leading the growth and taking up 61.1 percent of the total. Capital going into high-tech services rocketed 57.6 percent.

***
What does contracted FDI mean? How is it different from FDI? Or is it the same thing?
 
What does contracted FDI mean? How is it different from FDI? Or is it the same thing?


This is total of values of contracts signed (as reported to PBOC-SAFE, awaiting approval/execution), not executed values (as captured on ITRS by PBOC-SAFE) which normally has a time lag behind the contracts.

Treat this indicator as a future index for FDI.

Note:
SAFE = State Administration of Foreign Exchange
ITRS = International Transactions Reporting System
 
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Australia's Opposition approves terms of China-Australia FTA
Xinhua, October 21, 2015

Australia's Opposition on Wednesday agreed with the government on terms which would allow the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement (ChAFTA) to go ahead.

Following a meeting between Labor senator Penny Wong and the government's Trade Minister, Andrew Robb, Labor's caucus room approved the deal on Wednesday morning, which now includes a number of small changes to Australia's Migration Act.

Under Labor's requests, the government will require businesses to apply labor market testing to all new work agreements. Previously, the government indicated it would apply mandatory market testing to work worth in excess of 110 million U.S. dollars.

The Opposition has indicated that it gives Australian workers the first right to secure jobs before they are offered to overseas workers.

Also included in the agreement, workers coming into Australia who require the temporary work visa known as 457 will now be required to be licensed in Australia for the specific work they have been brought in for.

Lastly, Labor requested that wages paid to workers gaining entry Australia because of the trade deal would be regulated so that the undercutting Australian wages would not occur.

Labor had previously threatened to block the deal over its concerns that the agreement would negatively affect Australian jobs and worker's rights.
 
This shows that companies from various parts of the world are very optimistic in China's growing economy despite the so-called term "China's downfall" which is a term invented by self-proclaimed economists.
 
Huawei to invest $1bn in ICT; keen on graphene applications

(Credit: MoneyTimes) Huawei will explore developing graphene-based applications to be used in its durable mobile phones. Of late, Huawei is on expansion spree as it’s spreading its presence in Australia, India and the US markets.

huawei.jpg

October 20
3:19 AM 2015

Chinese mobile maker Huawei Technologies Co Ltd has decided to invest $1billion on information and communication technology (ICT) development over the next five years. Huawei will work closely with Britain in the development of technology applications in the telecommunications segment.

Huawei is keen on using graphene in the ICT sector. More details are likely to be announced during the visit of China's President Xi Jinping to Britain. The telecommunications equipment manufacturer from the world's second largest economy is investing millions of pounds in the research project.

The University of Manchester's National Graphene Institute will lead the research project. In addition, several partnerships are scheduled for signing up during President Jinping's five-day tour to the United Kingdom.

Ryan Ding, Executive Director and President (Products and solutions) of Huawei, said in a statement that the "aim is to help developers create innovative services and rapidly respond to customers' business needs." Of late, Huawei is on the expansion spree as it's spreading its presence in Australia, India and the United States markets.

The latest investment plan of China in ICT sector will also ease the pressure on the government as it's been facing criticism over ailing steel industry. Thousands of jobs have been cut in the UK steel industry and China has been impacted negatively. Industry observers expect this issue may also be resolved during President Jinping's visit.

Huawei is focusing on developing industrial applications using Graphene in a more commercial way. It's estimated that graphene is 200 times stronger than steel. Huawei sees good potential in using fuel cells, aeroplane wings, water purification technology and significantly durable mobile phones.

Huawei is fast emerging Chinese mobile maker and giving tough competition in the global market. Its investment plan will bring China and the UK closer in graphene research and development project.

The massive inflow of cheap steel from China is the one of the major factors that weakened the competitiveness of UK's steel industry. Coming to graphene, the University of Manchester has helped many independent companies exploiting it in a commercial way. Graphene is a single atom thick discovered by The University of Manchester.
 
