BEIJING, July 24 (Xinhua) -- First-half Hong Kong investment in the
mainland nearly doubled in value from a year earlier, the Ministry of Commerce
reported on Thursday, although it's unclear how much of this investment was
actually speculative funds or so-called "hot money."
From January to June, the mainland approved the establishment of 6,900 Hong
Kong-invested projects, down 8.2 percent year-on-year, but investment actually
used soared 94.5 percent to 23.39 billion U.S. dollars.
Given the close trade and economic ties between the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region (SAR) and the mainland, analysts said, at least some of
the investment might be speculative funds.
That's because the amount invested surged while the number of projects
fell, at the same time that numerous foreign-funded processing enterprises were
closing in the Pearl River Delta, adjacent to Hong Kong, according to professor
Ding Zhijie with the Beijing-based University of International Business and
Economics.
Ding said given the close Hong Kong-mainland relationship, it was much
easier for hot money seeking to profit from interest and exchange rate
differentials to enter the mainland through Hong Kong.
Also, he said, "in comparison with other channels, it is much easier for
speculative funds that entered the mainland in the form of direct investment
from Hong Kong to leave. This is more hazardous."
China has recently tightened control over foreign direct investment (FDI)
and intensified scrutiny of investors' credentials. The aim is to curb the
influx of short-term speculative funds, which has added to the inflationary
pressure on the mainland.
According to the Ministry of Commerce, as of the end of June, the mainland
had approved the establishment of 292,663 Hong Kong-funded projects, involving
331.93 billion U.S. dollars of capital actually used, or 40.7 percent of total
FDI used in the mainland.
The figures are cumulative since 1978, the start of the reform and
opening-up polices on the mainland.
First-half mainland-Hong Kong trade was 97 billion U.S. dollars, up 8
percent year-on-year. The total included 90.65 billion U.S. dollars in exports
to Hong Kong, up 7.8 percent, and 6.35 billion U.S. dollars in imports from the
SAR, up 9.8 percent.