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China sends Europe new exports: Jobs

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China sends Europe new exports: Jobs

When two Chinese companies appeared among the bidders to buy a troubled Portuguese bank this year, its staff took heart.

The reason? They believed the potential buyers would do what Chinese investors are increasingly doing in Europe: save badly needed jobs and invest in expanding the business.

Flush with cash, Chinese buyers are shopping for foreign brands and technology to improve their competitive edge and propel their global expansion. Unlike Western buyers that might cut staff or close operations that duplicate their own, Chinese companies have an incentive to hang onto experienced foreign employees and expand.

It's an unusual position for China after being cast for years as the country that drained manufacturing jobs from the West. For Europe's battered economies like Greece or Portugal, it's welcome relief as they try to tame rampant unemployment.

Rui Riso, head of the 41,000-member Portuguese bank workers' union, says Chinese acquisitions in Portugal have not disrupted business.

"The companies have essentially stayed on the path they were on. And that is what we want for Novo Banco, too - a strategy based on continuity," he said.

For Chinese firms, the pressure is mounting to diversify investments as growth at home, in the world's second-largest economy, slows and wages and other costs rise.

"Overseas investment is really core for a lot of firms," said Andre Loesekrug-Pietri, founder and chief executive of A Capital, a firm in Beijing that invests with Chinese partners in European assets.

Employees of Volvo Cars fretted about possible job losses or changes in work practices when the Swedish automaker was acquired by China's Geely for $1.8 billion in 2010. Instead, Geely launched an $11 billion effort to transform Volvo into a global brand that has preserved Swedish jobs and added manufacturing capacity.

In Oslo, labour groups say the Chinese have been model employers since a subsidiary of state-owned ChemChina acquired Norway's Elkem in 2011.

As the construction business slumped after the 2008 financial crisis, German concrete pump maker Putzmeister shed more than a fourth of its 3,800-strong workforce. Following its 2012 acquisition by China's Sany, the German company's workforce rebounded to above 3,000 last year, when the company reported its strongest revenue in seven years.

This year, ChemChina bought a 26.2 per cent stake in Italian tyre manufacturer Pirelli and said it would offer to buy the rest. Pirelli's chairman, Marco Tronchetti Provera, promised "no impact on employment" - and kept his own job, too.

The deal will "allow immediate growth in volumes and market share that Pirelli alone would have taken years to achieve," said Tronchetti Provera.

The leading European destinations for Chinese investment are Britain, Germany and France, according to a June ranking by the Mercator Institute for China Studies, a Berlin think tank, and New York-based Rhodium Group, a research and advisory company. Investment in the European Union from China was more than 46 billion euros ($52 billion) from 2000 to 2014, close to the $54 billion China invested in the US over that period.

The survey found no evidence Chinese companies were shifting European jobs to China. Instead, it concluded the Chinese were adding staff and expanding European research and development operations.

The Chinese bidders for the Portuguese bank, Novo Banco, were Fosun International, a Shanghai-based conglomerate, and Beijing-based Anbang Insurance Group Co. Others in the race were Spain's Santander and US private equity group Apollo Global Management.

Fosun already owns 80 per cent of Caixa Seguros, one of Portugal's biggest insurers, and France's Club Med. Anbang last year bought New York City's Waldorf Astoria.

The acquisition of Novo Banco, if completed, would be the largest Chinese purchase in European financial services. The sale was postponed last month amid litigation involving the bank and uncertainty over European capital requirements.

In Europe's smaller countries, China's investments can have a big impact.

Portugal came fourth in the ranking of Chinese investment in Europe, with Britain first. But the 5.1 billion euros Portugal has received is equal to almost 3 per cent of gross domestic product, whereas for Britain the ratio was just 0.45 per cent.

Chinese investment in Portugal started in 2011 with the acquisition by China Three Gorges Corp., the world's biggest dam operator, of a controlling stake in national power company EDP-Energias de Portugal.

EDP gave the Chinese wind power technology and an immediate international presence through EDP's interests in 14 countries, including 12 American states.

As Portugal's unemployment rate soared to 17.7 per cent in 2013, EDP shed no staff and has had no friction with labour groups. It kept the same management and business strategy.

Three Gorges beat rival German and Brazilian bidders by paying a 53 per cent premium on EDP's share price. It also committed to providing EDP, which has 17 billion euros in debt, with a loan of 2 billion euros and an additional 2 billion euros for investments.

The following year, the Chinese became Portugal's utility industry leaders when government-owned State Grid Corp., which operates most of China's electricity distribution network, bought 25 per cent of energy distributor REN.

Miguel Santos Neves, a professor at Lisbon's Autonomous University who has studied Chinese investment in Europe, warns much larger China could exert political pressure in return for investments.

The privatisations "were a good deal" for Portugal, he said, but added: "The issue is the long-term implications of putting all your eggs in the same basket."

