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China Global M&A Push, 2005 ~ Nowadays

China is Building Some of the World's Biggest Packaged Food Companies
Demand for premium brands in China is growing to accommodate changing consumer tastes

The two-car train chugs out of Master Kong’s Dream Exploration Park in eastern China, filled with children giddy from shooting cartoon cabbages to dunk in animated pots of instant noodles. Next stop: A factory churning out 4,000 packets of the real thing every minute.

They may not inspire the same levels of awe as Shanghai Disneyland, but the noodle-themed playground and nearby assembly lines are propelling Tingyi (Cayman Islands) Holding Corp. into its own world of tomorrow.

The owner of the Master Kong brand makes half the 3.4 million tons of instant noodles eaten annually in China, yet revenue is stagnating as middle-class consumers abandon the salty, fatty cups for healthier options. Tingyi is on a mission to reinvent the humble noodle, pouring millions of dollars into customer education, food science, Olympic Games sponsorships and “Kung Fu Panda” movie shorts to convince diners the cheap meal can be part of their gastronomic aspirations.

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“We want to continue to grow up, and ‘premium up,’ with our Chinese consumers,” Richard Chen, Tingyi's chief technology officer, said at the company's Shanghai research center. “In a couple of years, we will be able to reach the gold standard, which is when you can’t tell our noodles apart from what you would get in a noodle shop.”

China’s packaged-food market, valued at $226 billion by Euromonitor International Plc, is helping forge domestic companies that rival some of the world's biggest food giants, from state behemoth Cofco Corp. to dairy company Inner Mongolia Yili Industrial Group Co. and meat producer WH Group Ltd. But swaying Chinese taste buds may be easier than swaying hearts and minds. In a nation where even eggs and milk can be deadly fakes, consumers have become cynical about home-grown food and are willing to pay a premium for foreign brands they assume contain better ingredients and had to pass tougher safety checks.
The opportunity to charge premium rates and the shortage of domestic supply for products is pushing companies like WH Group and Bright Dairy & Food Co. to look abroad for ammunition to help them keep their noodles, pork and yogurt in kitchen cabinets and on refrigerator shelves.

Chinese companies have announced more than 80 overseas deals valued at about $12 billion in the food industry since 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s the year after at least six people died from drinking melamine-laced concoctions sold as milk. Yili said just this month it bid $850 million for Danone SA's Stonyfield brand.

“The food companies have been smartest in moving up the value chain,” said Shaun Rein, managing director of China Market Research Group in Shanghai. “They understand the fears and are going as high-end as possible.”



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Hogs are butchered at the Smithfield Foods facility in Missouri, U.S.
Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

The biggest deal was in 2013, when WH Group acquired Virginia-based Smithfield Foods Inc., the world's largest pork producer, for $6.95 billion. Smithfield owns Armour salami, Smithfield bacon and Eckrich sausages, among others.

Having American brands gives WH Group a way to reach upscale consumers in the country that eats about half of the world’s pork, said Kenneth Sullivan, chief executive officer of Smithfield Foods and an executive director of Hong Kong-listed WH Group.

Chinese per-capita consumption is 39.4 kilograms (87 pounds) a year, and domestic hog farms can’t keep up with demand. U.S. pork exports to China and Hong Kong totaled 545,000 metric tons last year, a 61 percent increase from 2015, according to the U.S. Meat Export Federation.

There is a bit of a halo effect with the idea that the U.S. has very high food-safety standards and a high food-safety record,” Sullivan said.

As a result, Smithfield is considered a premium brand in China, with prices at least 20 percent higher than WH Group’s Chinese labels.

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WH Group opened a processing plant in Zhengzhou, China, to help meet demand in a country that eats half the world's pork.
Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
Smithfield can’t export sausage, ham and bacon from its U.S. factories because China prohibits imports of processed meat. So WH Group opened an 800 million-yuan ($116 million) factory in Zhengzhou that will produce 30,000 metric tons of those meats when it reaches full capacity next year.

“The whole idea was to incorporate the everyday protocols that we have in the U.S.,” Sullivan said.

One of the most active acquirers is government-owned Bright Food Group Co., based in Shanghai. China’s second-largest food company is recovering from scandal after its former chairman was sentenced in 2015 to 18 years in prison for embezzlement and bribery.

