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Photo of the day: Great wall of windmills

GBTIMES

2016/03/08


An aerial shot shows 17 wid turbines on China's Jintang Island in Zhejiang Province. (Photo: Yao Feng, Yan Zhaohui, China Daily)

An aerial shot shows a mountain top row of windmills on China's Jintang Island on March 5.

The island, part of the Zhoushan Archipalego in Zhejiang Province, is home to a number of wind farms with 17 wind turbines across.

Completed in December 2014, the winding circuit of turbines has a striking similarity to the Great Wall of China, if on a smaller scale.
 
China's FDI grows in Jan.-Feb.
Source: Xinhua 2016-03-11 16:37:48

BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) -- Foreign direct investment (FDI) in the Chinese mainland continued to grow steadily in the first two months of this year despite slowing overall growth.

FDI, which excludes investment in the financial sector, rose 2.7 percent year on year to 142 billion yuan (22.52 billion U.S. dollars) in the first two months of 2016, data from the Ministry of Commerce (MOC) showed Friday.

Investment in the service sector accounted for 62.8 percent of total inflow during the period, reaching 89 billion yuan.

FDI in the high-tech service industry grew 157 percent year on year during the period to 16 billion yuan.

Investment from the United Kingdom, the United States and Singapore rose the most, up 120 percent, 111 percent and 54 percent, respectively.
 
China FinTech investment explodes in 2015: KPMG
(Xinhua) Updated: 2016-03-11 15:47

BEIJING - China's financial technology investment in venture capital (VC) deals saw an explosive rise in 2015, according to the data compiled in the latest report by KPMG.

China's VC-backed financial technology investment went from around $600 million in 2014 to almost $2.7 billion in 2015, accounting for 20 percent of the overall investment in this area worldwide, according to the report.

Financial technology, or "FinTech", is a line of businesses which are founded with the purpose to facilitate the financial system by applying technology to services, such as mobile transactions.

Fund-raising platforms which offer online payment and currency transaction services, such as the peer-to-peer (P2P) brokers, contributed the most in China's recent FinTech business boom, according to the report.

ZhongAn, an online insurance group backed by Alibaba CEO Jack Ma, was at the top, drawing $931 million in private equity funding last year.

KPMG attributed the explosive development in China's FinTech industry to the growing partnership among banks, insurance providers and FinTech firms.

Traditional financial service providers are increasingly seeking partnerships with FinTech firms in order to provide their customers a more secure and easy financial services, said the report.

More Chinese banks are turning to small and medium sized firms, which were overlooked by larger banks before, the report said, driving more collaboration within China's FinTech.

By providing an alternative financing approach beyond traditional banks, the increasing interest among the people in remote China where traditional banks cannot reach provides massive potential for China's FinTech business.

The Chinese government also played a positive role in driving the FinTech industry, according to the report.

As China undergoes an upgrade to development, moving from investment and exports to innovation, the government has been exploring ways to inspire creativity and tap the new ideas offered by start-ups.

"The Chinese government is taking a particular interest in driving FinTech in a responsible manner," said the report, adding that the government is conscious of the need to stabilize the market while encouraging companies to innovate.

Chinese investment in Europe, U.S. hit record high in 2015
Xinhua, March 10, 2016

Chinese investment in Europe and the United States hit a record high in 2015, according to a report released by law firm Baker & McKenzie on Thursday.

Last year, Chinese investors poured 23 billion U.S. dollars and 15 billion U.S. dollars into Europe and America, respectively, according to the report.

Italy, France and the United Kingdom were the top three destinations in Europe, and the states of New York, California and Texas were the top U.S. destinations for Chinese investment, it said.

Chinese investment was concentrated in the real estate, automobile, finance and information technology sectors, it said.

Chinese companies have entered hi-tech and high-end manufacturing through acquisition of well-known companies. They have aimed for long-term returns through investment in housing and infrastructure to cushion the risks of economic slowdown in China, it said.

