In Silicon Valley, Chinese 'accelerators'
aim to bring startups home
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[May 17, 2018]
By Koh Gui Qing and Salvador Rodriguez
NEW YORK/ SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -
Beijing's unslakeable thirst for the latest technology has spurred a
proliferation of "accelerators" in Silicon Valley that aim to identify
promising startups and bring them to China.
The surge in the number of China-focused accelerators - which support,
mentor and invest in early-stage startups - is part of a larger wave of
Chinese investment in Silicon Valley. At least 11 such programs have
been created in the San Francisco Bay Area since 2013, according to the
tech-sector data firm Crunchbase.
Some work directly with Chinese governments, which provide funding.
Reuters interviews with the incubators showed that many were focused on
bringing U.S. startups to China.
For U.S. government officials wary of China’s growing high-tech clout,
the accelerator boom reaffirms fears that U.S. technological know-how is
being transferred to China through investments, joint ventures or
licensing agreements.
"Our intellectual property is the future of our economy and our
security," Senator Mark Warner, the Democratic vice-chairman of the U.S.
Senate Intelligence Committee, said in a statement to Reuters about
Chinese accelerators. "China's government has clearly prioritized
acquiring as much of that intellectual property as possible. Their
ongoing efforts, legal or illegal, pose a risk that we have to look at
very seriously."
The U.S. has already moved to block many Chinese acquisitions in the
tech sector, and is considering several measures that could impose
sweeping new strictures on Chinese investment in Silicon Valley.
U.S. President Donald Trump's crackdown down on visas for foreign tech
workers and threats of a trade war with China are also changing the
landscape.
And to be sure, the Chinese programs are a small part of the picture;
there are 159 accelerators and 70 incubators of all types in the San
Francisco Bay area, according to Crunchbase.
Yet the accelerators reflect close ties between entrepreneurs, tech
investors and top engineering talent in the U.S. and China.
U.S. universities remain a major training ground for Chinese engineers,
for example, and U.S. companies such as Microsoft have long had research
laboratories in China.
Officials at several China-backed accelerators told Reuters their goal
was to help startups gain access to the China market and nurture
relationships between entrepreneurs and investors in both countries.
"We are building the door or bridge to the China market," said Wei Luo,
chief operating officer at ZGC Capital Corp, which runs the ZGC
Innovation Center.
The center is backed by Zhongguancun Development Group, an entity funded
by the Beijing local government; its name refers to the Zhongguancun
neighborhood, which is sometimes called China's Silicon Valley.
Accelerators like ZGC "help U.S. entrepreneurs understand China better,"
Luo said.
CHINA CONNECTION
Ethan Schur, an American entrepreneur and co-founder of Grush, a smart
toothbrush that combines brushing with gaming to encourage children to
clean their teeth, has teamed up with ZGC and called the partnership
"very helpful."
ZGC helped Grush set up shop in China, Schur said.
"We're able to meet the manufacturers we want to work with, are
trustable, reliable and have a good price," he said.
For entrepreneurs David Lee and Grace Wang, who founded a ZGC-backed
travel planning app called The Explorer.io, running a company that is
not well connected to China is bad for business.
"It's all about collaboration," said Wang, who was born in China and
moved to the United States in 2011 for college before attending graduate
school at the University of California Berkeley. "There should be some
way where we can help countries grow together and work with each other."
During a Reuters visit, the ZGC Innovation Center in Santa Clara, in the
heart of Silicon Valley, was bustling with tech entrepreneurs of both
Chinese and American origin. Since its 2014 opening, the center has
hosted 55 startups and has invested in more than 40.
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An exterior view of the ZGC Innovation Center is seen in Santa
Clara, California, April 12, 2018. Picture taken April 12, 2018.
REUTERS/Stephen Lam
Other accelerators in the valley that help bring U.S. startups to
China include Plug and Play, a non-Chinese accelerator that
collaborates with several local Chinese governments; InnoSpring,
whose investors include Legend Capital, a unit of Legend Holdings
<3396.HK>, the parent of computer group Lenovo Group Ltd <0992.HK>;
and Shanghai Lingang Overseas Innovation Center, which is linked to
the Shanghai government.
Jaunt, in which InnoSpring is an investor, has raised more than $100
million in funding. And the Chinese-backed incubator Amino Capital
has a stake in Human Longevity, a health data company, which has
raised more than $300 million.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Many local governments in China - like their counterparts in the
United States - are eager to support startups in the name of
economic development.
The accelerators work with companies in fields including artificial
intelligence, autonomous driving technology, big data and health
sciences.
They often help U.S. companies set up joint ventures or licensing
agreements to enter China - the type of deals some U.S. policy hawks
have criticized as conduits for transferring intellectual property.
The Shanghai Lingang Overseas Innovation Center will "serve as a
broker in technology transfer," the Shanghai government said in a
brief statement on its website in May 2016 to mark the opening of
the center in downtown San Francisco.
There have been no high-profile examples of such theft from
companies helped by the Chinese accelerators. But American
heavyweights such as Apple, GM and even Michael Jordan have faced
fights in China over protecting their intellectual property.
Xiao Wang, co-founder of InnoSpring Silicon Valley, a
Shanghai-headquartered accelerator that has invested $3.5 billion in
70 U.S. and 15 Chinese startups in the last five years, said those
who believe intellectual property theft is the price for entering
need "to understand China better."
Although China's protection of intellectual property is not as good
as in the United States, it has improved, she said. Risks for
startups are outweighed by the benefits of moving into China, which
include access to a huge market and a growing pool of talent, Wang
said.
Sue Xu, a general partner at Amino Capital, said her firm had
invested in more than 130 startups and helped more than 30 percent
of them enter China.
"The Chinese market is huge, so the companies we invested in say 'We
won't stop until we get into the Chinese market,'" she said.
Still, even deals in which U.S. startups gladly welcome Chinese
investors concern some policymakers in Washington, D.C.
A study by the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental, which invests
in commercial technology on behalf of the U.S. Department of
Defense, said in a report in January that Chinese investment in
startups hit a record high of $11.5 billion in 2015, or 16 percent
of all technology deals that year.
For entrepreneurs like The Explorer.io co-founder Lee, who moved to
the United States from South Korea 15 years ago, the hope is that
suspicions about Chinese investors will eventually fade.
It is only a matter of time, he said, before people realize that
suspicion of Chinese investment is "detrimental for the United
States."
(Editing by Jonathan Weber and Gerry Doyle)
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