In December, listed subsidiary Shanghai Maling Aquarius Co. Ltd., a producer of canned meat, completed a deal for half of Silver Fern Farms Ltd., a New Zealand meat cooperative, for the equivalent of about $191 million at that time.

That capped a regional buying spree for the conglomerate that included New Zealand dairy company Synlait Milk Ltd. and Manassen Foods Australia Pty Ltd., which sells cheese, crackers, smoked salmon and other products.

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Bright Food's buying spree includes New Zealand's Synlait Milk, which exports powder to China.
Photographer: Brendon O'Hagan/Bloomberg
In 2015, it bought control of Tnuva Food Industries Ltd. in a deal valuing the Israeli dairy company at about $2.16 billion.

“Walking out of China to use global food resources and the global food market can help us bring the best food technology into Bright Food, and can also be a channel to push out Bright Food’s domestic products to the world,” Pan Jianjun, a spokesman, said in an email.

The rapid expansion of China's food industry also brought casualties. Shenyang-based China Huishan Dairy Holdings Co., which once touted how it imported 250,000 cows into northern pastures to provide premium milk, rocked the Hong Kong stock market in March when its shares plunged 85 percent following an emergency meeting with creditors. Trading is suspended.

Noodle-maker Tingyi, meanwhile, is spending more of its money in-house. Innovators at the food giant once focused on practical advancements such as foldable forks and double-layer packaging so working-class Chinese could wolf down noodles on their commutes.

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Now, they work out of a 500 million-yuan research complex in Shanghai, with Tingyi tapping the nation’s top food-science university programs and partnering with Japanese companies such as Itochu Corp. to develop chemical-free flavorings and palm oil-free noodles.

“The most advanced instant-noodle technology will be here in China because the potential of this market goes beyond anywhere else,” said Chen, the chief technology officer.

Master Kong and his competitors seek to stem a 12 percent decline in China’s total instant-noodle sales since 2013 to 82 billion yuan, with a further drop to 62 billion yuan forecast by 2021, according to London-based Euromonitor.

Tingyi’s sales declined 23 percent from 2013 to 2016, and instant-noodle sales fell 10 percent last year to $3.24 billion from a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Sales of products including mid-end packets and snack noodles plunged 39 percent in the first quarter of 2017, compared with a year earlier, the company said May 22.

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Sales of Master Kong brand instant noodles declined from 2013 to 2016 as consumers sought healthier alternatives.
Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
Chen said the lost cups can be recovered. He points to Japan, where 60 packets of instant noodles are consumed per capita every year, compared with 30 in China.

Yet Tingyi still has work to do. At the Master Kong park, visitor Chen Huiling said she allows her sons, aged 12 and 10, to eat instant noodles once every few weeks, when she’s too tired to cook.

“I don’t think it’s bad for them,” said Chen, 35. “But it’s still not the same as fresh food, is it?”

—With reporting by Shuping Niu, assisted by Tom Mackenzie and Haze Fan

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/feat...-noodles-are-fattening-up-china-s-food-giants
 
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The biggest deal was in 2013, when WH Group acquired Virginia-based Smithfield Foods Inc., the world's largest pork producer, for $6.95 billion. Smithfield owns Armour salami, Smithfield bacon and Eckrich sausages, among others.
 
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GSR nears $1 billion deal for Nissan battery venture, report says

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Automotive Energy Supply Corp. builds batteries for the Nissan Leaf. The automaker has a majority stake in the unit.

Jonathan Browning and Lulu Yilun Chen


Bloomberg


May 26, 2017 13:32 CET

HONG KONG -- GSR Capital, a Chinese private equity firm with backing from the Hubei provincial government, is nearing a deal to acquire control of a Nissan Motor Co. rechargeable battery unit for about $1 billion, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The firm is in advanced talks with Nissan about buying a stake in Automotive Energy Supply Corp., which makes the lithium ion cells for the Japanese company's Leaf electric car, the people said. The parties aim to announce an agreement within the next two weeks, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the discussions are confidential. The Hubei government-backed Yangtze River Industry Fund is contributing at least 20 percent of the GSR Capital fund doing the AESC deal, the people said.

Nissan owns 51 percent of AESC, while NEC Corp. holds the remainder.