Bank of China joins Dubai derivatives exchange DGCX
(Xinhua) Updated: 2016-03-11 11:25

DUBAI - The commodities and currency derivatives bourse Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange (DGCX) said on Thursday that Bank of China was appointed as a settlement bank for Dubai Commodities Clearing Corporation (DCCC), a subsidiary of DGCX, United Arab Emirates (UAE) state news agency WAM reported.

DCCC has expanded its network of settlement banks to five with UAE's first lender Emirates NBD, Standard Chartered, HSBC, Bank of Baroda from India and Bank of China.

Bank of China is the first Chinese bank to be appointed as a settlement bank and would be operating through its Abu Dhabi branch.

Tian Jun, general manager of Bank of China Abu Dhabi branch, said the agreement will accelerate the interaction and collaboration between the derivatives and financial markets of China and the UAE.

In 2014, China, surpassing India, became the biggest trade partner of the UAE as bilateral trade hit nearly $50 billion.
 
China fixed-asset investment up 10.2 pct in Jan.-Feb.
Xinhua, March 12, 2016
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China's fixed-asset investment grew 10.2 percent year on year to 3.8 trillion yuan (586 billion U.S. dollars) in the first two months of 2016.

Growth picked up slightly from the 10-percent increase recorded in 2015, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Saturday.

It marked an end to several years of continuous deceleration in the growth of China's fixed-asset investment, money used to purchase and build factories, machines, property and other fixed facilities.

Investment slowdown is believed to be a major reason behind China's current weakness in demand and the main downside risk to the Chinese economy.

In breakdown, fixed-asset investment in agriculture was up 34.3 percent in the Jan.-Feb. period, followed by 11.1 percent for the service sector and 7.9 percent for industry.

Fixed-asset investment in eastern, central and western regions increased 9.7 percent, 12.5 percent and 12.7 percent, respectively.

Investment in the northeast worsened with a 18.6-percent drop, compared with the 11.2-percent decrease in 2015.

Investment by foreign companies gained 6 percent year on year in the first two months, compared with the 2.8-percent decrease reported in 2015.

Funding growth for fixed-asset investment edged up 0.9 percent in the first two months to 5.93 trillion yuan, sharply lower than the 7.7-percent gain seen in 2015.

Of the total funds, the government budget for fixed-asset investment rose 10.9 percent, 4.7 percentage points lower than that in 2015.
 

China Focus: China's favorite retro cola makes comeback


Source: Xinhua 2016-03-17 21:35:30
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CHONGQING, March 17 (Xinhua) -- Chinese cola brand Tianfu, the country's top-selling soft drink in the 1980s, formally returned to shop shelves on Thursday after being absent for nearly two decades.


The reincarnated cola, with the slogan "not just a familiar taste,"comes in bottles and cans

"From the establishment of the brand to national popularity, to the disappearance after a joint venture (with Pepsi), the changes of Tianfu have coincided with twists and turns of my life," said Li Peiquan, 78, former general manger of Tianfu Cola, at the relaunch ceremony on Thursday in the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing.

Tianfu still uses a traditional herbal recipe to produce the healthy drink, said Qian Huang, the new general manger. The goal for this year is to sell 200,000 tonnes.

"We are first aiming for the domestic market but interested parties from overseas already contacted us to take Tianfu Cola abroad," he said. "Chongqing, where the factory is, has railways stretching to Europe, so our cola could easily sell there," said Qian.

Other nostalgia products, including chocolate champagne, fruit juice and vegetable protein drinks, will also hit the market soon, he said.

Back in the 1980s and 1990s, the Chongqing company had a strangle hold of 70 percent of China's soft drink market. The cola was also sold in Russia and America. In 1994, the company entered a joint venture with Pepsi, which was not successful. By 2005, Tianfu Cola's market share had plummeted to 1 percent.

Many other smaller soft drink brands suffered a similar fate as the country opened up economically in the 1980s and 1990s. Qian attributed the failure to cutting Tianfu production to make way for Pepsi.

In 2006, the company sold its stake in the joint venture to Pepsi, but Pepsi refused to return Tianfu's right of production.

