Foreign Policy Blogs

Today's News: International Investment Losses; Declining FDI; Increasing Outbound Projects

China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), the country’s exclusive manager of almost  $2 trillion foreign exchange reserves, has lost more than $80 billion in its diversification into global equities. Details of SAFE’s holdings are only disclosed to the top Chinese leadership, a fact that makes exact estimates about China’s losses in its international investments rather complicated. Conservative estimates by economists from the Council on Foreign Relations in New York hover around $160 billion in overseas equities and a subsequent loss due to falling stock markets of $80 billion.

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in China continued its decline in February and dropped 15.8 percent from a year earlier. The youngest decline follows a 32.6 percent drop in January and marks the fifth month of falling FDI in China.

China’s outbound investments rose 24.8 percent in the first two months of 2009, according to the Ministry of Commerce. Overseas contractual projects reached around $8 billion as Chinese companies are increasing their international outreach.

 

Author

Andreas Seitz

Andreas Seitz holds a MS with Highest Honors in International Management for China from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London. During his undergraduate and postgraduate studies in Cologne (Germany), Dalian (China) and London (UK) he focussed on macro- and microeconomic issues in China. He has worked as a China consultant in Germany, China and the United States with a special concentration on market entry strategies, small- and medium-sized enterprises and human resource management.

Areas of Focus:
Economy; Trade; Diplomacy

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