GSR Capital sees value in building an independent battery supplier to multiple automakers and is considering moving some of AESC's manufacturing to Hubei, the people said. The central Chinese recently earmarked 547 billion yuan ($80 billion) for investments in areas like clean energy to modernize its economy.

"This deal would bring huge benefits to both sides," said Takeshi Miyao, an analyst at Tokyo-based market researcher Carnorama. "China is planning to manufacture batteries in the country as they encourage use of electric vehicles and AESC would be a perfect target as it has good battery technology."

Lighting deals

Sizeable Chinese acquisitions of Japanese assets are rare, with transactions this year totaling just $11.4 million, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Last year, Japan attracted less than $700 million of deals from firms based in Asia's biggest economy, the data show.

There's no certainty the talks will lead to a transaction, and another buyer could still emerge.

Nissan said in an emailed statement it's committed to producing the best electric vehicle solutions and continually evaluates its business strategy in pursuit of optimal products and business structure. Representatives for GSR and NEC declined to comment, while the Yangtze River Industry Fund didn't respond to emailed queries.

GSR Capital is led by Chairman Sonny Wu, who has fronted several attempts at multibillion-dollar overseas purchases. Wu pursued acquisitions of Osram and Royal Philips’s lighting unit last year, people familiar with the matter said earlier, though in both cases the discussions didn't lead to a transaction. Another deal he spearheaded, the $2.8 billion takeover of the Philips Lumileds business by his GO Scale Capital fund, was blocked by a U.S. security panel.

Vehicle subsidies

Wu's funds have invested in Lattice Power Corp., which is developing cheaper and more efficient LED chips, and Chinese electric-car maker Xin Da Yang. GSR Ventures is also a backer of Boston Power, which builds lithium ion batteries for electric cars and buses.

Global automakers have been seeking to make inroads in China, the world's biggest electric-vehicle market. The Chinese government has required EV producers to choose from a list of approved battery vendors, all domestic makers, to receive subsidies.

Nissan and NEC established the battery unit in 2007, more than three years ahead of the Leaf's introduction. The Japanese automaker has been selling stakes in businesses including parts manufacturer Calsonic Kansei Corp. and forklift truck maker UniCarriers Corp. to focus on developing technology including electric powertrains and autonomous driving. Nissan is also looking to push into Southeast Asia with its purchase of a stake in Mitsubishi Motors Corp.

http://europe.autonews.com/article/...n-deal-for-nissan-battery-venture-report-says
 
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[URL='http://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshepard/']New Silk Road: China Takes A 49% Cut Of Khorgos Gateway, A Major Overland Silk Road Port
Wade Shepard
, CONTRIBUTOR[/URL]
2017-03-29-15.01.36-1200x900.jpg


COSCO and Lianyungang port signed a deal for 49% of the Khorgos Gateway dry port in Kazakhstan.

It’s now official: China’s COSCO Shipping and the Port of Lianyungang have signed on to take a 49% cut of Kazakhstan’s epic Khorgos Gateway dry port. The deal was signed at the Belt and Road summit in Beijing on May 15 for an undisclosed amount.

Khorgos Gateway sits within the broader Khorgos Eastern Gate SEZ — a massive 600-hectare development area that is strategically positioned in Kazakhstan right on the border with China. Not long ago, the place was about as remote as it gets — being just a tick or two from the Eurasian Pole of Inaccessibility, the farthest point on earth from an ocean.

So why would the world’s largest marine logistics operator have any interest in a place that literally couldn’t be farther from the sea? The answer is found in the New Silk Road — the pell mell network of various international trade pacts, customs blocs, political endeavors, and mega-projects that are headlined by China’s Belt and Road initiative. The linking up of major players in China’s shipping industry with the Kazakh dry port shows the developing synergy between Kazakhstan’s Nurly Zhol infrastructure building program with China's Silk Road Economic Belt.

Khorgos Gateway has successfully positioned itself as the central station of the New Silk Road. Sitting right at the heart of an emerging network of trans-Eurasian rail lines, which directly connect 27 cities in China with 11 cities in Europe, goods flow in from China to be consolidated and transshipped to destinations all over the Eurasian landmass. After just one year of full-fledged operation, the port is already handling over 1/5 of their 2020 goal of 500,000 TEU per year, and with COSCO and the Port of Lianyungang in the mix, cargo volumes are expected to receive a massive boost.

