Sunday, December 30, 2007

Learn Chinese - Microeconomy: 50 SOEs to go global

BIZCHINA / Biz Media Digest

Microeconomy: 50 SOEs to go global

(Shenzhen Daily)
Updated: 2006-12-21 11:42

The government said it plans to foster up to 50 State-owned enterprises
to become globally competitive to shield them from overseas rivals under
the World Trade Organization.

The government wants to maintain control in companies engaged in national
defense, petrochemicals, power transmission, telecommunications, coal,
civil aviation and shipping, said Li Rongrong, director of China's
State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, caretaker
of the government's assets.

At a Tuesday press conference in Beijing, Li said that the government
will "foster the growth of between 30 and 50 internationally competitive
business groups with their own intellectual property rights and brands."

The government may set up a new asset management company to accelerate
the pace of readjusting assets among its companies, Li said, without
elaborating.

China also wants its largest companies to tap the capital market for
funds. The government will allow business groups such as SAIC Motor Co,
the Chinese partner of Volkswagen AG and General Motors Corp., to inject
assets into publicly traded units, according to Li. Companies will also
be encourage to sell shares on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges,
he said.

"State companies were previously encouraged to list overseas because we
wanted them to enhance their management and because the domestic markets
did not have the capital to accommodate them," Li said. "With the
improvements in the domestic markets, there are more options available to
them to raise funds locally."

State companies will also be required to contribute to the government's
pension fund, in a move to reduce the burden of public finance, Li said.

Most of China's largest companies are already State owned. Baoshan Iron &
Steel Co, the biggest Chinese steelmaker, ranked sixth in the world by
production, is owned by the government.

SAIC Motors, one of China's largest carmakers by sales, is owned by the
Shanghai government. The maker of GM's Buick and Volkswagen's Santana
sedans sold a record 1.05 million cars and trucks last year, 24 percent
more than in 2004 and about 18 percent of the total vehicles sold last
year.

The country's six largest airline groups, including Air China Ltd, China
Southern Airlines Co. and China Eastern Airlines Corp. are government
owned. China Southern is run by the government of Guangdong Province
where the carrier is based while China Eastern is Shanghai-owned.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

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