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Japanese investments look outside China

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Toshiba to build 'huge solar plant' in Bulgaria
AFP - Friday, January 21


TOKYO (AFP) - – Toshiba and Tokyo Electric Power will team up with the Japanese government to build one of the world's largest solar power stations in Bulgaria, according to a report.

The plant will be built in the eastern city of Yambol by March 2012 at a cost of more than 100 billion yen ($1.2 billion), Japan's Nikkei daily said.

As a European Union member, Bulgaria needs quickly to bolster its sources of renewable energy to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

The EU has an aggressive goal to unilaterally cut carbon emissions by 20 percent by 2020, as compared to a benchmark year of 1990.

By tapping Japanese technology, the eastern European nation aims to pave the way for obtaining 16 percent of its power from renewable energy sources by 2020, up from roughly seven percent now, the report said.

Toshiba, Tokyo Electric, Japanese trader Itochu and the government-backed Innovation Network Corp. of Japan will set up a local joint venture, investing a total of around 50 billion yen.

CEZ Group, the seventh-ranked European power utility, will also take part in the joint venture, contributing as much as 20 billion yen, according to the report.

Japanese Economy and Industry Minister Banri Kaieda and Bulgarian Economy and Energy Minister Traycho Traykov will agree to support the consortium at a meeting early next week, the Nikkei said.
 
No lah, China FDI at record levels, Koreans, Germans investing big time - huge consumer market within China. Read here. Last year FDI in China rose 17.4% to $105.7B. FDI to India for 2010 DROPPED 31% percent to $23B. Wonder if investors are moving their FDI from India to China? :



Foreign Direct Investment in China in 2010 Rises to Record $105.7 Billion
By Bloomberg News - Jan 17, 2011 6:20 PM PT
Foreign direct investment in China rose to a record $105.7 billion last year, underscoring confidence that rising incomes will boost demand in the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

Investment climbed 17.4 percent from a year earlier, the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement in Beijing today. Spending in December rose 15.6 percent from a year earlier to $14 billion. Estimates of five economists surveyed by Bloomberg News for the month ranged from an increase of 29 percent to a decline of 21 percent.

Boosting wages and reducing income inequality will be major tasks over the next five years, China’s leaders said in October after setting targets for the economy for the 12th five-year plan. Samsung Electronics Co. and LG Display Co., the world’s two biggest makers of liquid-crystal displays, received Chinese government approval to build LCD factories in the country and meet surging demand.

“Foreign companies tapping Chinese consumers will benefit from rising wages and will continue to invest in China,” said Alan Liao, an economist at Chinatrust Commercial Bank in Taipei. “There’s a misconception that higher salaries will force companies out of China, this may apply to low-margin textiles or toy manufacturers, but it’s not true for value-added service sectors and high-margin technology companies,” he said.

Overtaking U.S.

China in 2009 overtook the U.S. to become the world’s biggest car market, passed Germany as the largest exporter and likely surpassed Japan to become the second-biggest economy in 2010. It may overtake the U.S. as the largest economy by 2027, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. chief economist Jim O’Neill.

The economy probably expanded about 10 percent, Vice Premier Li Keqiang said last week. Growth may slow to 8.7 percent this year as the government tries to limit increases in asset prices, the World Bank said in a Jan. 12 report.

Foreign investment inflows are adding to liquidity flooding the economy from the trade surplus and surging bank lending and putting pressure on the central bank’s policy of restraining yuan appreciation.

The People’s Bank of China has raised interest rates and told banks to keep more money as reserves to mop up cash. The government is also encouraging outbound investment, allowing companies to keep foreign-currency earnings overseas and boosting use of the yuan for trade and investment.

Mergers Jump

Outbound investment by non-financial companies climbed 36.3 percent to $59 billion, the commerce ministry said today. Overseas mergers and acquisitions by Chinese companies rose more than 30 percent last year to a record 188 with a combined deal value of $38 billion, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP said at a press briefing yesterday.

Middle-income and affluent consumers with annual household incomes of more than 60,000 yuan ($9,000) will probably almost triple in the next 10 years to 415 million, Boston Consulting Group Inc. said in a report released on Nov. 8.

