BEIJING, May 28 -- China welcomes more foreign
private equity firms to invest in its real estate, technology and services
industries, the capital's equity exchange said.
"China hasn't sufficiently opened up to foreign
firms" in purchases of state-owned enterprises, said Xiong Yan, president of the
China Beijing Equity Exchange, during an interview on Saturday in Beijing.
"Foreign buyout firms especially have a lot to offer in highly innovative
sectors."
Such firms are stepping up expansion in Asia, where
private equity and buyout transactions climbed sevenfold to 122 billion U.S.
dollars last year, according to data.
Private equity funds will continue to seek
opportunities in the Chinese market and are expected to pump 10 billion dollars
into the country in 2007, according to a high-ranking summit on finance and the
high-tech industry in Beijing.
Statistics show that the 17 Asian private equity
funds now allowed to invest in China raised a total of 7.6 billion dollars in
the country during the first three months of the year, more than three times the
amount in the same period last year.
In China, the government has expressed concern that
buyout firms only seek short-term profits, forcing Washington-based Carlyle
Group to cut its proposed stake in a state enterprise.
Carlyle Group, manager of the biggest U.S. buyout fund,
twice scaled back its planned investment in Chinese machinery maker Xugong Group
Construction Machinery Co, after China said the nation's biggest equipment
makers should remain under state control. Carlyle's original October 2005 bid,
which offered 375 million dollars for 85 percent of Xugong, was the first by a
private equity firm for a major Chinese SOE. In March, it agreed to pay 1.8
billion yuan (235.2 million dollars) for 45 percent of the equipment maker.
"China welcomes all investors with deep pockets and a
long-term investment approach," Xiong said. "Though we'll naturally be more
selective about bringing in overseas investors as our economy develops and the
total amount of foreign investment in the country grows."
Investment from private equity funds reached 738
billion dollars globally in 2006, of which 11.7 billion dollars were invested in
the Chinese market, according to statistics from Zero2IPO, a service provider of
China's venture capital and private equity sector.
The China Beijing Equity Exchange was set up in
February 2004. It serves as a trading platform for assets including shares in
state-owned firms, intellectual property and innovative financial products,
according to the equity exchange's Website.
(Source: Shanghai Daily/Agencies)