Report
Chinese FDI in Europe: 2018 Trends and Impact of New Screening Policies
European Union member states are modernizing foreign direct investment screening regimes, which has raised the bar for Chinese takeovers.
Rhodium Group’s China practice uses an integrative, multidisciplinary approach to produce unique insights into China’s economy. We leverage our proprietary datasets and decades of experience to produce incisive analysis of China’s investment flows, market and policy directions, and economic and business cycles.
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Showing 191 – 200 of 300 total results
Report
European Union member states are modernizing foreign direct investment screening regimes, which has raised the bar for Chinese takeovers.
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Last year Chinese companies completed acquisitions and greenfield investments in the United States worth only $4.8 billion, down 84% from $29 billion in 2017 and 90% from $46 billion in 2016. This represents the lowest level seen in seven years.
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A new report produced by Rhodium Group in partnership with Baker and McKenzie explores the diverging patterns of Chinese investment in North America and Europe.
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The new report examines state firms in the context of China’s economic and political system, summarizes the past and present of SOE corporate governance, and analyzes key players in China’s government and at the company level.
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Credit and Credibility examines China's epic growth performance to date, and why it is running out of steam.
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How Beijing manages this stress will be a crucible for commitments to financial reform and the deleveraging campaign.
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In the first half of 2018, Chinese companies completed acquisitions and greenfield investments worth only $1.8 billion – a drop of more than 90% from 1H 2017 and the lowest level in seven years.
cable stayed bridge over a river at night
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In 2017, China’s global outbound investment declined for the first time in more than a decade. According to China’s Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM), outbound FDI by Chinese companies dropped by 29%.
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While Chinese investors enjoy the same rights in the EU market as any European business, China continues to limit access for foreign companies in many sectors.
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The decline in Chinese investment last year was mostly triggered by policy shifts in both China and the US, not commercial dynamics.