China's first deficit in foreign investment signals West's 'de-risking'
pressure
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[November 06, 2023] SHANGHAI
(Reuters) -China recorded its first-ever quarterly deficit in foreign
direct investment (FDI), according to balance of payments data,
underscoring capital outflow pressure and Beijing's challenge in wooing
overseas companies in the wake of a "de-risking" move by Western
governments.
Direct investment liabilities - a broad measure of FDI that includes
foreign companies' retained earnings in China - were a deficit of $11.8
billion during the July-September period, according to preliminary
balance of payments data.
That's the first quarterly shortfall since China's foreign exchange
regulator began compiling the data in 1998, which could be linked to the
impact of "de-risking" by Western countries from China, as well as
China's interest rate disadvantage.
"Some of the weakness in China's inward FDI may be due to multinational
companies repatriating earnings," Goldman Sachs wrote.
"With interest rates in China 'lower for longer' while interest rates
outside of China 'higher for longer', capital outflow pressures are
likely to persist."
Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital Economics,
said the unusually-large interest rate gap "has led firms to remit their
retained earnings out of the country".
Although he sees little evidence that foreign companies are, on
aggregate, reducing their presence in China, "we do think that, over the
medium-term at least, increasing geopolitical tensions will hamper
China's ability to attract FDI and instead favour emerging markets that
are more friendly to the West."
Driven by the FDI outflows, China's basic balance - which encompasses
current account and direct investment balances and are more stable than
volatile portfolio investments - recorded a deficit of $3.2 billion, the
second quarterly shortfall on record.
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A view of the city skyline, ahead of the annual National People's
Congress (NPC), in Shanghai, China February 24, 2022. Picture taken
February 24, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
"Given these unfolding dynamics, which are poised to exert pressure
on the RMB, we anticipate a sustained strategic response from
China's authorities," Tommy Xie, head of Greater China Research at
OCBC wrote.
Onshore yuan trading against the dollar also hit record-low volume
in October, official data showed, highlighting authorities'
stepped-up efforts to curb yuan selling.
Xie expects China's central bank to continue counter-cyclical
interventions - including a strong bias in daily yuan fixings and
managing yuan liquidity in the offshore market- to support the
currency in the face of these headwinds.
Latest data shows that onshore volume of yuan trading against the
dollar slumped to a record low of 1.85 trillion yuan ($254.05
billion) in October, a 73% drop from the August level.
The People's Bank of China has urged major banks to limit trading
and dissuade clients to exchange the yuan for the dollar, sources
have told Reuters.
In September, foreign exchange outflows from China rose sharply to
$75 billion, the biggest monthly figure since 2016, Goldman Sachs
data showed.
($1 = 7.2819 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Shanghai newsroom;Editing by Shri Navaratnam and
Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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