In 2010, Tianfu took Pepsi to court accusing the U.S. firm of stealing the secret recipe for its beverage. The court ordered Pepsi to return the formula and technical secrets, but rejected Tianfu's request for 1 million yuan (150,000 U.S. dollars) compensation.

Tianfu regained its trademark in 2013 and started trial production in 2014.

"It is not only a familiar taste, but also a memory of childhood," said Xu Li, a loyal Tianfu Cola fan, present at the ceremony.
 
By:www.cnbc.com
China's economic fix a millstone for world trade-IMF
SYDNEY, April 12 (Reuters) - China's slowdown might not be quite as severe as first feared but its "momentous" shift from investment-led growth is still having a chilling effect on trade globally, the International Monetary Fund said on Tuesday.

The Washington-based organisation cited recent policy stimulus from Beijing as it nudged up forecasts for China's growth, even as it trimmed the outlook for the world as a whole.

The Fund now expects economic growth of 6.5 percent this year and 6.2 percent next, both up two-tenths of a percentage point from the last outlook in January.

That would still be a down from the 6.9 percent growth posted for 2015, which itself was the poorest showing in a quarter of a century.

Official figures for gross domestic product (GDP) due later this week are expected to show annual growth eased to 6.7 percent in the first quarter, though data from Beijing is often greeted with some scepticism by financial markets.

"China, now the world's largest economy on a purchasing-power-parity basis, is navigating a momentous but complex transition toward more sustainable growth based on consumption and services," the Fund said in the foreword to its 200-page global outlook report.

"Ultimately, that process will benefit both China and the world," added the Fund, whose spring meetings along with the World Bank will be held in Washington this week.

"Given China's important role in global trade, however, bumps along the way could have substantial spillover effects."

China accounts for a tenth of world trade and is among the top 10 trading partners for more than 100 countries. Crucially it was the biggest single spender on infrastructure, housing and the like, accounting for a quarter of world investment.

As that investment boom cooled, it took a toll on other countries' exports. The IMF estimated every 1 percentage point investment-driven drop in China's GDP, cut growth for the entire Group of Twenty by 0.25 percentage points.

"Even countries that have few direct trade linkages with China are being affected through the Chinese slowdown's impact on prices of commodities and manufactured goods, and on global confidence and risk sentiment," the Fund said.

It offered a long list of suggestions for reform, ranging from strengthening market forces in China, to widening the social safety net and reining in state-run enterprises.

"A well-managed rebalancing of China's growth model would ultimately lift global growth and reduce tail risks," the Fund concluded..............See more
 
China's RMB unlikely to depreciate largely this year, U.S. expert says
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Source: Xinhua | 2016-04-12 07:44:02 | Editor: huaxia


WASHINGTON, April 11 (Xinhua) -- China's currency renminbi (RMB), or the yuan, is unlikely to see a large depreciation this year despite slowing economic growth and weak exports, a U.S. expert said Monday.

"I don't think we'll see either a big step devaluation or a market-driven large depreciation" of the RMB this year, Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a leading expert on China's economy, said at a seminar on global economic prospects.

"I don't accept the argument that the (Chinese) currency is significantly overvalued. I don't accept the argument that China has lost the competitiveness," Lardy said, adding that China has successfully moved up the value chain into higher value-added products and its share of global exports continued to expand in recent years despite the significant appreciation of the RMB.

China's current account surplus was about 300 billion U.S. dollars last year, which was the largest in the world in absolute terms, indicating that China didn't need to devalue its currency to boost the economic growth, Lardy said.

Lardy also refuted the claim that market forces will force a large depreciation of the RMB because China's foreign exchange reserves are "overstated" and "falling rapidly."

China's foreign exchange reserves fell by about 513 billion dollars in 2015, the biggest annual drop on record, but about one third of that decline reflected valuation effect rather than an actual outflow of reserves, according to Lardy.