I thought China was collapsing?

No?I must be too naive、dumb and stupid then。:lol::lol:

Some people are trying hard online, but, somehow, reality overpowers fiction.

Stupid ping-guo! Why not India?


Apple to invest, create more jobs in China: Tim Cook
October 22, 2015

e89a8f5fc4c21792977a02.jpg

Customers buy products at the new Apple store in a tower building of the China Central Place on Dawang Road in Beijing, capital of China, Jan. 10, 2014. Apple's fourth store in Beijing opened on Friday. [Xinhua]



Apple is set to continue to invest in China, "a superb place" where the U.S. high-tech giant is "as aggressive as ever," said Apple chief executive Tim Cook on Wednesday.

Cook recently joined the Paulson Institute's CEO Council of Sustainable Urbanization and is in Beijing for a meeting of the institute on Thursday.

"I know some people are worried about the economy. We'll continue to invest," Cook said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua.

"If you look at the long term, it is clear that China is such a great place to be," he said.

"China is a superb place to be. Nothing has changed that," he said.

Apple will open its 25th Apple Store in greater China this weekend, closing the gap on the eventual goal of 40 stores by mid-2016.

"When we reach this goal, we will not take our foot off the gas at all," he said.

Cook's visit coincides with China's first mass entrepreneurship and innovation week, which kicked off on Monday in eight cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.

Currently there are 1.5 million developers in China working on iOS-related projects.

"Many people in the country start their own business," said Cook, adding that many others are hiring, and beginning to deliver their products to millions, in some cases hundreds of millions, of people.

"They are the engine of the economy," he said.

On Wednesday afternoon, Cook met a Chinese developer who leads an 11-member team that is developing an application on traditional Chinese wood joints, which are used for furniture and architecture.

Downloads of the application have almost hit 1 million; It has wide appeal, from students to art and design practitioners.

Sun Yong, the developer, said his company, Tag Design, was profitable just three years after it was founded.

Sun is among thousands of Chinese developers who have earned more than 4 billion U.S. dollars selling their 230,000 apps globally, more than half of which paid out last year, according to Apple.

The number of paid iOS app developers increased by 56 percent last year. iOS-based project development has facilitated the creation of 1.4 million jobs, almost half of the 4.4 million jobs Apple has created in China.
 
Some people are trying hard online, but, somehow, reality overpowers fiction.

Stupid ping-guo! Why not India?


Apple to invest, create more jobs in China: Tim Cook
October 22, 2015

e89a8f5fc4c21792977a02.jpg

Customers buy products at the new Apple store in a tower building of the China Central Place on Dawang Road in Beijing, capital of China, Jan. 10, 2014. Apple's fourth store in Beijing opened on Friday. [Xinhua]



Apple is set to continue to invest in China, "a superb place" where the U.S. high-tech giant is "as aggressive as ever," said Apple chief executive Tim Cook on Wednesday.

Cook recently joined the Paulson Institute's CEO Council of Sustainable Urbanization and is in Beijing for a meeting of the institute on Thursday.

"I know some people are worried about the economy. We'll continue to invest," Cook said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua.

"If you look at the long term, it is clear that China is such a great place to be," he said.

"China is a superb place to be. Nothing has changed that," he said.

Apple will open its 25th Apple Store in greater China this weekend, closing the gap on the eventual goal of 40 stores by mid-2016.

"When we reach this goal, we will not take our foot off the gas at all," he said.

Cook's visit coincides with China's first mass entrepreneurship and innovation week, which kicked off on Monday in eight cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.

Currently there are 1.5 million developers in China working on iOS-related projects.

"Many people in the country start their own business," said Cook, adding that many others are hiring, and beginning to deliver their products to millions, in some cases hundreds of millions, of people.

"They are the engine of the economy," he said.

