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CHINA'S central bank is planning to give US$10 billion from the very large reserve of foreign exchange and back a new office that will help Chinese SOE (State owned enterprises) firms to invest overseas. The People's Bank of China is in talks with China Reform Holdings Corp, a company controlled by the State-owned Asset Supervision and Administration Commission, to set up a joint venture, probably abroad, the sources said. "The central bank plans to offer US$10 billion for the cooperation. The negotiations have been going on for a while". "The two sides prefer to set up a joint venture overseas, which will try to help state-owned firms to invest abroad with foreign exchange reserves," the source added.
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The Ministry of Commerce said in January that it was targeting US$560 billion in outbound foreign direct investment in the five years to 2015. China has faced repeated obstacles to making major overseas acquisitions in recent years, whether they are political objections from governments of potential targets or internal wrangles over the permissions needed to make deals. Set up in 2010, China Reform Holdings Corp, with initial registered capital of 4.5 billion yuan (US$713 million), helps the State-owned Asset Supervision and Administration Commission consolidate state assets under its oversight.
China Economic News
China stock market
news and
business information. The Chinese economy. The Shanghai, Hong Kong, and
Shenzhen stock markets have learned some lessons from putting so much
financial emphasis on the U.S. economy. When the first delegations from
China came to the U.S. in the late 1980's to investigate stock market
methodology, they were very enthusiastic and looked forward to learning
a lot from the U.S. They did learn a lot, and based a lot of their
macro-economic policies on training in the U.S.
China has the world's largest stockpile of foreign exchange
reserves
totaling US$3.3 trillion, and it has been seeking ways to diversify
holdings to preserve value and improve returns.
The State Administration of Foreign Exchange manages the bulk of
China's official foreign exchange reserves. China Investment Corp, a
sovereign wealth fund, was set up in 2007 with an initial US$200
billion. The fund had US$410 billion under management at the end of
2010.
Sources told Reuters in February that CIC was set to receive a further
US$50 billion injection. CIC Executive Vice President Jesse Wang said
in March that the fund had been given an extra US$30 billion in 2011.
China is also increasing efforts to support domestic firms investing
abroad.
Central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said in April that China was
encouraging capital outflows to help reduce imbalances caused by net
capital inflows.
China has accumulated a vast store of reserves as its massive export
industry has sucked in foreign currency which companies must exchange
at the central bank to comply with the country's closed capital account
rules.
It was not immediately clear how the new operation would further
China's stated ambition of making more overseas investments with its
foreign currency holdings.
Both of these factors are not looked on favorably by Chinese regulators, but are seen as somewhat as a necessary evil in the expansion of the Chinese economy and it's impact internationally.
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Foreigners that are seeking to invest in the Chinese stock market should be focusing on more stable larger Chinese corporations, and not smaller companies that look very promising but have much higher risk associated, and their financial background and strength cannot easily be verified. Staying with infrastructure related businesses, such as oil, chemicals, metals, road building, communications, banking, pharmaceuticals, medicine, etc, could be a more realistic approach to taking advantage of growth in China.
Some Chinese
exporters are now
preferring euros to U.S. Dollars: The Chinese are afraid of increasing
their losses when they deal with U.S. dollars. Because the U.S. economy
is weak they are seeking to find other alternatives.
China is a country
of young
people, but a large population of older people that is increasing
disproportionately. You also see this in business. There is more of a
burden on the Chinese economy that needs to take care of the elderly,
but in business the young environmet for opportunities is
blooming. There is a whole generation of younger Chinese that
have gone from rags to riches within a short period of time.
Shanghai stock market
China Business reports

Shanghai Securities Branch
Wholesale markets, export markets, import business, distribution, foreign investments in China, Chinese outbound investments. China makes new reguations for export currency, Chinese interests face new challenges. Home buyers in China face losing their investments of a couple years ago if the China housing authorities require making housing prices more reasonable. This is a double edged sword. In trying to adjust and protect from a collapsing housing market due to the economic housing bubble, the Chinese private investors face losing their enormous investments throughout the country. China is taking a more gradual approach to solving this problem.
Hong Kong stock market, Shenzhen
stock market, Shanghai stock market
http://topics.bloomberg.com/china's-economy/
Hong Kong stock market Hong Kong stock exchange SEHK
Chinese companies seek IPO in Singapore and Hong Kong and europe. Several Chinese investment companies are now seeking alternatives to IPO in the USA because of several factors. The U.S. IPO is more costly and more timely and divestment of assets for commissioned brokers is more difficult. So, the U.S. is losing stock market growth because many Chinese companies choose other venues for their offerings.Another questions: Is it possible that the United States purposely let the dollar depreciate against other currencies? This is a question that many Chinese have, and the same group of Chinese uses this argument to contradict the U.S. claims of Chinese currency manipulations.
The dollar’s
decline, said Sun Zhenyu, the
Chinese envoy, had also shrunk the value of reserves held by China and
other countries. Sun Zhenyu charged that the Bush administration abused
the world trading systems by imposing unjustified duties
on certain Chinese products. They also complain that the U.S. trade
regulations limit exports of some technologies from the U.S. to China.
The result of some
of these factors is that the
Chinese are starting to import more than they export. That's good for
U.S. exports. This will impact the U.S. stock market in a positive way
for a time.
“We’re seeing a greater appreciation that exchange rates are complicated things,” the president of the U.S.-China Business Council, John Frisbie, said. “There’s also a growing recognition that China is now our third-largest export market and that punitive measures to get China to move probably aren’t going to get you to whatever the goal is.”
The largest importers of oil are: the USA, China, India. China is making great strides in developing more oil / petroleum technolgies and resources. The USA may open the oil exploration market internally within the next few years due to the poor economy in the U.S.
Examples of some
popular Chinese stock market
stock symbols:
http://www.economist.com/topics/chinese-economy
China trade surplus, China currency possibly still undervalued. China's
surplus narrowed.
Another question is,
Is the Yuan undervalued? What will be the results of undervalued Yuan
(RMB)?
China Factories, China manufacturers, discount tours
China trying to buy two Canadian
oil sands projects totaling more than $1.8 billion
http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/asia/economy/
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