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China Economy Forum

:partay:
Another funny article. Thanks for making my day Martian

“There’s too much quality risk in China to produce there,” Takashi Yamamoto, executive vice president of Lexus International and an engineer who’s worked at Toyota for 33 years. The company also still has to improve the brand’s awareness and standing among consumers. “When that difficulty is gone, maybe local production is likely to be launched in China, maybe several decades later,” he said.

--->several decades later, China will be using electric cars. Lexus? Why would people buy a Lexus when BMW and Mercedes is more high end for a lower price?

"The 5 Series cars produced at BMW’s plant in Shenyang in northeastern China have won top ranking in J.D. Power & Associates’ quality award for the past four years"

---->ok so good so far,

"New-vehicle owners reported 105 problems per 100 vehicles in J.D. Power’s China initial quality study, released last week. The number of problems reported has fallen from 168 in 2010, and was lower than the 112 industry average for the U.S. market this year."

---->Then this

'“It doesn’t necessarily mean that China vehicles have better quality,..Geoff Broderick, an automotive analyst for J.D. Power, wrote in an e-mail."

--->:disagree: He forgot to mention the US car industries have 100 years of producing cars but still can't get the Mustang right even after 60 years of production

Western spin doctor. This is how they manipulate information and create opinion as opposed to facts.
 
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China's CNNC may buy into French nuclear company
November 3, 2015

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An Areva building. [File photo]


Areva said on Monday it had signed a memorandum of understanding for a possible partnership with China National Nuclear Corporation that could see the Chinese group take a minority stake in the French nuclear company.

The partnership would also cover "uranium mining, front end, recycling, logistics, decommissioning and dismantling", Areva said in a statement.

The deal excludes the reactor business that French power group EDF is buying from Areva, the company said.

"This project offers numerous opportunities for both AREVA and CNNC," Areva Chairman Philippe Varin said in the statement following a ceremony in Beijing.

"Strengthening the cooperation with our Chinese partners is an integral factor for Areva's future success," said the statement, issued during a visit to China by French President Francois Hollande.

The French government wants utility EDF and nuclear group Areva, both State-owned, to keep a combined 66 percent stake in Areva's former reactor building arm Areva NP, a government source told Reuters on Oct 6.

With respective stakes of 51 percent for EDF and 15 percent for Areva, this would open the door for outside investors to buy into Areva NP and limit the amount of funds the French state will have to spend on saving the nuclear firm.

After four consecutive years of losses wiped out Areva's capital, EDF said in July it had agreed to buy 51-75 percent of Areva's reactor arm Areva NP, while Areva would keep a maximum 25 percent and EDF would look for other investors to invest in Areva NP.
 
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China becoming a major investment market for Intel

Monica Chen, San Diego; Joseph Tsai

DIGITIMES [Thursday 5 November 2015]

Intel Capital is estimated to invest a total of US$500 million in 2015. Prior to the end of October, Intel Capital had already invested US$168 million in China and with a separate US$1 billion investment in the Tsinghua Unigroup, several funds established specifically for China-based firms, and an US$5.5 billion investment to upgrade its wafer foundry in Dalian. China has already become a key investment market.

Intel Capital unveiled several investments in China in the second half including an US$60 million investment in Hong Kong-based unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) manufacturer Yuneec and a combined US$67 million investment in eight China-based companies covering industries such as smart device equipment, robots and cloud computing service applications.

In early November, Intel announced investment in China-based Perfant Technology, a company that mainly focuses on developing artificial intelligence, machine vision, 3D modeling and virtual reality technologies. Perfant's 360-degree camera, Eyesir, is capable of being used for travel, aerial and virtual reality applications. Perfant is also planning to launch a new product designed based on Intel's RealSense technology.

As for Taiwan, Microprogram Information has received funding from Intel Capital, showing that China's IT industry has grown rapidly in terms of both innovation and technology and Taiwan's IT industry will continue to face increasing competition from China.
 
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Do you think the recent settlement on the SANY/Ralls vs Obama lawsuite will lower or even remove political barrier for Huawei's entry into US?

Obama blocks Chinese wind farm over national security | Page 2
No. Congress and its protectionist lobbyists (e.g. CISCO) will try to block Huawei for as long as possible.

Right now, the US telecoms market is larger than China's.

Since the US can currently maintain a trade advantage by invoking national security (despite Huawei's willingness to share its source code), the protectionist barrier will remain in place.

That won't be true in about five years.

After China's telecoms market becomes larger than the US telecoms market, you will see the US administration (with the full support of Congress) back a open-market competition between Huawei and CISCO.
 
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China's Yashili New Zealand Dairy Company, a subsidiary of China's Yashili International Holdings and Mengniu Dairy Compay, has opened an infant formula plant Pokeno, south of Auckland.

The 145 million U.S. dollar plant which was constructed over three years, will produce formula for the Chinese market.

The new plant will employ 85 staff and have an annual production capacity of around 52-thousand tons of formula product.

Shipments are expected to begin early next year.

China is the fastest growing dairy market in the world.

Its infant formula market is expected to grow to about 21 billion U.S. dollars by 2017. (Photo/CRI)

 
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China's Yashili New Zealand Dairy Company, a subsidiary of China's Yashili International Holdings and Mengniu Dairy Compay, has opened an infant formula plant Pokeno, south of Auckland.

The 145 million U.S. dollar plant which was constructed over three years, will produce formula for the Chinese market.

The new plant will employ 85 staff and have an annual production capacity of around 52-thousand tons of formula product.

Shipments are expected to begin early next year.

China is the fastest growing dairy market in the world.