On Wednesday afternoon, Cook met a Chinese developer who leads an 11-member team that is developing an application on traditional Chinese wood joints, which are used for furniture and architecture.

Downloads of the application have almost hit 1 million; It has wide appeal, from students to art and design practitioners.

Sun Yong, the developer, said his company, Tag Design, was profitable just three years after it was founded.

Sun is among thousands of Chinese developers who have earned more than 4 billion U.S. dollars selling their 230,000 apps globally, more than half of which paid out last year, according to Apple.

The number of paid iOS app developers increased by 56 percent last year. iOS-based project development has facilitated the creation of 1.4 million jobs, almost half of the 4.4 million jobs Apple has created in China.

Maybe pinguo is simply too big and delicious a fruit for our Indian and Vietnamese friends to handle。:rofl:

Apple To Raise China Solar Investment Fivefold with Climate Bid

October 21, 2015 — 9:00 PM EDT

Apple Inc. will build an additional 200 megawatts of solar power in China and push suppliers to make similar commitments, as the maker of the iPad and Apple Watch seeks to offset its global-warming emissions in the world’s most polluting country.

The solar investment comes atop two previously announced solar farms in southern China that have now been completed, producing a combined 40 megawatts of power, Apple said in a statement Wednesday. The company will also partner with suppliers, including iPhone maker Foxconn Technology Group, on an additional 2 gigawatts of solar, wind and hydropower projects.

“Climate change is one of the great challenges of our time, and the time for action is now,” Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook said. “We believe passionately in leaving the world better than we found it and hope that many other suppliers, partners and other companies join us in this important effort.”

The promises are part of Apple’s efforts to cut greenhouse-gas emissions and come ahead of a United Nations summit in Paris later this year where world leaders will try to reach a global deal on reining in climate-change pollution. China, the world’s biggest source of greenhouse gases, has promised to almost double the amount of energy it gets from renewable and nuclear power by 2030.

Apple said in April that it would partner with U.S.-based SunPower Corp. to build the two generating stations in Sichuan province. The new solar farms produce more power than Apple’s operations consume in China, making the company “carbon neutral," according to the statement. The 200 megawatts of new investments will involve construction in northern, eastern and southern China and “will begin to offset the energy used in Apple’s supply chain."

Foxconn will construct 400 megawatts of solar by 2018 as part of the initiative with suppliers, starting in Henan province. Foxconn has committed to generate as much renewable energy as its Zhengzhou factory uses in final production of the iPhone, Apple said.

Apple To Raise China Solar Investment Fivefold with Climate Bid - Bloomberg Business
 
Sigh... These people must be out of their mind now that China is about to collapse.

***

Intel set to invest US$5.5b in Dalian
Source: Agencies | October 22, 2015, Thursday |

INTEL Corp said it may invest up to US$5.5 billion in making semiconductors in China, lifting efforts to improve ties with the country as it seeks new revenue streams while demand for its core computer processing chips falters.

The US firm said it would convert a facility in Dalian, its first plant in China, for memory chip production. It didn’t disclose a time period for the investment, but said it will start making advanced memory chips that can store data without using up power, called 3D NAND chips, in the second half of 2016.

The move follows a flurry of deals in the global semiconductor industry, highlighting growing importance of the memory chips used to store data in increasingly popular mobile devices. Researcher TrendForce predicts China will consume US$6.67 billion worth of NAND chips this year, or 29 percent of global NAND industry revenue.

Building its own chip industry has been deemed strategically important by China in its drive to modernize its economy. Intel’s new investment follows a deal last year to buy 20 percent stake of two mobile chipmakers owned by state-backed Tsinghua Holdings Co.

Tsinghua recently unveiled a plan to buy a 15 percent stake in US data storage company Western Digital Corp for US$3.8 billion.

In separate deals, Western Digital said yesterday that it would buy SanDisk Corp for about US$19 billion, giving it better access to flash memory storage chips used in smartphones and mobile devices. Tsinghua is also trying to acquire Micron.