Since the U.S. dollar appreciated against the euro, yen and other currencies starting in late 2011, the value of these non-dollar financial assets in China's foreign exchange reserves measured in dollars has been going down, he explained.


A large part of the decline in reserves actually reflected Chinese corporations repaying foreign currency loans, Lardy said, noting that cross-border claims by foreign banks on Chinese counterparties in China had fallen by about 235 billion dollars to 875 billion dollars by the end of the third quarter of 2015.

"This is part of capital outflows, but I don't think it should be regarded as capital flight, and certainly there's no change in China's net international financial position as a result of this (adjustment)," he argued.

"I think the argument that the decline in reserves is because of panic mainlanders trying to get their money offshore is somewhat misleading," Lardy said. "I think it largely reflects actions of investors and corporations in response to change in exchange rate expectations and interest rate differentials."

China's foreign exchange reserves increased by 10.26 billion dollars to top 3.21 trillion dollars in March, the first increase since November, easing fears of a downward spiral of capital outflows and currency weakness.

Chinese authorities have repeatedly said that there is no basis for sustained devaluation of its currency.

Analysts believed capital outflows from China are likely to slow down in the coming months as the U.S. Federal Reserve signals slower pace of interest rate hikes this year and China's economy shows signs of warming.
 
China's State Grid wins bid for two transmission lines in Brazil
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2016-04-14 14:13

RIO DE JANEIRO - China's State Grid Brazil Holding on Wednesday won bids on two power transmission lines in Brazil, said the Brazilian Electricity Regulatory Agency (Aneel).

The company won the rights of two lots located around the Paranatinga town in Mato Grosso, west Brazil, at 334.5 million reais ($95.6 million) and 61.4 million reais ($17.5 million) respectively

On Wednesday, over 10 companies got 14 transmission lines stretching across 3,402 km, with bid price totalling 6.87 billion reais ($1.96 billion), said Aneel.

And the companies winning the bidding will earn up to 2.5 billion reais ($715 million) annually over the 30 years of the concession.

They will also be able to benefit from the sub-stations which start operation in 2017, according to tender contracts.

Jose Jurhosa, director of the Aneel, said that the investments are of signigicant value for the country struggling in recession.

"Given the situation of Brazilian economy, receiving almost 7 billion reais ($2 billion) in infrastructure investments is really very positive," said Jurhosa.

The regulatory agency has put up for bid of 24 transmission lines of 6,500 km, which it estimates would bring in 12.2 billion reais ($3.49 billion) and create 27,640 direct jobs.


http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2016-04/14/content_24538086.htm
 
Commentary: China's economy a lot better than bears think
Source: Xinhua 2016-04-15 14:23:13
By Xinhua writer Wang Yaguang

BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- China bears should now take a break. New indicators have proved once again that pessimism over the Chinese economy is overplayed and misplaced.

Data released on Friday showed China's economy rose 6.7 percent in the first quarter, the weakest since the dark days of the financial crisis in early 2009, but several key indicators pointed to signs of stabilizing.

Year on year, consumption expanded 10.3 percent during the same period, fixed-asset investment was up 10.7 percent, while industrial production rose 5.8 percent, with the growth rates all accelerating from the January-February period.

Contrary to claims that weak demand in China has dragged down the world's commodity markets and weighed on exporters, customs data showed China's imports, such as crude oil, iron ore and copper, actually increased strongly in the first quarter.

These are not the numbers of an economy that is about to collapse.

However, they may do little to quell naysayers, who think they have plenty to support their notions: slowing growth, debt build-up, overcapacity and capital outflows.

Due to the concerns, two of the world's three leading rating agencies, Moody's and Standard & Poor's, have raised a red flag over the economy.

Yet the pessimism is overdone.

China's economy is sufficiently resilient. China is not likely to see the kind of debt crisis that the EU has been dealing with, as its unified treasury system makes bailout plans easier to implement.

China's ability to endure risk is also strengthened by its moderate deficit level (2.4 percent in 2015 and a target of 3 percent for 2016), large household savings and massive foreign exchange reserves.