In job-hungry Portugal, though, not many people are listening to warnings.

"The good thing (about EDP) for the Chinese was that our know-how helps them to expand internationally, using us as a base," said Orlando Ribeiro, a 35-year veteran of the company. "For us, the good thing is that we got to keep our jobs."
 
If jobs are not cut are the acquired companies still making money? When US companies acquire Canadian companies, the first thing they do is lay off some Canadian operations and move it to the US. Our *** kissing politicians applaud the move because they are our allies :rofl:
 
If jobs are not cut are the acquired companies still making money? When US companies acquire Canadian companies, the first thing they do is lay off some Canadian operations and move it to the US. Our *** kissing politicians applaud the move because they are our allies :rofl:

:nono:

Two years in, Nexen deal still a tough swallow for state-owned CNOOC

"So, CNOOC’s charm offensive came with promises: To keep jobs, to stay in Calgary, to maintain the trappings of a Canadian identity. And on Dec. 7, 2012, two years ago this week, a reluctant Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced a consequential decision: The Nexen sale to CNOOC would be allowed, but there would be new rules preventing any more state-owned enterprises (SOEs) from purchasing controlling interests in the oil sands.

But today, current and former employees speaking on condition of anonymity, at times through third parties, claim the integration of the two companies has not gone well, that Canadian staff is adjusting badly to the imposition of the Chinese company’s practices and that its priority has been cost cutting, not expansion."

Nexen reorganizes, lays off 300 in Calgary | Calgary Herald
 
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Two years in, Nexen deal still a tough swallow for state-owned CNOOC

"So, CNOOC’s charm offensive came with promises: To keep jobs, to stay in Calgary, to maintain the trappings of a Canadian identity. And on Dec. 7, 2012, two years ago this week, a reluctant Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced a consequential decision: The Nexen sale to CNOOC would be allowed, but there would be new rules preventing any more state-owned enterprises (SOEs) from purchasing controlling interests in the oil sands.

But today, current and former employees speaking on condition of anonymity, at times through third parties, claim the integration of the two companies has not gone well, that Canadian staff is adjusting badly to the imposition of the Chinese company’s practices and that its priority has been cost cutting, not expansion."

Nexen reorganizes, lays off 300 in Calgary | Calgary Herald
Peter C, do you really want to play the Google search game? Or do you want to deal in reality?

The biggest layoffs in Canadian history
Target Canada’s 17,600 pink slips comprise one of the biggest mass layoffs in more than 20 years
 
Peter C, do you really want to play the Google search game? Or do you want to deal in reality?

The biggest layoffs in Canadian history
Target Canada’s 17,600 pink slips comprise one of the biggest mass layoffs in more than 20 years

I NEVER said the U.S. doesnt layoff people.
However YOU implied China doesn't layoff people when acquiring companies.

Do you comprehend the difference?
 
China sends Europe new exports: Jobs

When two Chinese companies appeared among the bidders to buy a troubled Portuguese bank this year, its staff took heart.

The reason? They believed the potential buyers would do what Chinese investors are increasingly doing in Europe: save badly needed jobs and invest in expanding the business.

Flush with cash, Chinese buyers are shopping for foreign brands and technology to improve their competitive edge and propel their global expansion. Unlike Western buyers that might cut staff or close operations that duplicate their own, Chinese companies have an incentive to hang onto experienced foreign employees and expand.

It's an unusual position for China after being cast for years as the country that drained manufacturing jobs from the West. For Europe's battered economies like Greece or Portugal, it's welcome relief as they try to tame rampant unemployment.

Rui Riso, head of the 41,000-member Portuguese bank workers' union, says Chinese acquisitions in Portugal have not disrupted business.

"The companies have essentially stayed on the path they were on. And that is what we want for Novo Banco, too - a strategy based on continuity," he said.

For Chinese firms, the pressure is mounting to diversify investments as growth at home, in the world's second-largest economy, slows and wages and other costs rise.

"Overseas investment is really core for a lot of firms," said Andre Loesekrug-Pietri, founder and chief executive of A Capital, a firm in Beijing that invests with Chinese partners in European assets.

Employees of Volvo Cars fretted about possible job losses or changes in work practices when the Swedish automaker was acquired by China's Geely for $1.8 billion in 2010. Instead, Geely launched an $11 billion effort to transform Volvo into a global brand that has preserved Swedish jobs and added manufacturing capacity.

In Oslo, labour groups say the Chinese have been model employers since a subsidiary of state-owned ChemChina acquired Norway's Elkem in 2011.

As the construction business slumped after the 2008 financial crisis, German concrete pump maker Putzmeister shed more than a fourth of its 3,800-strong workforce. Following its 2012 acquisition by China's Sany, the German company's workforce rebounded to above 3,000 last year, when the company reported its strongest revenue in seven years.