Intel’s latest move raises concerns that new memory supply from the chipmaker could undercut margins for leading industry players.
 
China-Australia FTA Legislation Passes through Australia's Lower House
2015-10-22 -- Qian Shanming

The China-Australia Free Trade Agreement (ChAFTA) is on track to be implemented before the end of the year, after the legislation was passed through Australia's lower house on Thursday.

The news followed Wednesday's decision by the federal Opposition to back the free trade agreement after previously threatening to block the legislation unless a number of amendments were made.

Labor asked for a number of measures to be implemented, namely mandatory Australian licensing for overseas workers, pay for overseas workers to be pegged to Australian standards, and for compulsory labor market testing to be regulated for all projects.

Australia's Trade Minister Andrew Robb told Parliament on Thursday that the agreement passing through the lower house was an important stepping stone towards a prosperous future for the Sino-Australian relationship.

"ChAFTA represents an agreement of outstanding quality between two highly complementary economies," Robb said.

"My Chinese counterpart Minister Gao Hucheng has described the deal as the most liberalizing trade agreement China has ever signed."

The bill has been passed onto the senate, which is expected to approve the agreement when it sits during November.

@ahojunk
 
Ford to invest near $2.5bn in China

AFP

12 OCT 2015, 10:13 PM

US auto giant Ford will invest nearly $2.5 billion on research and development in China, despite falling sales in the world's biggest auto market.

The 11.4 billion yuan ($A2.46 billion) investment, to be completed by 2020, will build up Ford's R&D capability in the country, especially at an existing engineering centre in the eastern city of Nanjing, the company said in a statement.

"With this investment in research and development, the next generation of Ford vehicles will be completely designed around our customers," said Mark Fields, Ford's president and chief executive officer.

Ford sold 700,196 vehicles in China during the first eight months of 2015, but that was down around one per cent from the same period last year, amid an overall slowdown in the market due to weaker economic growth.

In August alone, the carmaker reported sales of 79,608 vehicles in China, a three per cent decrease compared to the same month in 2014.

Still, Ford will expand its product line for the Chinese market by launching two electric vehicles next year, the statement said.

Beijing has made new-energy vehicles a priority but sales have disappointed despite the government push, industry officials say.

Ford also said it had partnered with Dida Pinche, operator of China's largest car-pooling app, to match Ford drivers with passengers in Beijing and Shanghai, cities which are plagued with traffic congestion.

Ford to invest near $2.5bn in China | Business Spectator
 
Ford to invest near $2.5bn in China

AFP

12 OCT 2015, 10:13 PM

US auto giant Ford will invest nearly $2.5 billion on research and development in China, despite falling sales in the world's biggest auto market.

The 11.4 billion yuan ($A2.46 billion) investment, to be completed by 2020, will build up Ford's R&D capability in the country, especially at an existing engineering centre in the eastern city of Nanjing, the company said in a statement.

"With this investment in research and development, the next generation of Ford vehicles will be completely designed around our customers," said Mark Fields, Ford's president and chief executive officer.

Ford sold 700,196 vehicles in China during the first eight months of 2015, but that was down around one per cent from the same period last year, amid an overall slowdown in the market due to weaker economic growth.

In August alone, the carmaker reported sales of 79,608 vehicles in China, a three per cent decrease compared to the same month in 2014.

Still, Ford will expand its product line for the Chinese market by launching two electric vehicles next year, the statement said.

Beijing has made new-energy vehicles a priority but sales have disappointed despite the government push, industry officials say.

Ford also said it had partnered with Dida Pinche, operator of China's largest car-pooling app, to match Ford drivers with passengers in Beijing and Shanghai, cities which are plagued with traffic congestion.

Ford to invest near $2.5bn in China | Business Spectator

So many foolish people who have no idea as to where they need to invest.

:D

They are doomed to be doomed.
 
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