Even if the worst happens, China has ample policy tools to cushion a downturn. After the latest cut in interest rates in October, the benchmark one-year lending rate still stands at 4.35 percent, leaving the central bank more room to maneuver.

Also lost amid the talk of a collapse is the fact that China is making progress in an ambitious transformation -- away from its old growth model of credit-fueled, investment-led and export-powered growth and toward sustainable expansion driven by consumer spending and entrepreneurship, a shift that will bring slower growth. The progress matters hugely for the future of China and the rest of the world.

Consumption has made a bigger contribution than investment to China's growth, accounting for more than 60 percent of GDP in the first quarter. Services continued to trump industry's contribution, expanding 7.6 percent in the last three months and accounting for 56.9 percent of GDP. Hi-tech industry expanded much faster than the industrial sector as a whole, and energy consumption per unit of GDP continued to fall.

Supply-side structural reform is also advancing as the country moves to address issues like industrial overcapacity, a large inventory of unsold homes and unprofitable "zombie companies," a good choice not only for the country, but also for the world at large.

To be sure, China's economy will not return to its mega-growth and may be on a bumpy journey, but it is on a solid footing and is heading in the right direction. The real test lies in China's resolve to push reforms as the world economy remains sluggish.

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China's outbound investment to grow at least 10% in 2016

China's overseas investment is expected to increase more than 10 percent in 2016 and keep the momentum in the next five years, bucking up the trend of domestic economic slowdown and gloomy global recovery, said a report released by Ernst & Young on Thursday.

Investments will continue to diversify amid Chinese companies' overseas expansion, targeting areas with more added value, including consumer goods, science and technology, services, as well as high-end machinery manufacturing such as high-speed rail and nuclear power.

"More Chinese enterprises will 'go global', investing in wider areas around the world while accelerating industrial upgrade and deepening international capacity cooperation," said Loletta Chow, global leader of EY's China Overseas Investment Network.

"They will focus more on acquiring high value-added technology and marketing networks, so as to increase their international competitiveness," she added.

The country's outbound direct investment hit a record high of $139.5 billion in 2015, up 13.3 percent from a year earlier, among which investment grew 18.2 percent to reach $14.8 billion in countries and regions along the Belt and Road, according to the report.

Meanwhile, the value of overseas mergers and acquisitions surged 74 percent last year, led by such sectors as TMT, auto and transportation, and financial services with a year-on-year growth of 163 percent, 128 percent, and 101 percent, respectively.

The immediate impetus for Chinese investors' global outreach, said Chow, came from the urge to transform and upgrade, and boost their own competitiveness in the world arena.

"The next step is to develop 'China intelligent manufacturing', build 'China brand' and improve 'China services', which will be the new direction for 'Made in China' to go global," she said.

She noted that China's growing outbound investment would become the key driver of future domestic economic growth and acceleration of the globalization.

High end, high speed

The manufacturing industry has contributed about 40 percent to China's double-digit economic growth for the past three decades, producing 90 percent of the country's total exports, according to the report.

Long been at the low-end value chain, Chinese enterprises are now well-positioned to upgrade their global strategies to access advanced technology, brands and markets, largely bolstered by the country's push of international capacity cooperation and its "Made in China 2025" strategy.

According to EY's report, last year's outward direct investment from the country's machinery manufacturing industry surged 154.2 percent from a year ago.

The sector, said the report, will be led by high-speed rail and nuclear power, and enjoy more opportunities for years to come, especially in the countries and regions along the Belt and Road.

It's estimated the total length of overseas high-speed rail will reach 80,000 km with the investment value of $2.4 trillion by 2030 or 2035. World's total nuclear power capacity will more than triple to reach 1,350 gW by 2030, with an expected investment of up to $1.5 trillion.

China has several advantages in these areas, such as rich experience, low-cost control, technologies, and national policy, said Chow. "That will lead to a new wave of their booming overseas expansion."

By 2015, the country has built the world's longest high-speed rail of nearly 19,000 kilometers, accounting for more than 60 percent of the global total mileage. The country has extended its high-speed rail network across the world.

