Value of U.S. deals in
China sinks on rising trade tensions
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[July 28, 2017]
By Sumeet Chatterjee and Kane Wu
HONG KONG (Reuters) - U.S. corporate
acquisitions in China collapsed to their lowest level for 14 years in
the first half of this year, as trade tensions between the two countries
and uncertainty about Chinese government regulations took a toll on deal
making.
The value of mergers and acquisitions involving American companies in
China dropped 32 percent to just $523 million in the six months to June
30 from $771 million in the same period last year, and were down 87
percent from $4 billion in the first six months of 2015, according to
Thomson Reuters data.
Bankers and lawyers involved in deal making say that increasing signs of
trade friction between Washington and Beijing are acting as a deterrent.
The tensions were reflected at a meeting earlier this month when
officials from the two countries failed to agree on major new steps to
reduce the U.S. trade deficit with China.
American companies do not want to make acquisitions in an environment
where they could get caught in crossfire between the two governments,
these sources said. That could happen if, for example, U.S. President
Donald Trump's administration imposed punitive tariffs on Chinese steel
and other products and Beijing retaliated with its own action against
American goods or entities.
(For a graphic on U.S. M&A in China, click http://tmsnrt.rs/2gWn98u)
That in turn leads to the danger that American companies won’t be able
to take full advantage of China’s still buoyant economic growth of just
under 7 percent a year, adding further to the stresses in the trade and
investment relationship between the two countries.
"The new norm for China and the U.S. is to be at odds on trade issues.
As of now, they are having huge differences with regards to the steel
industry, huge differences with regards to trade imbalance," said Roy
Zou, a Beijing partner at law firm Hogan Lovells. “I don't see a big
increase in U.S. investments in China.”
China's Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) did not respond to Reuters faxed
request for comment on the drop in U.S. acquisitions. The decline is
happening at a time when Chinese deals in the U.S. are still rising,
though opposition in Washington to certain kinds of Chinese purchases on
national security grounds is also increasing and could add to tensions.
FOREIGN FIRMS COMPLAIN
European companies' deal making has also been declining but at a slower
pace. Their acquisitions in China in the first half of this year were
worth $223 million, against $268 million in the same period last year.
Foreign firms have complained for some time about not being offered a
level playing field in China. Among their concerns are restrictions on
foreign ownership in key sectors – including finance and technology –
and various regulations that favor domestic firms over foreign rivals.
And all of this can make them think twice about pulling the trigger on a
major acquisition, trade experts said.
"Foreign investors face explicit and implicit ownership restrictions in
the most attractive sectors, and they are also not able to participate
in the restructuring and consolidation of ailing industries," said
Rhodium Group economist Thilo Hanemann, who analyses China’s
international investment position.
The American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai said in its annual China
Business Report published on July 12 that the Chinese government needed
to halt policies and regulations that favor domestic firms over foreign
businesses. The lobby group complained of long-established "systemic
inequities," in the report, which was based on responses from 426 AmCham
member companies in China.
While buyers of assets in China have faced many such challenges before,
they haven’t usually had to do so against such a backdrop of trade
tensions and wider political uncertainty.
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China's President Xi Jinping arrives for the opening ceremony of B20
Summit ahead of G20 Summit, in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China,
September 3, 2016. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
"There is a lot of grandstanding going on between the two countries," said a
senior M&A banker at a U.S. bank in Hong Kong. "Not many would like to deploy a
couple of billion dollars now when you are not sure of the regulatory landscape
and what shape and form it would take."
This picture is further complicated by the approaching 19th National Congress of
the Chinese Communist Party, this autumn. The gathering is expected to lead to a
consolidation of President Xi Jinping’s power.
Many of the organs of the party and government are focused on making sure the
Congress, which is held every five years, goes off without a hitch and that
there isn‘t any kind of economic or political schism in the months leading up to
it.
"Chinese economic bureaucracy is now dominated by a desire to manage systemic
risk in preparation for the upcoming 19th Party Congress," said Brock Silvers,
managing director of Kaiyuan Capital, a Shanghai-based investment advisory firm.
"Any policies or reforms to be adopted after the Congress are still unknown," he
said, adding last week his firm advised a U.S. private equity fund to postpone
plans for China investments until regulatory issues are clarified.
The Chinese authorities’ increasing scrutiny of some of the most acquisitive
Chinese companies of recent years, such as the HNA Group Co Ltd, which has led
to a slowdown in their deal making, has added to the uncertainty. This is
focusing attention on the opaque nature of their ownership and finances and may
make them less appealing as deal makers, whether as buyers and sellers of
assets, or as partners in any transactions.
There have been 17 announced acquisitions of companies in China by U.S. firms
this year, compared to 39 in whole of 2016. The average value is down to $43
million this year from $73 million in 2008, when U.S. acquisitions hit an
all-time high of $12 billion.
Some trade experts worry that a more hawkish Washington approach to the national
security risks of proposed Chinese investments in the U.S. could easily trigger
retaliation from Beijing.
"The sense we get from talking to our clients is there is concern as to whether
anti-trust policies (in China) could now be used to discriminate against foreign
enterprises," said Mustafa Hadi, head of disputes and international arbitration
for Greater China and North Asia, at advisory and consultancy firm Berkeley
Research Group.
In the financial sector in particular, there are concerns that some deals and
expectations of reform could get derailed if Sino-U.S. relations deteriorate,
according to people familiar with the situation.
JPMorgan Chase & Co is in talks to set up a new joint venture with a local
partner in China, while Morgan Stanley is looking to further increase its stake
in its mainland China investment-banking operations after already raising it to
49 percent this year, people with direct knowledge of the discussions have said.
JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley declined to comment.
(Reporting by Sumeet Chatterjee and Kane Wu; Editing by Martin Howell)
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