This year, ChemChina bought a 26.2 per cent stake in Italian tyre manufacturer Pirelli and said it would offer to buy the rest. Pirelli's chairman, Marco Tronchetti Provera, promised "no impact on employment" - and kept his own job, too.

The deal will "allow immediate growth in volumes and market share that Pirelli alone would have taken years to achieve," said Tronchetti Provera.

The leading European destinations for Chinese investment are Britain, Germany and France, according to a June ranking by the Mercator Institute for China Studies, a Berlin think tank, and New York-based Rhodium Group, a research and advisory company. Investment in the European Union from China was more than 46 billion euros ($52 billion) from 2000 to 2014, close to the $54 billion China invested in the US over that period.

The survey found no evidence Chinese companies were shifting European jobs to China. Instead, it concluded the Chinese were adding staff and expanding European research and development operations.

The Chinese bidders for the Portuguese bank, Novo Banco, were Fosun International, a Shanghai-based conglomerate, and Beijing-based Anbang Insurance Group Co. Others in the race were Spain's Santander and US private equity group Apollo Global Management.

Fosun already owns 80 per cent of Caixa Seguros, one of Portugal's biggest insurers, and France's Club Med. Anbang last year bought New York City's Waldorf Astoria.

The acquisition of Novo Banco, if completed, would be the largest Chinese purchase in European financial services. The sale was postponed last month amid litigation involving the bank and uncertainty over European capital requirements.

In Europe's smaller countries, China's investments can have a big impact.

Portugal came fourth in the ranking of Chinese investment in Europe, with Britain first. But the 5.1 billion euros Portugal has received is equal to almost 3 per cent of gross domestic product, whereas for Britain the ratio was just 0.45 per cent.

Chinese investment in Portugal started in 2011 with the acquisition by China Three Gorges Corp., the world's biggest dam operator, of a controlling stake in national power company EDP-Energias de Portugal.

EDP gave the Chinese wind power technology and an immediate international presence through EDP's interests in 14 countries, including 12 American states.

As Portugal's unemployment rate soared to 17.7 per cent in 2013, EDP shed no staff and has had no friction with labour groups. It kept the same management and business strategy.

Three Gorges beat rival German and Brazilian bidders by paying a 53 per cent premium on EDP's share price. It also committed to providing EDP, which has 17 billion euros in debt, with a loan of 2 billion euros and an additional 2 billion euros for investments.

The following year, the Chinese became Portugal's utility industry leaders when government-owned State Grid Corp., which operates most of China's electricity distribution network, bought 25 per cent of energy distributor REN.

Miguel Santos Neves, a professor at Lisbon's Autonomous University who has studied Chinese investment in Europe, warns much larger China could exert political pressure in return for investments.

The privatisations "were a good deal" for Portugal, he said, but added: "The issue is the long-term implications of putting all your eggs in the same basket."

In job-hungry Portugal, though, not many people are listening to warnings.

"The good thing (about EDP) for the Chinese was that our know-how helps them to expand internationally, using us as a base," said Orlando Ribeiro, a 35-year veteran of the company. "For us, the good thing is that we got to keep our jobs."



Many M&A targets in Portugal which is not an industrialized economy are services/utilities companies, like energy distributor REN, power generator EDP-Energias de Portugal, bank Novo Banco, insurer Caixa Seguros, etc. Different from manufacturing jobs, services jobs would more or less be kept at the where the market is.

Unlike industrial conglomerates, Fosun International is a private investment firm focused on services, the OP has quoted examples are like Novo Banco or Club Med. As Fosun (as well as other Chinese investors focused on services) is expanding its portfolio in Europe, companies acquired in the initial phases are likely to be used as bases for expansion, just like what Orlando Ribeiro (an employee of EDP) said in the article.

I posted a thread a few days ago about Fosun launching Eurasia asset management in Russia.

About Fosun International Limited

Fosun was founded in 1992 in Shanghai. Fosun International Limited (00656.HK) was listed on the Main Board of The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Limited on July 16, 2007. Fosun has been persistently taking roots in China and investing in China's growth fundamentals. It has been actively implementing its investment model of "Combining China's Growth Momentum with Global Resources". Fosun is dedicated to making a major stride towards becoming a world-class investment group underpinned by the twin drivers of "insurance-oriented comprehensive financial capability" and "global industrial integration capability taking roots in China". Today, Fosun's businesses include two major segments, integrated finance and industrial operations. For more information, please visit www.fosun.com [复星国际].

CONTACT: Fosun International Contact: Cynthia Chan, CorporateCommunications & Marketing Department, (852) 2509 2825,cynthiachan@fosun.com; Fosun Eurasia Capital LLC Contact: 4/7 ul.Vozdvizhenka, building 2, Moscow, Russian Federation, Email:info@fosuneurasia.com
Copyright (C) 2015 PR Newswire Europe


China's Club Med Buyer Fosun Adds Two New Billionaires
 
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