Meanwhile, the country boasts world's fifth of 31 nuclear power units in operation, and largest number of 24 under construction, and have already in cooperation with countries including the United Kingdom, France, and South Africa.

High-speed rail and nuclear power have become China's new business cards worldwide, said Chow.

With new opportunities, however, come lurking risks, said Yew-Poh Mak who leads EY's Transaction Advisory Services practice in North China.

"Since the political economy and social culture vary among countries along the Belt and Road, a lack of long-term planning and comprehensive understanding of investment destinations may lead to massive failure," he said.

He added that only a multidimensional and comprehensive knowledge pack of the degrees of economic freedom, investment freedom, and ease of doing business in the investment destination can assure accurate investment judgments.

http://europe.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2016-04/15/content_24580237.htm
 
China to Launch Gold Benchmark
(CRI Online) 08:28, April 19, 2016

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An employee shows two commemorative gold bars in Beijing. [File Photo: Xinhua]

China will launch a new contract today to set a "benchmark" price for gold bullion in the world's biggest producer and consumer of gold, as part of efforts to increase its influence in pricing of the precious metal.

The yuan-denominated gold fix will be launched on the Shanghai Gold Exchange this morning, with the benchmark price at 257.97 yuan (US$39.83) per gram, said a statement released by the exchange yesterday.

Eighteen banks and bullion traders have been chosen as initial market makers for the fix, including 10 Chinese lenders, Standard Chartered Bank, Australia and New Zealand Banking Group and six domestic and international bullion traders including Switzerland-based MKS Gold Ltd, the exchange said.

The world's top producer and consumer of gold has long been pushing to be a price-setter for bullion to enhance its influence on Asian and global markets.

The strategic move, coming a decade after China started to reform the gold market, of setting a new gold fix price also supports the internationalization of the yuan, an industry analyst from one of auction participants told Shanghai Daily yesterday. It will add pressure on the century-old London gold fix price.

China, which resumed its regularly reporting of bullion buying in July after a six-year gap, bought an impressive 103.9 tons in the second half of 2015, according to World Gold Council. China's gold reserves have ballooned by 708.2 tons since April 2009, the council added.

Hong Kong and Singapore have also recently launched exchange-traded contracts.
 
Chinese Company Buy Loss-making Serbian Steel Plant
(Xinhua) 08:33, April 19, 2016

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A view at the Smederevo Steel Mill in Smederevo, Serbia on April 18, 2016. [Photo: Xinhua]

Chinese company Hebei Iron and Steel Group, or HBIS, has signed an agreement to buy a loss-making Serbian steel plant in the city of Smederevo.

The 52 million US dollar agreement was signed on Monday with the Serbian government, who had been struggling for years to find a buyer.

HBIS President Yu Yong says that the Group's planned investments in the next five years will turn the factory into one of the most competitive in Europe.

"We are happy to enable investments for this steel company by using our new technology in production. We are sure that we are competent enough that we will build Smederevo into a new complex for steel production with improved equipment and better quality of products. We will make Smederevo a modern project for international cooperation between China and Central and Eastern Europe."

Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic says the deal is important for his country, which is in great need for foreign investment.

US Steel ran the company from 2002-2012, before reselling it to the Serbian state for a symbolic price of 1 US dollar, due to losses.

HBIS plans to invest at least 300 million euros in the steel mill.
 
Chinese private company purchases U.S. industrial robot manufacturer
Source: Xinhua | 2016-04-20 08:17:32 | Editor: huaxia

WARREN, United States, April 19 (Xinhua) -- A handover ceremony was held here monday after Chinese private Wanfeng Technology Group had acquired all stakes of U.S. industrial robot manufacturer Paslin for 300 million dollars.

The acquisition gives Wanfeng access to the advanced automated welding technology and clients that Paslin has developed over the past 80 years, and gives Paslin access to the huge market of China.

It will also create another 150 jobs in 2016 for Michigan. Paslin's managerial level and over 800 employees will retain their jobs.