There will be “strong” increases in salaries in the five years to 2015 as the nation’s supply of labor dwindles and consumers spend more and save less, Credit Suisse Group AG sad in a report dated Jan. 1. Wages may rise by 19 percent a year and private consumption may climb to 41.7 percent of GDP in 2015 from 35.6 percent last year, the bank estimated.

Companies in the online shopping and financial industries will benefit most from the increase in wages and consumer spending during the period, analysts led by Vincent Chan and Peggy Chan wrote in the report.

Billion-Dollar Factories

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and a group partners last month agreed to invest more than $500 million in Chinese online retailer 360buy Jingdong Mall.

China became the largest LCD-TV market in the third quarter, surpassing the U.S., according to Soh Hyun Cheol, an analyst at Shinhan Investment Corp. in Seoul. Samsung and LG are planning to build multi billion-dollar factories in Suzhou and Guangzhou to meet Chinese demand for flat panel displays used in televisions and computers.

Taiwan’s AU Optronics Corp. last month said its board approved an additional $167 million investment in its plant in Kunshan, eastern Jiangsu province, that makes color filters used in LCD TVs and flat-screen monitors. The company is awaiting approval to build a $3 billion LCD plant in Suzhou.

Top Target

The United Nations’ trade and development agency predicted global foreign direct investment flows would climb to $1.5 trillion this year and $2 trillion in 2012 from an estimated $1.2 trillion in 2010, with China remaining the top target. India and Brazil will trail as the No. 2 and No. 3 recipients, according to the report.

China was the second-largest recipient of FDI in 2009, attracting $95 billion, behind the U.S. with $130 billion, the United Nations said in a report in July. China estimated its FDI in 2009 at $90 billion.






Toshiba to build 'huge solar plant' in Bulgaria
AFP - Friday, January 21


TOKYO (AFP) - – Toshiba and Tokyo Electric Power will team up with the Japanese government to build one of the world's largest solar power stations in Bulgaria, according to a report.

The plant will be built in the eastern city of Yambol by March 2012 at a cost of more than 100 billion yen ($1.2 billion), Japan's Nikkei daily said.

As a European Union member, Bulgaria needs quickly to bolster its sources of renewable energy to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

The EU has an aggressive goal to unilaterally cut carbon emissions by 20 percent by 2020, as compared to a benchmark year of 1990.

By tapping Japanese technology, the eastern European nation aims to pave the way for obtaining 16 percent of its power from renewable energy sources by 2020, up from roughly seven percent now, the report said.

Toshiba, Tokyo Electric, Japanese trader Itochu and the government-backed Innovation Network Corp. of Japan will set up a local joint venture, investing a total of around 50 billion yen.

CEZ Group, the seventh-ranked European power utility, will also take part in the joint venture, contributing as much as 20 billion yen, according to the report.

Japanese Economy and Industry Minister Banri Kaieda and Bulgarian Economy and Energy Minister Traycho Traykov will agree to support the consortium at a meeting early next week, the Nikkei said.
 
Here is Times of India article on 31% drop in FDI. Investors looking elsewhere?



Global FDI flows to India down 31% in 2010: UNCTAD
PTI, Jan 17, 2011, 10.31pm IST
Tags:UNCTAD|James X Zhan|Global FDI flows to India GENEVA: Global foreign direct investment (FDI) flows into India dropped by over 31 per cent in 2010 despite robust economic growth, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).

However, China and other countries in South-East Asia continued to witness massive FDI flows, UNCTAD said in its Global Investment Trends Monitor report issued on Monday.

UNCTAD says global FDI flows remained almost stagnant in 2010, increasing by 1 per cent to USD 1.122 trillion.

UNCTAD forecasts that global FDI flows are likely to remain between USD 1.3 trillion and USD 1.5 trillion in 2011.

FDI inflows into India amounted to just USD 23.7 billion last year, as against USD 34.6 billion in 2009. "In India, we have seen a sharp decline and we can't explain why this has happened," said the UNCTAD's investment and enterprise division chief, James X Zhan, who prepared the investment report.

"We don't have the analysis," he said, maintaining that the decline in global FDI flows into India was based on the figures compiled by the central bank.