This deal signifies a monumental next step for Khorgos Gateway, as without investment from an array of international players, the emerging ports and SEZs of the New Silk Road are little more than skeletons of infrastructure. Such investment is what makes these places really come alive.

The Port of Lianyungang is one of the starting points of the central corridor of the overland Silk Road between China and Europe. A rail line and the emerging Western Europe-Western China highway — which will extend all the way to St. Petersburg, Russia when completed — move in tandem all the way across China and directly link in with Khorgos Gateway before moving on to Europe beyond. It is one of the larger seaports in the world, moving 200 million tons of cargo and 5 million containers per year. KTZ Express, the Kazakh logistics empire, also operates a terminal there.

While COSCO is the one of the world’s shipping giants, with over 1,100 ships sailing the seas, moving over 1.6 million containers each year between 254 ports in 79 countries. As a state-owned enterprise, the company has been a very active player in China’s Belt and Road initiative — Chinese President Xi Jinping’s signature foreign policy endeavor — with major holdings up and down its various land and sea routes -- including Greece’s Piraeus port. This January, COSCO received a $26.1 billion chit from China Development Bank to further invest in Belt and Road projects.

Next moves?

Watch for DP World, the Dubai shipping giant who currently advises at the Khorgos Eastern Gate SEZ, to finally make good on their long-touted promise to become actual investors in the zone.

In other words, watch for this once obscure shipping hub in the heart of Eurasia to not only come alive but thrive.


https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadesh...a-major-overland-silk-road-port/#28d6624a1373
 
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HONG KONG -- GSR Capital, a Chinese private equity firm with backing from the Hubei provincial government, is nearing a deal to acquire control of a Nissan Motor Co. rechargeable battery unit for about $1 billion, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The firm is in advanced talks with Nissan about buying a stake in Automotive Energy Supply Corp., which makes the lithium ion cells
Good deal by GSR Capital! Navigant Research’s report on lithium-ion battery suppliers indicates the top three leaders globally are LG Chem, Panasonic and Samsung SDI. Nissan-backed AESC leads the second pack of contenders.

Citation:
LG Chem, Panasonic & Samsung SDI Are Top 3 Lithium-Ion Battery Makers In Transport Sector
http://insideevs.com/lg-chem-panaso...-lithium-ion-battery-makers-transport-sector/
 
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China Tech Billionaire Buys Control Of US Gay Dating App Grindr
Wednesday, 13 Jan 2016

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One of China’s newly minted technology billionaires signed a deal to buy a controlling stake in Grindr, the world’s biggest gay social-networking app.Beijing Kunlun Tech Co., an Internet games developer, offered US$93 million in cash for 60 percent of New Grindr LLC, the company said in a statement to the Shenzhen stock exchange. Beijing Kunlun’s chairman, Zhou Yahui, became a billionaire after the company listed shares last year.

http://www.wealthx.com/articles/201...ire-buys-control-of-us-gay-dating-app-grindr/


Chinese company to buy US gay app Grindr
2017/05/25

Chinese company Beijing Kunlun Tech has announced on Tuesday that it will acquire remaining 38.47% stake in the world's largest gay social network app Grindr for $152m.

The company bought a 61.53% stake in Grindr with $93m in January 2016, according to National Business Daily. The new purchase will make the company the sole owner of Grindr Holding Company.

Kunlun announced that it will participate in the daily operating management of Grindr after the purchase. Based in Los Angeles, Grindr matches its users based on their photos and locations. It has more than 27 million registered users from 196 countries, over 30% of whom are in the US.

http://gbtimes.com/business/chinese-company-buy-us-gay-app-grindr
 
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Yancoal seeks expansion in Hunter Valley with $710m bid for Mitsubishi’s mines
Cecilia Jamasmie | 2 days ago

yancoal-seeks-expansion-in-hunter-valley-with-710m-bid-for-mitsubishis-mines.jpeg

Yancoal operates four coal mines in Australia and manages five others across the country, employing about 2,000 people. (Image courtesy of Yancoal.)

Yancoal (ASX:YAL), the subsidiary of China’s Yanzhou Coal Mining that is buying Rio Tinto’s thermal coal assets in Australia’s Hunter Valley, is now going after Mitsubishi’s mines in the area.