Chen Ailian, board chairman of the Zhejiang-headquartered company, said at the ceremony that with the participation of Paslin, "(Wanfeng's) robot industry will soon exceed 10 billion dollars in terms of the production scale."

"Wanfeng's acquisition is a win-win," noted Wu Jinhua, CEO of Wanfeng.

Wang Yong, China's deputy counsel general in Chicago, congratulated the city of Warren on attracting a large amount of investment from China, saying "this will bring great benefits to the local economy and the local people."

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder said that the acquisition "is a wonderful win for all of us."

"Let's keep this going," he said.

For Michigan State Senator Steven Bieda, Wanfeng's acquisition unleashed "a new chapter on the journey of Paslin in Michigan."

"We live in a global economy, and we have a lot of interests in common ... integrated economy and investing in companies in both countries make a lot of sense," he said.

Established in 1937, Paslin is the world's leading supplier of welding robot application system and arc welding system. It is also expert at special welding and resistance spot welding, and provides automation system solutions to the U.S. auto and heavy-duty industries.

Founded in 1994, Wanfeng has businesses in such fields as auto parts manufacturing, robot and intelligent equipment, magnesium alloy and financial investment, with annual sales of 3 billion U.S. dollars.

In 2013, the company purchased Meridian Canada, the world's leading supplier of magnesium alloy auto parts. The purchase led to a 10-fold growth in the latter's yield in two years.

The state of Michigan enjoys a good business relationship with China.
 
Chinese-built 135mln USD bridge opens in Tanzania
E-mailXinhua, April 19, 2016

Tanzanian President John Magufuli on Tuesday inaugurated a 135 million US dollar Kigamboni Bridge built by Chinese in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam, saying the bridge will contribute to the country's economic growth.



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Photo taken on April 18, 2016 shows vehicles traveling on Kigamboni Bridge Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. [Photo/Xinhua]



"The Chinese contractors have done a good job," Magufuli told the Chinese ambassador to Tanzania, Lu Youqing.

The President thanked China for the excellent job done by China Railway Construction Engineering Group (CRCEG) in a joint venture with China Railway Major Bridge Group (CRMBG).

The CRCEG/CRMBG project manager, Zhang Bangxu, said they employed over 5,000 Tanzanians as local foremen and technicians who have gained on-job experience.

"They can now be able to manage projects of similar proportions," said Zhang, adding that the construction of the bridge has given CRCEG and CRMBG credibility to undertake other construction works in the east African nation.

The 680 meter-long bridge, the first of its kind in east and central Africa, connects Dar es Salaam's business district to Kigamboni creek.

The bridge, measured 32 meters in width, has six lanes, three in each direction. It also has two pedestrian and cyclist lanes with a width of 2.5 meters, one on each side.

The president said the bridge was also expected to boost the domestic tourism sector in the planned Kigamboni city, making it a holiday beach.

Magufuli declined an offer to name the bridge after his name and suggested that the bridge should be named Nyerere Bridge in recognition of the country's founding leader -- Julius Nyerere.

The project was jointly funded by the Tanzanian government and the National Social Security

http://www.china.org.cn/world/2016-04/19/content_38284183.htm
 
Markets | Fri Apr 22, 2016 1:32am EDT
China seizes biggest share of global exports in almost 50 years | Reuters
SHANGHAI | By Elias Glenn and Pete Sweeney

Chinese exporters have found a silver lining in weak global demand by seizing market share from their competitors - good news for China but an expansion that is aggravating trade tensions.

China's proportion of global exports rose to 13.8 percent last year from 12.3 percent in 2014, data from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Employment shows, the highest share any country has enjoyed since the United States in 1968.

The success belies widespread predictions rising costs for Chinese labor and a currency that has increased nearly 20 percent against the dollar in the last decade would cause China to lose market share to cheaper competitors.

Instead, China's manufacturing infrastructure built during the country's industrial rise of recent decades is keeping exports humming and providing the basis for firms to produce higher-value products.