However, in sharp contrast, China received FDI worth USD 274.6 billion last year, compared to USD 233 billion in 2009. There is a "structural change," Zhan said in regard to the higher FDI flows to China, which is receiving huge investments on services and research and development activities.

Many Western companies have shifted their research facilities to China and there is rapid development in the hinterlands of the Communist country as well.

The sharp increase in global FDI flows to East and South-East Asian countries and Latin American nations in 2010 marked the first time that developing countries outpaced rich nations in attracting foreign investments.

China, Hong Kong and other South-East Asian countries like Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand were the main beneficiaries of the heightened FDI flows in the form of mergers and acquisitions (M&As) and greenfield investment.

Part of the reason for the stagnant investment flows the world-over was largely due to the poor performance of the developed economies, especially European countries, which were the worst-hit by the global financial turmoil.

The United States, which was the epicentre of the global economic meltdown in 2008, is gradually recovering from the crisis, with FDI flows increasing by 40% last year to USD 186.1 billion from USD 129.9 billion in 2009.

"The quarterly fluctuations during 2010 indicate that the worldwide FDI recovery is still hesitant," said the report.

Several risk factors such as the slow global economic recovery, investment protectionism, rising sovereign debt and continued volatility in the currency markets are likely to slow down the pace of foreign direct investment across the globe in 2011, it said.




Read more: Global FDI flows to India down 31% in 2010: UNCTAD - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...UNCTAD-/articleshow/7307111.cms#ixzz1BhAq5mVd
 
Bulgaria is a good place to invest in. The people there are very educated and intellectual. The only problem is the corruption.
 
Lets face it,Japanese look down on Chinese,Chinese hate Japan due to history!
 
with china prospering and growing stronger, i think i will enjoy seeing china "mind-fuck" the nihon!@:D:D:D:rolleyes:

Lets face it,Japanese look down on Chinese,Chinese hate Japan due to history!
 
I don't really see it that way. Taiwan and Japan can get along very well.
Yes,it is also correct that Taiwanese love Japanese,again due to history!

I cannot forget how President Lee Teng Hui -thb nemisis of MM LKY,insisted on speaking in Japanese to his Japanese friends
 
Yes,it is also correct that Taiwanese love Japanese,again due to history!

I cannot forget how President Lee Teng Hui -thb nemisis of MM LKY,insisted on speaking in Japanese to his Japanese friends
Taiwan is the ROC. ROC has also fought hard against the Japanese and suffered many casualties during the war. But at least, they let bygones be bygones, unlike PRC.

Speaking Japanese to Japanese friends is okay, in fact it is a good PR work. Likewise if I have Chinese friend, I will ensure that I speak only Chinese.
 
Japan has always looked down on Korea and tries to deny that Korea was once a more advanced civilization than Japan. Korean artifact found in Japan were quietly stored away.

China was a developed nation way before Japan to the extent that much of the Japanese language consist of Chinese characters. One much not forget that except for the last 200 years, for last 2000 China had the largest economy in the world.

Japan with it shrinking population is a spent force. I am not sure if the Japs look down on the Chinese given the history but yes the Chinese, including the KMT in Taiwan dislike the Japanese.

Lets face it,Japanese look down on Chinese,Chinese hate Japan due to history!
 
I don't really see it that way. Taiwan and Japan can get along very well.

I happen to come across this news item.
---

Oh Please, Chinese GDP Did Not Pass Japanese GDP*

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/china-vs-japan-gdp-2010-8#ixzz1BjbQmkUD

Let's just put some of today's headlines about Japan's GDP being surpassed by Chinese GDP in perspective.

In the quarter, Japan had economic output of $1.28 trillion, or $10,085 per capital, based on a population of 127 million.

China?

It had economic output of $1.337 trillion for the quarter, but a population of about $1.3 billion, so per-capita output of... $1000, about a 1/10th as big.

Let us know when China passes Albania.
---
 
Yes,it is also correct that Taiwanese love Japanese,again due to history!

I cannot forget how President Lee Teng Hui -thb nemisis of MM LKY,insisted on speaking in Japanese to his Japanese friends

Japan warns China on investments.

JAPAN today warned China it risked losing foreign investment if it did not introduce more transparency over its business rules.