Its infant formula market is expected to grow to about 21 billion U.S. dollars by 2017. (Photo/CRI)

The world is feeding Chinese appetite. More beef!
 
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China's record $61.64 billion October 2015 trade surplus

Think of China as a company.

Profitability is increasingly dramatically. This means China is becoming more efficient.

Like any multinational company, you eliminate the low-profit product lines and focus on the high-margin ones.

Similarly, China Inc. is shifting its focus into exporting high-speed rail, satellites, and civilian passenger jets (e.g. ARJ-21 and C919).

China's record-setting $61.64 billion October 2015 trade surplus proves that China's strategy is working.

China details record trade surplus | The Australian

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China's regional growth indicates economy bottoming out
BEIJING - China's central and western provinces reported stronger economic growth than their eastern peers during the first three quarters, indicating easing measures may have began to take effect.

At least 27 provincial-level regions in China unveiled their gross domestic product (GDP) growth for the third quarter of this year on Thursday. A total of 17 reported faster GDP growthin the first three quarters than in the first half year, six of them stayed flat, and four regions slowed.

Many attributed stronger growth to a recovery in the property sector, resilient consumption, especially online, and continued growth of emerging industries.

The landlocked western and central provinces have shown stronger growth than their moredeveloped coastal counterparts, with southwestern Chongqing municipality ranking at the topwith 11 percent GDP growth in the first three quarters.

Meanwhile, Beijing, Shanghai and eastern Zhejiang province reported slower growth in the first three quarters than the first half, amid what local officials say is an economic restructuring toward service and tech-intensive industries.

Quarterly growth of the Chinese economy moderated to a six year low of 6.9 percent in the third quarter this year.

Rise of the west

Economic powerhouse Chongqing has retained the top spot for growth among all Chinese provincial-level regions for seven straight months. Chongqing was followed by Guizhou province, also located in the southwest, with 10.8 percent year-on-year growth during the same period.

Consumption-driven growth has been a major contributing factor for their economies, with retail sales in Chongqing and Guizhou growing by 12.3 and 11.5 percent in the first three quarters respectively, above the national average of 10.5 percent.

Zhang Fumin, vice director of the Chongqing Statistics Bureau, also attributed Chongqing's outstanding economic growth to the robust development of manufacturing and the high-tech industry.

The city's manufacturing sector maintained relatively rapid growth, with auto and IT, its two backbone industries, growing 13.4 and 24.8 percent respectively for the first three quarters.

Zhang said the high-tech sector has become a new growth engine, offsetting the impact of slowing traditional industries.

Guizhou's restructuring has proven a healthy source of growth for the province. The economy is reducing its reliance on coal mining and nurturing new areas such as tourism and a more competitive agriculture sector, according to Hu Xiaodeng, professor with Guizhou Academy of Social Sciences, a government think tank.
 
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Europe ‘still bright’ for Hanergy
2015-11-9 0:13:01

HK probe led to end of IKEA partnership: experts

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A solar car on show at Hanergy's headquarters in Beijing in May 2015 Photo: CFP

Hanergy Thin Film Power Group, a leading solar equipment manufacturer in China, said on Sunday that it would retain access to the European market even though its partnership with Sweden-based furniture giant IKEA Group has ended.

In a statement sent to the Global Times, Hanergy said that its partnership with IKEA ended on November 1, but it would continue to offer solar power products and expand its business in Europe.

Hanergy, which is under investigation by Hong Kong regulators, said in the statement that it gained thousands of customers in Europe through the partnership with IKEA, but both parties mutually decided to not renew the contract in order to "seek more beneficial cooperation models".

Hanergy signed a deal with IKEA in 2012 under which Hanergy would install rooftop solar panels for IKEA stores in China and IKEA would sell thin-film solar panels for residential use in its stores in the UK, the Netherlands and Switzerland, according to the information sent to the Global Times on Sunday by Hanergy.

Though Hanergy made no mention of any investigation by Hong Kong stock market regulators in the statement, experts suggested that the probe was the main reason IKEA had declined to renew the partnership with Hanergy.

Shen Fuxin, secretary-general of the Zhejiang Solar Energy Industry Association, told the Global Times Sunday that the contract was not a "major loss" for Hanergy, but the termination of the agreement showed the investigation had caused difficulties for the company.

Hanergy suspended trading of its shares after the price dropped by 47 percent on May 20, chairman of the parent company Hanergy Holding Group Li Hejun said on September 29, according to a post on the company's website. The suspension remained in effect as of Sunday.

The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) launched an investigation into Hanergy, according to a statement on the SFC's website on May 28. The SFC hasn't provided further details about the probe, but media reports have suggested that the company was investigated for alleged related-party transactions.

Li admitted in the post that Hanergy had engaged in the transactions but said they were "no longer relevant" because the parent company was initially a client of the company. He also pointed out other issues at Hanergy, including a complex structure and absence of transparency, and called for reforms.

Shen said the investigation had a significant impact on Hanergy and created uncertainty about the company's future. "A new business model is necessary for the company," Shen noted.

Lin Boqiang, director of the Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, agreed, adding that such an investigation would shake the confidence of investors and business partners in the company and create obstacles to the company's growth.

But the top priority now was for Hanergy to "handle" the investigation to enable the company to move forward in the solar energy business, which has immense growth potential, Lin said.

Although it faces challenges due to the investigation and a slow-growing solar energy market, Hanergy could still be successful in the long run if it continued to innovate and bring new products to the market, Lin added.

Those products could include solar-powered cars, which Hanergy has announced plans to develop. A concept model of the Hanergy SolarPower vehicle made its debut at an event in Beijing on October 19, according to a post on the company's website last month. But experts said it would take some time before the car could go into production.
 
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