"China cannot be replaced," said Fredrik Guitman, formerly China general manager for a Danish maker of silver products, adding that reliable delivery times were more important than price. "If they say 45 days, it will be 45 days."

Still, even as Chinese firms compete in more sophisticated product lines, they are unloading overstocked inventory from entrenched industrial overcapacity in sectors like steel, an irritant in global trading relationships. The United States and seven other countries this week called for urgent action to address a steel supply glut that many blame on China.

At the same time, China's imports from other countries fell sharply - down over 14 percent in 2015 - leading some economists to suggest China was deploying an "import substitution" strategy that is pushing foreign brands out of its domestic markets.

On Wednesday, Beijing rolled out fresh measures to support machinery exports, including tax rebates, and encouraged banks to lend more to exporters. Machinery and mechanical appliances make up the biggest portion of China's exports.

Such policies may not be welcomed in the United States, where Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump has called for 45 percent tariffs on Chinese imports - a message that appears to resonate with American voters.

The risk is that the Chinese firms successfully moving up the value chain will see their overseas profits destroyed by a trade war if Trump's ideas find place in policy.

ADVANTAGE

Chinese firms' tenacity in overseas markets is largely built on the country's investment in a massive and integrated supply chain infrastructure, which makes them faster and more reliable to foreign companies that outsource all or some of their production.

"Reliability and speed is more important than price," Guitman said. "An out-of-stock product will hurt much more than a slightly higher price."

This manufacturing playground is allowing companies that make their own original goods to tinker with their products and branch out.

"China's export structure may not be as sophisticated as that of high-income economies, but with a better educated labor force and increasing investment in innovation, the country's products are now generally of a higher unit value and require more skilled labor," HSBC economists said in a report.

Critics say much of China's move up the value chain has been the result of pressure on foreign firms to transfer technology combined with a systematic and sustained campaign of industrial espionage targeting foreign technology.

The legions of mid-sized Chinese companies that now make drones, high-tech labels, smart home devices, and wind power equipment may lack the cachet of Chinese social media firms like Tencent, but they are a far greater combined threat to complacent foreign competitors, analysts say.

Privately owned SZ DJI Technology Co Ltd, a drone maker, is an example of how far Chinese exporters have come. The company has taken advantage of the smartphone component manufacturing ecosystem in the southern city of Shenzhen to take 70 percent market share in the United States, a report by investment bank Oppenheimer & Co says.

A DJI spokesman credited the availability of skilled labor as its key advantage.

The playground has also offered hope to firms in oversaturated industries.

Shanghai-based ReneSola (SOL.N), for example, was once one of a herd of Chinese solar panel manufacturers, stuck in a glutted industry and heavily in debt.

But the company's investment in LED, or light emitting diode, is now paying off, giving it a fresh product line to export to the United States.

The LED line boasts gross margins of over 30 percent, compared to low single digits for solar modules, the company's financial statements show.

ReneSola's U.S. marketing head Naveed Hasan said that the firm's position in China was an advantage.

"We are able to use our brand and leverage the great number of contract manufacturers."

THE PRICE CHALLENGE

But while China has expanded its share, that share is of a shrinking pie and the country's firms have yet to develop the branding power of the likes of an Apple or Louis Vuitton.

Much of Chinese industrial innovation has focused on process and production improvements to make products at lower cost but acceptable quality.

That has some worried rising labor costs and a stronger yuan, or renminbi (RMB), will have an impact.

"This has put pressure on firms to upgrade," Li Jian, head of foreign trade research at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, the Commerce Ministry's think-tank, said.

China's producer pricing power has been falling for four years and the Chinese government sees more rough weather ahead.

"The circumstances surrounding foreign trade this year remain both complicated and gloomy," Commerce Ministry spokesman Shen Danyang said on Tuesday. More than half of 3,000 companies surveyed by the ministry "believe the situation this year is increasingly grim."

(Additional reporting by Kevin Yao and Sue-Lin Wong; Editing by Neil Fullick)
 

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