The coal miner offered the Japanese company Thursday $710 million for its 32.4% stake in the Hunter Valley Operations mine (HVO), majority owned by Rio Tinto itself.

The bid fulfils Yancoal’s obligation to make a “tag-along offer” to Mitsubishi under the deal with Rio Tinto to acquire its thermal coal division, Coal & Allied Industries. If it goes through, the transaction will make Yancoal the new majority owner of HVO, adding to the company’s other coal operations across New South Wales, Queensland and Western Australia.

Yancoal CEO Reinhold Schmidt said that with Rio’s support, the company was looking forward to progressing the next steps in the Coal & Allied transaction to become Australia’s largest pure-play coal producer.

The Foreign Investment Review Board approved such transaction last month.

Mitsubishi has until June 23 to accept today’s offer.

http://www.mining.com/yancoal-seeks-expansion-hunter-valley-710m-bid-mitsubishis-mines/
 
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China sovereign fund buys European warehouse company
Published June 03, 2017 Markets Associated Press

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CIC Headquarter, Beijing

BEIJING – China's sovereign wealth fund is expanding its presence in Europe by acquiring a warehouse company in a 12.25 billion euro ($13.8 billion) deal.

China Investment Corp.'s purchase of Logicor from U.S. investment firm Blackstone Group adds to a multibillion-dollar string of Chinese acquisitions in Europe.

Logicor operates in 17 countries including Britain, Germany and France, from Blackstone Group, a U.S. investment firm. Blackstone said the company was "ideally positioned" to profit from growth in e-commerce.

Chinese companies are in the midst of a multibillion-dollar global buying spree to acquire brands, technology and real estate.

They are especially active in Europe, which they see as more welcoming than the United States, where security reviews of some Chinese purchases have made potential buyers skittish.

CIC was founded in 2007 to invest a portion of China's foreign reserves. It has more than $810 billion in assets.

The fund also owns stakes in companies that operate London's Heathrow Airport and the British capital's water system.

http://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/...ign-fund-buys-european-warehouse-company.html
 
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Chinese Firm Buys 253-Year-Old French Crystal Maker Baccarat
by Thomas Mulier June 2, 2017, 2:48 PM GMT+8 June 2, 2017, 3:42 PM GMT+8
  • Investment company buys majority stake for about $184 million
  • Baccarat says new shareholder to aid expansion in Asia
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The logo of the Baccarat Crystalworks firm is seen in Paris, France, March 3, 2016. REUTERS/Jacky Naegelen

French crystal maker Baccarat is changing hands 253 years after it was founded by royal decree of King Louis XV.


Chinese investment company Fortune Fountain Capital Ltd. is buying a controlling stake from Baccarat’s private-equity owners for about 164 million euros ($184 million), according to a statement Friday.

The deal ends more than a decade of ownership by Starwood Capital, which took over the brand from the Taittinger family in 2005. Buyout firm L Catterton, which is backed by luxury-goods leader LVMH, took a stake in 2012, and not much more than 10 percent of the shares are publicly traded.

Baccarat is known for sets of champagne glasses that cost as much as $990 and chandeliers that can cost thousands. It also sells a $5,000 glass chair.

The brand’s finest works include a crystal balustrade at Istanbul’s Dolmabahce Palace and its designs have been collected by royal families including that of Portugal. Some Baccarat pieces have been exhibited at the Louvre.

In recent years, revenue has been declining. Annual sales have dropped in each of the past four years and reached 148.3 million euros in 2016. Baccarat had a profit of 3.2 million euros last year, and prior to that was unprofitable for five out of seven years.

Expansion Plans

Fortune Fountain, owned by descendants of renowned Chinese calligrapher Wang Xizhi, agreed to buy an 88.8 percent stake from Starwood and L Catterton for 222.70 euros a share. The price is 14 percent less than Thursday’s closing share price for Baccarat, which has risen about 19 percent in the last two weeks on speculation of a possible takeover.

Fortune Fountain will offer other shareholders the same price for their shares, though doesn’t plan to delist the company, the crystal maker said.

Baccarat said the purchase would help it accelerate its expansion plans in Asia and the Middle East. Fortune Fountain will maintain production and jobs in the French town it’s named for, and Daniela Riccardi will continue leading the company as chief executive officer, Baccarat said.

