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BEIJING, April 9 -- China Ocean Shipping Company
(COSCO) announced on Friday it had bought China Ocean Shipping Tally Company
(COSTACO), in a move expected to sharpen the competitiveness of the country's
largest shipping firm.
The merger is seen as a big step in China's State-owned enterprises (SOEs) reform because COSCO was on the
central government's list of 30 to 50 promising large SOEs, which are being
strengthened to tackle global competition
"The merger has extended our business chain and also
made us both more competitive," COSCO President Wei Jiafu told China Daily.
He said COSTACO, the country's largest shipping tally
company, has become a subsidiary of COSCO, the world's second largest shipping
company in terms of capacity.
Wei, whose company reaped a net profit of 12 billion
yuan (US$1.4 billion) in 2004, promised the merger would not lead to job losses
at COSTACO, which has 70 branches nationwide and employs more than 7,000 people.
COSTACO's business ranges from cargo measuring and
weighing bulk cargo to supervising loading and unloading operations.
"Before merging, COSCO also had branches to operate
tally services, and they have all been transferred to COSTACO," said Wei.
COSTACO said it would benefit from the merger by
sharing the business network of its new parent firm, which already has 25
subsidiaries.
"We can become more competitive in tallying services
and also extend to other services with financial support from our parent
company," said COSTACO's Managing Director Lu Shengxuan.
Friday's takeover dropped the number of large SOEs
under the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the
State Council (SASAC) from 178 to 177.
"These steps will continue if the government is
determined to make its large SOEs capable of taking on global competition," said
Lin Yueqin, a researcher with the Economics Research Institute under the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences.
China started speeding up SOE reform in the early
1990s and now the government is focusing on improving efficiency and global
competitiveness, especially after China entered World Trade Organization.
Two years ago, the State Council selected 30 to 50
large SOEs which were expected to evolve into transnationals.
However, Lin said China's large enterprises still lag
international players in terms of management, marketing, technical development
and product innovation.
"I am concerned about the trends, even though some
SOEs are large in terms of scale," said Lin.
But COSCO's president said his company has attached
great importance to the promotion of its brand, integrating investment scale,
management innovation and business expansion. "We have already set up a perfect
governance structure and proper internal systems and we are taking the lead in
SOE reform," said Wei.
While expanding the information technology and real
estate arms of his firm, Wei said he would also up the firm's shipping capacity
across the globe.
He said the overall shipping capacity of the
company's container carriers will rise to 800,000 TEUs (twenty-foot-equivalent
unit) by 2010 to enter the world's top three. It currently sits seventh.
(Source: China Daily) |