Japanese Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada said China also needed to introduce more consistency into the regulatory regime for business, including in its legal framework to deal with labour issues.

Swinging back at Beijing in an emerging dispute over the treatment of Japanese companies operating in China, Mr Okada said a lack of comprehensive rules made it difficult for foreign investors to solve worker disputes and other problems they are now facing with increasing frequency in the world’s most populous nation.

“Foreign companies have faced problems in China that are unthinkable in a normal business environment,” Mr Okada said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal.

Among other examples of problems Japanese companies have had to deal with, the Foreign Minister also pointed to abrupt cuts in exports of rare earth metals used in manufacturing hybrid cars, and unfavorable local court rulings and weak implementation of favorable rulings for companies facing intellectual-property disputes.

“But if these problems continue to occur, there will be negative effects on future investments,” he warned.

“China is still one of the most heavily controlled economies in the world,” said Jacques de Boisseson, the presidentof European Union Chamber of Commerce, pointing to several examples of stringent licensing requirements and arbitrarily enforced legislation that create headaches for foreign businesses.

While the regulatory problems haven't led European companies to shift investment out of China, Mr de Boisseson said, that could change if the environment did not improve.
.
.
 
I happen to come across this news item.
---

Oh Please, Chinese GDP Did Not Pass Japanese GDP*

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/china-vs-japan-gdp-2010-8#ixzz1BjbQmkUD

Let's just put some of today's headlines about Japan's GDP being surpassed by Chinese GDP in perspective.

In the quarter, Japan had economic output of $1.28 trillion, or $10,085 per capital, based on a population of 127 million.

China?

It had economic output of $1.337 trillion for the quarter, but a population of about $1.3 billion, so per-capita output of... $1000, about a 1/10th as big.

Let us know when China passes Albania.
---
GDP figures can always be exaggerated, :rolleyes:
 
like it or not, china is emerging! i dun think china will be bothered with jap's warning. spore on the other hand is a sturdy bridge into china. maybe, nihon can use us to achieve that.:rolleyes:

my personal take: i like jap's products from their electronic items to their porno stuff.:D:p i admire them in their way of innovating technology,especially in the field of robotics. i am also proud of china's achievement as my root is chinese. as long as they verbal exchange,play some mind games and not go to war to kill each other, everything will be fine!:)

talking about unique excellence, i knew one jap engineer when i was working for fujitsu, he used microsoft excel to draw up a network of a data centre. sud!:cool:

Japan warns China on investments.
 
Investments?

Japan only owes Chinese huge debts. Their remaining capital can not compete with domestic Chinese capitals in highly competitive PRC market. Got squeezed out to 3rth world 4th world outside - low growth areas!

Because Japs are UNFIT and broke!
 
How reliable are the official figures released by China ?
There are a lot of grey areas regarding data issued by various ministries.
just like our island GDP figures, can be inflated so that ministers can increase pay.
 
Well, you could increase GDP by building apartment blocks that nobody would live in. You could also increase GDP if your citizens were sick, causing the usage of health services to increase. :rolleyes:
 
Well, you could increase GDP by building apartment blocks that nobody would live in. You could also increase GDP if your citizens were sick, causing the usage of health services to increase. :rolleyes:

GDP figures are plain noise fodder for the so called media economists.
Take for example - leverage trading in currency.

With a mere 10,000 dollars, one can do 100,000 dollar worth of trades.
Do it 5 times a day and you have 1 million worth of trades in a day.
That adds 1 million to the GDP figure. In just one day.

All it took was 10,000 dollars to accomplish that.

The same goes for stocks and shares trading.
 
GDP figures are plain noise fodder for the so called media economists.
Take for example - leverage trading in currency.

With a mere 10,000 dollars, one can do 100,000 dollar worth of trades.
Do it 5 times a day and you have 1 million worth of trades in a day.
That adds 1 million to the GDP figure. In just one day.

All it took was 10,000 dollars to accomplish that.

The same goes for stocks and shares trading.
Hedge fund,yes,it is pure bubbles,and wiseman MM LKY has sanctioned his dear daugther in law,madam Ho to go full steam ahead!
 
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