Societe Generale advised Fortune Fountain, while Messier Maris & Associes acted for the sellers.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...s-centuries-old-french-crystal-maker-baccarat
 
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China's Fortune Fountain Capital to buy French crystal maker Baccarat
Fri Jun 2, 2017 | 1:30pm BST

Chinese investment group Fortune Fountain Capital (FFC) said on Friday it has signed an agreement to buy a controlling stake in French crystal maker Baccarat (CDBP.PA) from U.S investment firms Starwood Capital Group and L Catterton.

Under the binding agreement, FFC will pay 222.70 euros per share, valuing the 88.8 percent stake at 164 million euros (£143 million).

The acquisition of the renowned Paris-based firm, founded in 1764, is another illustration of the growing weight of Chinese investments in the France, whose tourist and wine industries have a great appeal in the world's second-biggest economy.

The price reflects a 2.1 percent premium compared with Baccarat's closing stock price on May 18. Press reports then about a potential sale of the company triggered a spike in the share price, which closed at 259.90 euros on Thursday.

Baccarat turned a profit for the first time in four years in 2016. Its revenue over the period amounted to 148.3 million euros with earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) of 12.9 million euros.

"The acquisition... will enable Baccarat to accelerate its strategic international plans, including expansion into emerging markets such as Asia and the Middle East, as well as continued growth across existing developed markets, particularly North America," FFC said in a statement.​

The Chinese financial firm said it would keep the current workforce and management, including chief executive Daniela Riccardi.

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Chinese investors poured a record $23 billion into Europe in 2015, including $3.6 billion in France, the number three destination for Chinese deals after Britain and Germany, according to a research report by U.S. law firm Baker & McKenzie.

China's Fosun (0056.HK) took control of French holiday group Club Med in 2015 and is in talks to buy a stake in French ski resorts operator Compagnie des Alpes (CDAF.PA).

Jin Jiang International also bought Europe's second-biggest budget operator Louvre Hotels for 1.3 billion euros in 2015.

Politicians in France and Germany have expressed concern at the rapid advance of Chinese companies in Europe, with former French President Francois Hollande balking at the prospect of city of Shanghai-controlled Jin Jiang gaining control of French hotels group AccorHotels (ACCP.PA).

(Reporting by Alan Charlish in Gdynia and Pascale Denis in Paris; Additional reporting by Dominique Vidalon and Mathieu Rosemain; Editing by Michael Perry and Adrian Croft)


https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-baccarat-sale-idUKKBN18T1QP
 
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Wanda acquires rock 'n' roll marathon organizer
By Dai Tian | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-06-06

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Cheerleaders line the route of the Suja Rock 'n' Roll San Diego Marathon & Half Marathon in San Diego, California, June 1, 2014.[Photo/VCG]

Dalian Wanda Group has continued its buying spree in sports industry with a latest addition —a rock 'n' roll marathon organizer.

The conglomerate's triathlon arm Ironman announced the acquisition of Competitor Group (CGI) and its sports media outlets over the weekend.

Headquartered in San Diego, CGI holds a rock 'n' roll marathon series in 30 cities that attracts over 600,000 athletes each year, alongside with some 20 other running races worldwide, according to the company.

Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province, will become the first Asian city to hold such event later this year.

The series, which debuted in 1998, has made a splash in the industry by putting live bands and cheer teams along the running, creating a block-party atmosphere for participants.

The deal will make Ironman the largest running event producer in the world, according to a statement released by the two companies. The statement didn't disclose the investment amount.

Last year, at least 328 marathons were held in China attracting over 2.8 million participants, according to industry estimate.

"The ability to help globalize the successful rock 'n' roll marathon series brings about many opportunities to demonstrate our leadership in this industry," said Andrew Messick, Ironman's CEO.

Wanda Group acquired the Florida-based triathlon company for $650 million in 2015 before introducing the event to the country.

Its recent investments in sports sector also include a 20 percent stake in the leading football club Atletico de Madrid and the acquisition of Swiss marketing firm Infront Sports & Media.
 
