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China to Finalize Plans for $22 Billion Plane-Engine Giant

onebyone

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China plans to merge more than 40 entities working on plane engines into a group with 145 billion yuan ($22 billion) in assets as part of a broader push into advanced industries to propel its economy, people familiar with the proposal said.

The entities have combined assets of about 110 billion yuan, the people said, asking not to be identified because the discussions are private. The Chinese government and companies including Aviation Industry Corp. of China, known as AVIC, will invest an additional 35 billion yuan under the plan, which could be announced as soon as this month, they said.

China is eager to develop its own engine to power its planes, and also is keen to push its economy from labor-intensive work into more sophisticated sectors. The Made in China 2025 blueprint, released last March, cited aerospace as a sector that leaders hope will help make China into an advanced economy along the lines of Japan and Germany.


Shanghai-based Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China, known as Comac, is developing the C919 single-aisle jet, which is expected to make its first test flight this year. CFM International, a joint venture between GE Aviation and a division of France’s Safran SA, will supply a version of its LEAP engine for the initial C919s.

Shares Jump
Shares of Avic Aero-Engine Controls Co. closed up 7.7 percent Tuesday in Shenzhen, while Avic Aviation Engine Corp. ended up 6.7 percent in Shanghai. AviChina Industry & Technology Co. finished up 8.6 percent at HK$5.55 in Hong Kong in its biggest single-day gain since Oct. 2.

The new company will contain almost all assets related to aerospace engines in China, the people said. China’s State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, and AVIC didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment by fax and phone.

The plan to merge engine assets, which Bloomberg first reportedin October, is part of the government’s efforts to streamline the state-owned sector while creating companies that are globally competitive. The government merged two leading rail-equipmentcompanies last June, and announced a plan in December to reorganize two major shipping groups. China also plans to combine some assets of its three biggest airlines, a person familiar with the proposal said in October.


China to Finalize Plans for $22 Billion Plane-Engine Giant - Bloomberg Business
 
Great move. As big as China is, there is no need to have 40 different companies producing the same airplane engines . What's your take on this? @Shotgunner51 @TaiShang


Merging 40 entities into one $22 billion company is absolutely correct move! China needs to increase industrial concentration of tech sector to boost economy of scale, in order to improve R&D efficiency. As we push for "Made in China 2025", more mergers should happen.

I remember making same comment on a thread about patent filings:

China has larger patent filings than any other country including Japan. But out of top 10 applicants (2003~2012), 7 from came from Japan with Panasonic topping the list, 2 from South Korea, 1 from US.

top100.png


Source: WIPO Global Ranking – 2015 Edition
 
Merging 40 entities into one $22 billion company is absolutely correct move! China needs to increase industrial concentration of tech sector to boost economy of scale, in order to improve R&D efficiency. As we push for "Made in China 2025", more mergers should happen.

I remember making same comment on a thread about patent filings:

China has larger patent filings than any other country including Japan. But out of top 10 applicants (2003~2012), 7 from came from Japan with Panasonic topping the list, 2 from South Korea, 1 from US.

View attachment 288254

Source: WIPO Global Ranking – 2015 Edition

Mergers in certain industry is a good thing such as aerospace and defense industries. But I caution too many mergers is not good for the workers in general.

The graph you show for patents are for consumer electronics. Do you have a graph for patents on high tech sectors such as chips, etc?
 
Mergers in certain industry is a good thing such as aerospace and defense industries. But I caution too many mergers is not good for the workers in general.

The graph you show for patents are for consumer electronics. Do you have a graph for patents on high tech sectors such as chips, etc?


You are right bro, in many sectors China should in fact complete antitrust legislation to protect consumer rights.

The list is extracted from section "Top 100 Applicants Worldwide, 2003-2012" of WIPO 2015 Report, apparently it's for all industries/sectors, full list attached below. Many on the list are conglomerates, say Toshiba owns Westinghouse which makes nuclear reactors. I don't have a list of chipset companies on hand but I believe Samsung, TSMC, Hynix, Intel, Huawei etc will probably among the top, anyway you may check the site:

World Intellectual Property Indicators – 2015 Edition

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Merging is a natural process to increase efficiency. It is a welcome move and one would hope this move will put us right at the top in the next decades or so. Expect more engine to come out.
 
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