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Hytera-Global-Summit-2017.jpg


Hytera Communications Corporation Limited (SHE:002583; 52% owned by billionaire Chen Qingzhou) offers complete and customized communication solutions to government, public security, utility, transportation, enterprise & business for higher organizational efficiency. Founded in 1993 in Shenzhen China, Hytera has grown to large customer base in more than 120 countries across the world. As one of the few corporations that masters TETRA, DMR and PDT technologies, and produces all series of products and solutions of all these mainstream digital protocols, Hytera leads in the draft of digital trunking standard. Acquisition of Rohde & Schwarz TETRA business in August 2011 further strengthened competitive edge in TETRA market. Hytera's competent R&D team of over 1200 engineers in 5 research centers, establishes a state-of-the-art platform for digital technology research, product design and application development.

http://www.hytera.com/navigation.htm?columnId=223&columnType=content&pageType=aboutus
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Hytera completes Sepura Group takeover
May 26, 2017

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China's Hytera Communications has completed its acquisition of Cambridge-based digital radio products manufacturer Sepura Group. The takeover of Sepura adds approximately 700 professionals and staff to Hytera's organisation, along with research facilities and offices in Cambridge, Zaragoza and Helsinki. The £74m deal was agreed in December 2016 and was cleared by both UK and German authorities in the months that followed. Qingzhou Chen, founder, chairman and president of Hytera, said: "Sepura and its subsidiaries provide Hytera greater market share in the UK, Europe and North America, as well as strong channel partnerships through a worldwide dealer network."

Read the full article at https://www.insidermedia.com/insider/central-and-east/hytera-completes-sepura-group-takeover
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Hytera Communications Finalizes Acquisition of Norsat
By Kendall Russell | June 1, 2017

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Norsat International announced that it has entered into an amended arrangement agreement with Hytera Project, a subsidiary of Hytera Communications, under which Hytera will acquire all the issued and outstanding shares of Norsat for $11.25 per share. The proposed transaction values Norsat at an equity value of approximately $69 million.

Read the full article at http://www.satellitetoday.com/telecom/2017/06/01/hytera-communications-finalizes-acquisition-norsat/
 
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Chinese investment pours into Israel as US tightens regulations
Posted on May 15, 2017 by JNS.org

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (center) with Chinese internet entrepreneur Robin Li (left) in Beijing, March 21, 2017. Credit: Haim Zach/GPO.

(JNS.org) Chinese firms are failing to close business deals in the U.S. due to tightening American commercial regulations, prompting Asian firms to seek out new cutting-edge markets—such as Israel—for investing large amounts of Chinese capital.

In 2016, Chinese investment in Israel increased tenfold to a record $16.5 billion as capital from China poured into start-ups in the Jewish state’s high-tech, cybersecurity and medical technology sectors. A notable increase in these investments began towards the end of 2016, around the time new U.S. regulations and protectionist policies started coming into effect.

Juxtaposing the significant increase in Chinese investment in Israel, data indicates Chinese investments in the U.S. decreased a record $26.3 billion in 2016.

“I’m flying to Israel in May where we’ve selected more than 10 potential targets,” Li Dongsheng, chairman of the TCL Corporation electronics company, told Reuters in a report published last week.

Chen Shuang, CEO of China Everbright Limited, a Hong Kong-based investment branch of the state-owned China Everbright Group, is also seeking to invest in Israel’s “start-up nation.”

“Our Israel-focused fund has already invested in four local firms there, and we plan to invest in another three to four within this year,” Shuang told Reuters.

Israeli companies have expressed similar enthusiasm regarding the increased Chinese interest.

“We are not worried to take Chinese money over U.S. money. If you can deliver, there are endless opportunities,” Tomer Bar-Zeev of Israel’s ironSource, which builds various tools for app developers.

http://www.jns.org/news-briefs/2017...rael-as-us-tightens-regulations#.WRr1zFMrLBI=
 
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“We are not worried to take Chinese money over U.S. money. If you can deliver, there are endless opportunities,” Tomer Bar-Zeev of Israel’s ironSource, which builds various tools for app developers.

That's a fair way to look at it. :enjoy:

Plus, the USA is currently in the process of isolating themselves from all their allies, like when they pulled out of the Paris Climate Agreement.

More opportunities from China, in a business sense and even in a strategic sense. Considering how close China has become to traditional US allies (like in Europe). When push comes to shove they know that they have more business interests with China than they do with the US.
 
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